In recent product announcements, I have noticed a trend that is disturbing to me. Stack Exchange employees are making claims and arguing with users without providing data to back up assumptions. This is leading to both users getting frustrated because it looks like they are being ignored and employees getting frustrated because the users aren't understanding their point of view.
I'm going to provide a few examples, but I want to make it clear that I am not calling people out. My goal is to point out the frustration I see building as a high rep user and provide a few suggestions on how all of us can resolve some of these issues. I know that some of the frustration I am seeing is also festering from other recent posts, but I want to focus on posts where the community can provide valuable feedback to improve Stack Overflow, not solve worldly issues.
Concern 1: Dismissiveness
There are posts throughout this topic of users sharing user scripts to do two things - change the top color and unsticky it. Regardless of the merits of these (and I admit that I am biased in what I think the outcome should be), the tone coming from employees isn't the greatest. A few examples:
can you please include the votes from all the people who do like the white on white (but because they are OK with it, didn't feel the need to pipe up)? Claiming you and the few hundred upvotes on different posts are representative of the community as a whole is disingenuous at best. - Oded
and
@StevenPenny the reason Pawel didn't respond regarding the color is because if we change the color, we would first need to run additional testing. The team's run multiple usability and A/B tests to ensure usability and effectiveness of the current version. Making it black would make it stand off from the rest of the content more, but a lot of users in this meta post don't want that. We also know that things that don't look like the rest of the site tend to get ignored by more people. Kurtis Beavers
Both of these come off as, frankly, insulting. The first is asking for data that even Stack Exchange doesn't have and the second attempts to explain away why something can't be done because of "testing". Personally, I'd be ok with that testing response, if we have been provided more information but as it standings the only hard numbers we have is that top bar clicks increased 143%.
Suggestion: It is implied that other metrics were measured and these influenced the decision to build this a certain way. Share some of this with us. Stack Exchange values transparancy. We've come to expect it. Don't shut it out of this process.
We've interviewed a lot of users who had no idea what the items in the topbar were or that we had navigation at the top right-hand side of the page because they were used to landing on the page and scrolling to the answer. By this time everything is off screen. Clicks weren't the only thing that we measured, but they were an important metric for us, especially for unregistered or low-reputation users. We also tracked searches, because we want searching to increase or not decrease since this will likely result in less duplicate questions asked. - Kurtis Beavers
Concern 2: Forgetting (or appearing to forget) about experienced users
This is round 3 of meta posts and certain messages have been stated by high rep users several times. Again, these are the color and sticky bars. However, that last comment raises an important point that I believe is the heart of this recent discontent: Stack Exchange is focusing on the low-reputation/unregistered/casual users at the expense of improving the product for existing and power users.
Without knowing more about the internal processes that are driving these decisions, I can't offer a decent suggestion other than "don't ignore us", but comments like this from high rep users and your moderators is frustrating to read over and over:
interesting! But I'm not a new user. To me the sticky bar is distracting and contains mostly irrelevant links for me. I never use the Jobs or Tags or Documentation links, and I'll happily use my Home button to go back to the top for the rest. When I am answering I look for the question to get details right, and notifications that distract me from answering are hindering at that point. Please separate the daily power user from the unregistered casual visitor! - Martijn Pieters
This type of concern is casually dismissed with a (paraphrased) "they don't know what they really want".
We've interviewed a lot of new and veteran users, but this is also something that's been asked for on meta and lot of users within this post like. Because some power users don't like something doesn't automatically mean it is a poor design for all power users and we don't care about their needs. Saying things like "tyranny of the casual user majority" may be one of the reasons some people outside this community perceive it as unfriendly to new users. - Kurtis Beavers
This concern is even more obvious when links that were used by experienced users to help new users are completely removed. The help button may not be used by new users (I'm sure there is a stat somewhere about how often it's used, but I can't find one) but it is used by experienced users to point the newer people to help. Comments like this to users trying to help don't make sense. The button was removed for those that can help, but those that don't use it have the button still in place.
i understand that and I'm really sory but please try to consider fact that majority of our users didn't use that help link in top bar. people just don't read help usually so for majority of users this link was simply useless. your effort trying to teach others (and linking to help) is priceless but we still need to consider needs of other users as well. that area in header is very "expensive" and we're trying to keep there only essential and most useful things. but i agree that we, as company, need to do better job at informing users about help. but link in header is not a solution... – Paweł
Suggestion: Consider your audience. These posts are made on meta, where your experienced and invested users lurk. These are the people that want Stack Overflow to succeed. The suggestions they are offering are to help you. Dismissing them or forgetting about them isn't helpful to either side.
Realizing that some of the animosity that exists right now is due to other events, I think these two concerns I've presented can be easily addressed. The community is here to help Stack Overflow grow. We want to work with the company and we want new and better things. We are engaging you on Meta because you brought the updates to us. Dismissing feedback that was requested is only strengthening a concern some community members have: Stack Overflow is starting to forget about its users. I am not saying that you need to listen to everything we say. But, Stack Exchange values transparency and many of us love seeing posts filled with data to back up or refute assumptions. Let's see more of that to argue points.