Update (2021-12-14): This experiment has launched on Stack Overflow.
Since we announced the start of product discovery for the new user onboarding project we have been focused on gathering user feedback and analyzing data. Now we are planning some small experiments around first-time askers to help us gain more insights into the underlying challenges we face. While there are several areas of the asking experience we are investigating for experimentation, like showing potential duplicates and the right sidebar content, the first experiment we are launching is with the content in the modal that is shown to first-time askers on Stack Overflow.
Many users move quickly from registration to asking their first question. Over 50% of users who ask their first question within a week of registration do it in less than 15 minutes. This doesn't leave a lot of time to engage with help content and the current modal has ~1% clickthrough rate on the "search the site" call to action (CTA). This may be because users are reluctant to engage with anything that stands in the way of posting their burning questions, or it may be because the guidance in the modal isn't engaging or relevant.
This is what our experiments will focus on: can we surface content to new users that engages them and helps improve their question quality? For this first experiment, we are planning a copy change to the "Asking a good question" modal that appears the first-time a user visits the ask page.
Updating the first-time asker modal
Our goal for this change is to provide first-time askers (this modal only shows to accounts with no previous questions) with guidance they are most likely to need for their first question. These are the A and B versions of the modal. A is the current view and B is the experimental view:
Modal part | Current modal | New experimental modal |
---|---|---|
Title | Asking a good question | Asking a good question |
First Paragraph | You're ready to ask your first programming-related question and the community is here to help! To get you the best answers, we've provided some guidance: | About 30% of first questions do not contain enough code and are closed. Closed questions cannot be answered. Learn about providing a reproducible example. |
Second Paragraph | Before you post, search the site to make sure your question hasn't been answered | Here are some tips for success on Stack Overflow: |
1. | Summarize the problem | Provide a detailed description of your problem and what you've tried |
2. | Describe what you've tried | Make sure your question is on topic for the site |
3. | When appropriate, show some code | Check to see if your question has already been answered |
4. | Ask one question per post | |
Closing Paragraph | You'll find more tips in the sidebar. | You'll find more tips in the sidebar. |
Button and Link | Start Writing. Don't show me this again | Start Writing. Don't show me this again |
Update (2021-12-14): New image with updated content based on community feedback. The top paragraph and list item 4 have been updated. For the original version see the edit history.
When we reviewed why first questions are closed we noticed that the current modal copy doesn't align well with the top reasons first questions get closed. For example, being a duplicate is not the top reason that first questions get closed, but it is a prominent CTA in the existing modal. Meanwhile, in the First Question Review Queue, "Question Needs Code" is one of the top outcomes and "Question Has Too Much Code" is the least common outcome and the MRE help page can teach users about what is needed for reproducibility. As a result, we've changed the first CTA on the modal to focus on the MRE instead of searching for duplicates. Similarly, we structured the numbered list to give top close reasons higher ranking. The new guidance brings the content in the modal inline with the problems that first-time askers often face and we are hoping this change will increase question quality.
Our null hypothesis is that more relevant copy will not improve question quality (measured by % of closed questions). We are not changing the logic behind how the modal shows today, so if you are in the variant group the only changes you see will be to the modal content. If you have asked a question before, then you won’t see this modal at all.
What's next?
As stated above, we are exploring other small experiments that aim to improve new users' first questions and can help us learn more about what resonates with these users. You may see some of these experiments over the next few months and we'll share what we've learned from them in a future post. If you have any suggestions on aspects of the new user experience, and first questions in particular, that could benefit from similar experiments let us know.