In December, we did some internal analysis on what's displayed on both the current Profile and the Developer Story, and found that about 40% of the data is in both places. This led us to wonder if it's unnecessary and confusing to users to have the same data in multiple places, and we started user research sessions to learn about issues with the Developer Story and the current profile page. These sessions are still in progress, but I wanted to provide some insight on what we've discovered so far (or already heard about from you and merely confirmed).
Usability Tests
Earlier this year, we hired a fantastic UX researcher, Kristina Lustig, and one of her first projects was to help understand the issues with the discoverability and usability with the Developer Story. In March, we started meeting with various groups of users to get some answers. The first sessions told us that most users go to other developers' Stack Overflow profiles to do the following:
- Get context for an answer that they've seen
- Look at other answers that the user has written
They do this to see what tech they use, what kind of development they do, where their reputation comes from, and they want to know a bit more about who they are. While users went to other developers' profiles, they didn't browse to their Developer Story because "they never really thought about doing it." They did, however, express interest in seeing the stories of other users, especially for higher rep users. When the participants were specifically asked about the possibility of combining the Developer Story and the profile, most couldn't think of a reason for not doing it. Some were even excited about the idea.
After the initial sessions, the team developed a prototype of a single tab combining the profile and the Developer Story to test in subsequent sessions and iterate on.
Results
A lot of what we heard in the research sessions, we had already heard in various Meta posts, and the sessions just cemented that we need to make some changes.
You told us after the launch of the Developer Story that the existing layout was hard for users to parse - the research confirmed it. For example, changing a job from current to former makes the position, possibly, jump down the page and from view, making finding it difficult. Also, the strict reverse chronological order of the timeline doesn't allow for easy scanning of information.
Along with the issues of timeline ordering, we were told by participants that they'd want to display their data by 'category' or 'type', meaning group all similar items together like Stack Overflow activity, experience, and education.
The 'Add a New Item' menu doesn't have enough context around it. We need to make it clearer what items can be added.
Again, you told us that the privacy settings on the Developer Story were not very usable or clear how they worked. It became abundantly clear that this needs to be addressed as this was the most painful area.
Obviously, some of the pain points identified above have been covered by feedback on Meta since the launch of Developer Story, but the research sessions have confirmed that there are issues that need to be resolved.
The next round of research sessions is scheduled to take place on or about June 7th, and we're specifically looking for Meta users to take part in them. If you're reading this and want to participate, then please complete this signup.