Editors note: For the Ask Question Wizard 2022 see Feature Test: Ask Wizard for New Users (trial has completed)
I'm really happy to announce that the Ask Question Wizard is now live on Stack Overflow! This is the end of a long arc of experiments that have been happening for over a year to provide structured guidance to newcomers when asking a question, and I'm so excited for everyone in the community to give it a go. This is the biggest change we've made to the question asking experience on Stack Overflow since we started a little over ten years ago, and it's the result of a lot of hard work and collaboration with all of you in the community.
How it works
Go to the question asking page. If you are under the reputation threshold (currently 111, because that's what we tested with in previous experiments), you will automatically be directed to the wizard, also known as guided mode. If you are over that threshold, you'll be taken to the original question asking page, which we're calling traditional mode.
You can switch from traditional to guided mode at any time by clicking the "Use guided mode" link near the top. When in guided mode, you'll be able to switch to traditional mode after first answering a few questions - a "Use traditional mode" link will appear when this is available.
After you've switched modes, future visits to the question asking page will direct you to the question asking mode you last used for a period of time, overriding the default described in #1. That way, you don't need to keep switching back and forth between the two experiences. After that time period expires, you'll again be directed to the default mode based on your reputation.
Switching between guided and traditional modes should always save your work once you start typing your question, so don't worry about losing any drafts when switching between the two modes. There might be slight differences in formatting when you switch, but the content of your post should always be preserved.
Why we're excited
Everyone on Stack Overflow stands to benefit from this feature:
Guided mode addresses many of the concerns newcomers have about asking their first few questions.
There is a lot of guidance, history, and culture involved in asking a question, and filling out those few blank boxes in the original question asking page can feel like a daunting task. With guided mode, we've tried our best to bake in many of the best practices when asking a good question on Stack Overflow. We're hoping that, with this launch, asking a question can turn from an intimidating experience into one that is more approachable and even fun.
Guided mode means better questions on the site overall.
Based on our experiments, we found that question quality improved when using guided mode compared to traditional mode. In our latest experiment, we found a 5.12% decrease in bad-quality questions, and a positive change in neutral-quality questions (2.26% increase) and good-quality questions (1.12% increase). We also saw an overall 3.42% decrease in overall question volume, which correlates pretty well with the decrease we saw in bad quality questions.
These early findings suggest that we're not only helping people ask better questions, but also stemming lower quality questions that occur on the site. These may seem like small percentages, but when we consider the scale that we're operating at with this launch, these small differences can have a large impact that we'll be looking for over the long term.
What's next?
One of the biggest wins with this launch is that we now have a framework for improving the question-asking experience. We wanted to get this first public version of guided mode out so we can continue improving on it as we learn more about how it's used. The team at Stack Overflow has a lot of exciting ideas about how we can improve the question-asking experience with this in place, but we also want to hear from you! Go and try out the wizard, and tell us what you think could be improved and what new ideas you're excited for us to explore.
You'll be hearing more from me and the rest of the team in coming weeks about the wizard and other features that are coming soon. We think this is one of the first big steps we can take to help both newcomers and veterans of the site collaborate better on Stack Overflow.