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T.J. Crowder
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I think you're headed the right direction, but it may be worth taking an incremental approach to start with, and re-evaluating based on data.

Specifically, I'd start with this: If the post is:

  • Downvoted
  • Closed
  • Edited by the OP (some minimal "substantial" metric may be needed; e.g., not just a title or tags tweak)
  • Reopened

...then notify downvoters that the question has been improved and reopened. Don't change their vote; they will if they agree. Don't notify downvoters if the post has been edited but not reopened. Reopening is a strong signal that the post has been improved.

No special placement, no automatic un-downvoting. It'll already be an active post (and if downvoters come back to have a second look, that's more activity).

If that's in place for a while, it'll generate data we can draw metrics from to see if it's doing the job or further tweaking (such as automatic vote-reversal) would be useful.


Another thing to consider doing (instead, in addition, before, or after) would be: If the post is:

  • Closed
  • Edited by the OP
  • A previous close-voter votes to reopen

...then notify other close-voters that the question has been improved and may be worthy of reopening.

That addresses the concern ImportanceOfBeingEarnest had that actively-engaged question posters who jump on improving their post wouldn't benefit from the improvement you're trying to make.


In both cases, offering opt-out of the notifications (but defaulting to opt-in) may be necessary, but only if volumes are outrageous.


And finally: Important to remove these features if they don't achieve their purpose.

I think you're headed the right direction, but it may be worth taking an incremental approach to start with, and re-evaluating based on data.

Specifically, I'd start with this: If the post is:

  • Downvoted
  • Closed
  • Edited by the OP
  • Reopened

...then notify downvoters that the question has been improved and reopened. Don't change their vote; they will if they agree. Don't notify downvoters if the post has been edited but not reopened. Reopening is a strong signal that the post has been improved.

No special placement, no automatic un-downvoting. It'll already be an active post (and if downvoters come back to have a second look, that's more activity).

If that's in place for a while, it'll generate data we can draw metrics from to see if it's doing the job or further tweaking would be useful.


Another thing to consider doing (instead, in addition, before, or after) would be: If the post is:

  • Closed
  • Edited by the OP
  • A previous close-voter votes to reopen

...then notify other close-voters that the question has been improved and may be worthy of reopening.

That addresses the concern ImportanceOfBeingEarnest had that actively-engaged question posters who jump on improving their post wouldn't benefit from the improvement you're trying to make.


In both cases, offering opt-out of the notifications (but defaulting to opt-in) may be necessary, but only if volumes are outrageous.


And finally: Important to remove these features if they don't achieve their purpose.

I think you're headed the right direction, but it may be worth taking an incremental approach to start with, and re-evaluating based on data.

Specifically, I'd start with this: If the post is:

  • Downvoted
  • Closed
  • Edited by the OP (some minimal "substantial" metric may be needed; e.g., not just a title or tags tweak)
  • Reopened

...then notify downvoters that the question has been improved and reopened. Don't change their vote; they will if they agree. Don't notify downvoters if the post has been edited but not reopened. Reopening is a strong signal that the post has been improved.

No special placement, no automatic un-downvoting. It'll already be an active post (and if downvoters come back to have a second look, that's more activity).

If that's in place for a while, it'll generate data we can draw metrics from to see if it's doing the job or further tweaking (such as automatic vote-reversal) would be useful.


Another thing to consider doing (instead, in addition, before, or after) would be: If the post is:

  • Closed
  • Edited by the OP
  • A previous close-voter votes to reopen

...then notify other close-voters that the question has been improved and may be worthy of reopening.

That addresses the concern ImportanceOfBeingEarnest had that actively-engaged question posters who jump on improving their post wouldn't benefit from the improvement you're trying to make.


In both cases, offering opt-out of the notifications (but defaulting to opt-in) may be necessary, but only if volumes are outrageous.


And finally: Important to remove these features if they don't achieve their purpose.

Source Link
T.J. Crowder
  • 1.1m
  • 19
  • 110
  • 139

I think you're headed the right direction, but it may be worth taking an incremental approach to start with, and re-evaluating based on data.

Specifically, I'd start with this: If the post is:

  • Downvoted
  • Closed
  • Edited by the OP
  • Reopened

...then notify downvoters that the question has been improved and reopened. Don't change their vote; they will if they agree. Don't notify downvoters if the post has been edited but not reopened. Reopening is a strong signal that the post has been improved.

No special placement, no automatic un-downvoting. It'll already be an active post (and if downvoters come back to have a second look, that's more activity).

If that's in place for a while, it'll generate data we can draw metrics from to see if it's doing the job or further tweaking would be useful.


Another thing to consider doing (instead, in addition, before, or after) would be: If the post is:

  • Closed
  • Edited by the OP
  • A previous close-voter votes to reopen

...then notify other close-voters that the question has been improved and may be worthy of reopening.

That addresses the concern ImportanceOfBeingEarnest had that actively-engaged question posters who jump on improving their post wouldn't benefit from the improvement you're trying to make.


In both cases, offering opt-out of the notifications (but defaulting to opt-in) may be necessary, but only if volumes are outrageous.


And finally: Important to remove these features if they don't achieve their purpose.