Abstract
It's unlikely that forcing people to look at the tour page will improve their subsequent contributions. Rather, the Informed badge is a strong signal that a user has a desire to understand the Stack Overflow community and become a productive contributor.
After 2 1/2 years, we should have plenty of data to know how well the tour is working. In order to tackle the question you asked we need to try answering the following questions:
- Do users who have read through the tour page ask better questions and provide better answers than those who have not?
- If the statistics show correlation between reading the tour and positive contributions, can we demonstrate causation?
Given that we have a badge for at least pretending to take the tour, we can compare the results of people who joined in 2014 and earned that badge (or any other) before posting* to those who didn't:
N Badge avg_score deleted_rate closed_rate|avg_posts avg_rep rep_per
------ -------------- --------- ------------ -----------|--------- ------- -------
583431 none -0.15 22.6% 9.5%| 4.5 28.2 4.7
32864 Informed 0.05 16.7% 7.3%| 5.7 52.1 5.7
12593 Autobiographer -0.05 17.1% 6.9%| 6.5 59.3 7.2
|
713 Editor 0.76 9.9% 1.7%| 12.7 201.8 16.1
422 Supporter 0.91 9.6% 4.9%| 7.3 186.2 60.6
308 Excavator 0.78 7.3% 2.0%| 9.5 162.8 17.7
279 Enthusiast 0.82 16.3% 5.0%| 5.4 66.1 10.4
For those following along, this query using public data shows the method I'm using. Notice that since first posts are often deleted and since deleted posts are not represented in the public data, you'll see some odd things like people earning the Tumbleweed badge for a question before they've posted anything. In those cases, the first post was deleted. The chart above corrects for that problem by including deleted posts.
Everything to the left of the vertical line represents data on the first post a user submitted. Columns to the right represent the entire career of the user. Because the site has changed substantially over the years, I'm only considering people who created their account in 2014. rep_per
is a very rough estimate of the quality of a user's contributions calculated by dividing their total reputation by the number of posts they've contributed. It's not great on an individual level since voting volume varies by tag, but it should help us gauge quality on an aggregate level.
About 5% of users read the tour page (as judged by the Informed badge) before posting. Those users initial posts are far more likely to be upvoted, less likely to be deleted and (if they ask questions) less likely to be closed. Over their entire career, Informed users are also likely to post more and those posts are more likely to be upvoted. So there's a strong link between the people who tend to do well on Stack Overflow and people who have read the tour.
That's all well and good, but compare those numbers with the 2% of the people who fill in all the autobiographical information on their profile before posting. (There is some overlap between people who earn various badges before posting. It's possible this group is a near subset of the Informed.) While they do slightly worse with their first post, they tend to contribute more and better posts over their careers. Filling in autobiographical details doesn't teach people to use the site, but it does indicate that these people did their homework on how the site operates. So it seems that while reading the tour might help people with their first post, there's a good chance people who read the tour are also conscientious, which is an important attribute to have if you want to succeed on Stack Overflow.
More striking are the outliers who edit, vote (with the help of an association bonus for being active on another site) or visit the site many consecutive days before posting. These folks do far better with their first posts and (with the exception of Enthusiasts) have much more productive careers. These rare individuals not only read the short tour page, but also have read and even interacted with actual posts on the site before posting themselves. Unfortunately, we can't force everyone to study the site in that level of detail.
Since most people earn privileges required to participate by posting, that probably explains why so few people manage to, say, vote before posting. In any case, the main concern is with people who ask before viewing the tour. Answers tend to be evaluated in relation to the question they answer, but questions must create their own context. So let's focus on first questions:
N Badge avg_score deleted_rate closed_rate|avg_posts avg_rep rep_per
------ -------------- --------- ------------ -----------|--------- ------- -------
460243 none -0.37 24.3% 12.8%| 3.2 19.1 5.5
29044 Informed -0.08 18.4% 10.0%| 2.9 88.1 40.9
12535 Teacher 0.45 11.5% 6.0%| 3.4 349.8 157.2
11672 Autobiographer -0.17 18.4% 10.9%| 3.1 144.0 68.9
8919 Editor 0.43 11.7% 6.3%| 3.6 432.7 191.0
7309 Supporter 0.62 9.6% 5.2%| 3.4 494.7 231.3
2249 Commentator 0.83 9.1% 4.4%| 3.7 1122.2 555.7
1348 Critic 1.06 8.8% 3.5%| 3.3 1336.6 731.7
1282 Custodian 1.47 8.9% 4.8%| 3.0 2290.4 1489.2
743 Citizen Patrol 1.26 7.6% 3.0%| 3.5 1484.5 844.8
N.B.: In this case, avg_posts
and rep_per
only count questions. Please don't compare those numbers with the previous table.
Once again, if you poke around the site a little bit by reading the tour and/or filling in your profile, your first question tends to be better than if you jump right in. And while you don't ask more often, your overall contribution to the site will probably be more impressive than most. But actual participation in the form of answering, editing, upvoting, commenting, downvoting, reviewing, and flagging turns out to be exponentially more indicative of good asking experiences.
Comparing to the badge for reading the FAQ, Analytical, turns out to be difficult because the (now retired) badge just wasn't given out as much. So it's difficult to tell if we are seeing the effects of unusually diligent users or if the information actually helped. In any case, here's the same query for people who created an account and asked their first question in 2013, the one year in which it was possible to get both badges:
N Badge avg_score deleted_rate closed_rate|avg_posts avg_rep rep_per
------ -------------- --------- ------------ -----------|--------- ------- -------
428303 none 0.02 26.2% 14.9%| 2.7 44.5 17.1
9370 Teacher 0.95 15.0% 7.5%| 3.2 775.7 393.1
6304 Editor 0.99 14.9% 6.8%| 3.3 1002.2 502.1
5205 Supporter 1.10 13.0% 6.8%| 3.3 1138.4 588.4
4469 Informed 0.71 16.7% 9.7%| 2.9 717.2 369.6
3126 Autobiographer 0.31 21.6% 12.9%| 3.2 546.5 286.9
1624 Commentator 1.43 11.9% 5.2%| 3.5 2455.4 1349.0
1051 Critic 1.55 11.5% 5.5%| 3.5 3125.6 1772.4
842 Analytical 1.24 10.9% 5.1%| 3.7 1399.3 689.1
Obviously we have no way to know that people actually read the FAQ, but it seems like the effort required to click a link for each section correlated with better results than simply visiting the tour page.
Correlation does not imply causation
At this point, it's tempting to say that activities such as reading the tour, suggesting edits or answering question teach users how to ask better questions. That might be true. But it's far more likely that those activities signal people who have a reason to visit the site other than merely getting answers to their questions. (For a similar situation, consider the question of whether owning books makes your children smarter.) If so, adding more requirements won't do anything to improve question quality. Instead, it will rob us of potentially valuable signal.
Footnote:
* While researching this question, I discovered a bunch of oddities: