I recently received a careers email asking me to consider a role advertised on Stack Overflow Careers. It looked good but there were a few things that made it unsuitable, so I was minded to reply to see if there is any wiggle-room.
Now there probably isn't any wiggle room, but interestingly the Careers message interface reduces the wiggle room itself. Before I can reply I must answer a very binary question using one of two buttons:
- YES I AM INTERESTED
- NOT INTERESTED
I leaned towards "no", and was soon made aware this sent a message to the employer on my behalf before I was ready - oops! UI affordance seems lacking here: buttons should not have unexpected actions.
The message conversion (presumably also what the employer sees) records me as saying that I am NOT INTERESTED [red warning]
, whereas I would say my thoughts on the matter are more subtle than that. No harm done, but possibly worth reflecting on.
I then replied summarising my thoughts in text, and I tend to take a while to compose messages, so as to fully consider how it might be read. Thus if the employer is using Stack Overflow Careers when I clicked on the above "No", the delay between their receiving NOT INTERESTED [red warning]
and a polite email thanking them for their time and interest can rather look like a brusque rebuttal.
To fix this, I wonder if these items might be considered:
- Make it clearer what the two buttons do. "Yes" shares details, "no" does not. No message is sent unless the UI makes it clear.
- Reduce the shouty caps
- Send the interested/not interested classification at the same time as a manual message. This could be done by rewording the buttons as radio icons, and displaying the reply interface straight away. (If people choose to leave the message blank, that's up to them, of course).