TL;DR We’re launching a series of tests designed to help us better educate new community members about Q&A and all the new products we’re launching.
Many of you already know about all the new projects we’re building to serve programmers even better. We have a lot going on: Jobs has already shipped, Documentation is now in closed beta, and Teams is being actively worked on.
With all these changes, we need to update and improve how we introduce new members to what Stack Overflow represents as well as create useful public guides for the new projects we’re shipping.
What’s the problem we’re trying to solve?
The short version is this: we don’t have a consolidated place for people who don’t know what Stack Overflow is to learn more about us and how to contribute to our community.
What we do have currently includes the tour page, various Meta posts, individual blog posts, and the banners shown to users not signed into an account (or those who don’t yet have an account) in each of the main feature pages. To see the latter for yourself, log out or open a private window and go to Jobs, Documentation, or the home page in a private window.
We need a solution that consolidates these fragmented explanations and better answers the questions of who we are, what we do, and how new community members can participate.
Here’s what’s going to happen
We want all programmers to feel welcome in our community, and improving their first experiences with the site is a good step in this direction. We’re launching a series of A/B tests with different designs to solve this problem. Here’s what’s included in our tests and updates:
- A single destination that gives a general overview of Q&A and our new products like Jobs and Documentation. This page is akin to “Features” pages you see on other sites that give a short description of each “thing” that the site offers.
- A prominent way to get to the above described destination from stackoverflow.com. This probably means changing the hero banner that users see when they’re logged out and on the homepage.
- Individual pages that go in-depth into each of our features with Q&A, the community sites, and Jobs to start, with Docs and Teams forthcoming.
- Possibly links to our client site and our company “about us” pages, in case they aren’t a developer and need to get to the right place.
So what might change while these experiments happen?
For the vast majority of you, you won’t notice anything unless your first interaction with the site tends to be to log in. The areas that this series of experiments touches are the things that current users don’t see most of the time. This is mainly about educating people who don’t yet know or use Stack Overflow. That means that anonymized portions of our homepage and the tour page are the only existing places that might be affected - everything else is pretty new. Even then, only a relatively small proportion of users are going to see the changes anyways since it’s a split test.
Your Thoughts
We’d love your help on this. Specifically, we want to know what made you want to join Stack Overflow in the first place so that we can share that same excitement with new members.
- Was there a particular blog or Meta post or other piece of content that convinced you to sign up?
- How did you learn how to contribute on Stack Overflow?
- What first got you excited about Stack Overflow and made you want to contribute?