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I’m Kristina, the first (and so far, only) User Experience Researcher here at Stack Overflow. As you probably know, on SO we have a bit of a problem with our new user experience. People new to SO (or maybe even new to programming!) come to us to find an answer to a programming issue, and that means that sometimes they ask a question themselves. When they ask a question, we show them a long page of rules for how to ask a question, and then throw them into it. (In case you forget what that looks like, here it is below.)

screenshot of ask a question rules

From here, one of several things happens:

  1. They are too intimidated by the wall of text (or get distracted or any number of things) and they just don’t ask it
  2. They ask a question, but it’s badly formed and it gets downvoted or deleted or snarked at
  3. They ask a question, but it’s a duplicate and gets closed right away (which is good for SO overall, but probably doesn’t feel great in-the-moment)
  4. They ask an appropriately-formed question and get a useful response

What we’re working on is reducing the instances of scenarios #1-3. We’re working with Denae Ford, a CS PhD student at NCSU (you might recognize her from her wonderful research work on gender-based barriers to Stack Overflow usage). Our first attempt to resolve this problem and make Stack Overflow friendlier to new folks (and hopefully also write a paper about it!), is to test a lightweight mentorship program.

Here’s how we envision this test working (about a month long, starting hopefully within the next month):

  1. When we see a first-time asker in the Ask a Question page, we show them a link to a chatroom in the sidebar
  2. We have a specially-created, moderated chatroom for people from the Ask a Question page and for people who volunteer to mentor (there are no rep minimums for this room)
  3. The mentors help with question formation, strategies for searching for existing questions, or with tagging. Mentors don’t actually answer programming questions in chat.

We hope that this or something like it will give new users a better first-time experience, thus increasing their likelihood of participating in the future, and generally make them better-equipped members of the Stack Overflow community. We also hope that the ratio of useful questions on the site will increase.

So, here’s what I’m asking from y’all:

  • What do you think about this idea? We’re just starting to put this test together and would love your feedback and thoughts - we want to give it as much likelihood to succeed as we can.
  • What concerns do you have with how we’re deciding to implement this initially? We’re trying to go as light on the technical requirements as possible, but we want to make sure we haven’t missed anything glaring.
  • And most importantly: are you interested in volunteering to be a mentor? A project like this would never work without knowledgeable and experienced Stack Overflow users to actually do some mentoring. As this is a test, we’d probably also want to talk to you about your experience afterwards.

If you want to be a mentor, sign up here.

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    When we see a first-time asker in the Ask a Question page, we show them a link to a chatroom in the sidebar I think this link would have to stand out more, it should be placed above the title of the question, that way it's less likely someone will miss it. The problem is mainly people haven't even gone to the How To Ask page before asking a question. Great idea to fix this issue btw, I hope this works!
    – George
    Jul 26, 2017 at 13:26
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    I think this is a good idea generally. I would also love to volunteer (although I have very limited free time). Though I have doubts regarding the amount of new users that will actually notice this link and actually click on it. On the other hand, if there will be too many users at the same time in the chat, that could become very chaotic as you won't be able to have a proper conversation with a certain new user because of tens of messages posted from other users in between. Jul 26, 2017 at 13:39
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    Good idea generally. Worth trying out and seeing whether it's viable.
    – Pekka
    Jul 26, 2017 at 14:00
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    It's funny - only two days ago I thought about writing up a Meta suggestion on creating a new class of moderators, with the role of social workers where our current moderators have the role of cops - putting out fires but not having the time to help individual users much. A bit like the old SWAT team of nice suggestion. I wasn't sure whether it would be a good idea, but in this context and equipped with special chat rooms, it might make sense. It also might be a complete disaster - but it's certainly worth trying out!
    – Pekka
    Jul 26, 2017 at 14:06
  • 56
    'Mentors don’t actually answer programming questions in chat' - how long will it take before someone attempts to get round that by expicitly asking a programming question, or by attempting to 'turn' an existing thread, (answers to the nearest 10ms, please). Jul 26, 2017 at 14:14
  • 8
    Still, an attempt/trial to reduce the number of bad questions sounds good:) Jul 26, 2017 at 14:15
  • 17
    Is there going to be any tag filtering? I could help people ask a C++ question or try and find a dupe for the, but I would be pretty limited in the help I could offer someone with PHP. Jul 26, 2017 at 14:33
  • 26
    Off topic, I still think showing annotated examples of good and bad questions is the way to go teaching new users what works and what doesn't on Stack Overflow (To the extent that there is any rhyme and reason to what works around here and what doesn't.) Simple, understandable to ESL folks, relatively cheap to build.
    – Pekka
    Jul 26, 2017 at 14:50
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    It should be trialed. If it turns into a massive disaster, it will still have value as a shield when disgruntled users fire off the all-too-common 'SO does not help new users' posts. We can link it and say 'we tried harder, and it just didn't work'. Jul 26, 2017 at 15:00
  • 11
    How will you determine success/failure? Are you prepared to let it die if it does fail? Jul 26, 2017 at 15:24
  • 15
    @PaulCrovella Oh, yes. We're killing it after about a month in any case - it's meant to be a short-term experiment where we gather data about the kinds of things people need help with, the way that people interact with each other in this setting, and how much getting personal help with asking a question actually helps people feel more welcome. So there really is no success/failure criteria here, because knowledge gained is a success - even if we learn that this is a horrible idea. :)
    – kristinalustig StaffMod
    Jul 26, 2017 at 15:42
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    When you say that "there are no rep minimums for this room", that just applies to the new members asking for help to get their question in shape, right? Surely the mentors need site experience, and probably also domain-specific experience too. I suggest that mentors should have at least a bronze badge in some language tag.
    – PM 2Ring
    Jul 26, 2017 at 17:39
  • 7
    @KristinaLustig Quick reality check. How many new SO users per day? How many questions from beginning users per day?
    – empty
    Jul 27, 2017 at 19:51
  • 7
    @SteelToe 'new users mean know harm, its just they need a answer to a question fast.' That's exactly the approach that gets them down and close-voted:( Jul 27, 2017 at 23:39
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    @SteelToe 'I know so many programmers that were turned off from the trolling and bias against first timers' do you have any evidence of trolling and bias against first timers, as distinct from bias against bad questions? No, you don't. How do I know? I have asked for evidence in many meta posts that claim thsi happens, and not one link has ever been posted. Now who is trolling, exactly? Jul 27, 2017 at 23:42

35 Answers 35

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Mentorship sounds great.

But why are you trying to use chat?

Chatting is the wrong tool for the job. Using the current chat system will cause a lot of problems:

  • There is no good way to reuse advice from chats. It's not easily searchable for newcomers. Mentors will have to keep re-explaining the same things.
  • Chats are messy. Can you really handle the load of incoming questions? Certainly not in one chat room, unless the mentorship is ineffective and new users don't take advantage of it.
  • Chats don't provide an isolated place to post the actual question. To review the question, you have a few options:
    • Put the question on the site and then refer back to it. Problem: other people on the main site will deal with the question in other ways (down votes, voting to close).
    • Put a lock on the question until the mentors have approved it. This is sort of acceptable, but might seems a bit of work to get right. If the page is public but not linked from other pages, then spammers can use it and lower traffic means it might stick around longer than on the main site.

I think it would be much better if we

Create a dedicated SE site for mentoring questions

That's right. We already have a tool that can handle mentoring, and it's not chat.

I propose that there be a new site: Questions.SE. In this site, users would post their questions. Instead of answering the question itself, answers would be reformatted versions of the question.

  • The gamification built into all SE sites would mean that there would be incentives for mentors.
  • Bad questions are isolated from the main site.
  • Comments, chatting, votes, votes-to-close, and flags would still exist. This means that mentors would have plenty of tools to deal with questions.
  • It is scalable. If you want to use it as a sandbox for other SE sites, that's fine. That's what tags are for.

How do we deal with trash? This site would be a magnet for a lot of low quality content.

  • Lower the spam/abusive thresholds to allow questions to be deleted quickly
  • Maybe give high-rep users a new hammer: the unclear hammer. This would immediately put on hold questions that nobody can understand enough to rewrite.
  • Have the roomba delete all questions that are not marked after 2 weeks.

So how are we going to get the new users to use this? Here are my thoughts:

  • Don't allow users to post to SO until they have posted to Questions.SE. Maybe redirect the Ask a Question page there.
  • When the question on Questions.SE has been tagged by high-rep users with , then the question can be (automatically) asked on SO.
  • Keep requiring users to go through this process until [insert-algorithm-here] decides that they can ask good questions. It would take into account their SO posts' score and the number of questions they have posted on Questions.SE.
    • If you're following the logic, yes this means that users who ask a few good questions and then start posting bad questions will be sent back to Questions.SE. I think this would be a good thing.

How do we get mentors to use this?

  • Gamification, gamification, gamification. Who wouldn't want to earn rep on a site for re-writing people's questions?
  • The kindness of their heart. The universe needs saving and you can help.
  • To give back to the community.

After all, why would people answer questions on SO on the first place? The same things that inspire people to answer on SO will apply on Questions.SE. All that needs to happen is to spread the word to all the mentors out there and maybe offer a badge or two.

Cons

  • If somebody has the X/Y problem, I'm not sure how that would be dealt with. The site would be targeted at improving questions. Something like X/Y might not be figured out until people try to answer it.
  • Duplicates need to be closed cross-site. I'm not sure how to give users a good way to search for potential dupes and flag. Or would we want dupes to make it to the main site to be signposts?
  • Technical questions need to be technical. I suggested that users would be willing to help, but would enough users from every tag be willing to help? If not, how can questions in those tags be rewritten?
  • Time. It would take some amount of time and effort for a new user to finally get their question asked on SO. The benefit is that the question would be a good question, but it would mean that a lot of new users would never get their question asked.
  • If users are patient, they may never learn to write good questions. Just post to Questions.SE and wait for somebody to make it good for them. We can only hope that the delay inspires them to learn to write good questions for themselves.
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    But how are we going to get them to ask good bad questions on the new site? ;) Jul 27, 2017 at 16:43
  • @NathanOliver I just realized I misread your comment. What do you mean by "good bad questions"? Do you mean questions that have the potential to be good? If so, the answer is you don't. Unsalvageable questions will always be asked. My ideas for dealing with them are in the "How do we deal with trash" part. Jul 27, 2017 at 17:37
  • I was being funny. If the OP has problems asking a good question here and then we want them to go to a different site to ask a question on how to ask a question here, how do we get them to ask a good question there? So a good (for the new site) bad (for this site) question. Jul 27, 2017 at 17:41
  • Ah. Well, the question the ask on the other site would not be a "how to ask" sort of question. They would post their SO question, in their words, and answers would be improved versions of the question. So any question would be a good question there, as long as people can turn it into something that makes sense. Jul 27, 2017 at 17:49
  • "So any question would be a good question there, as long as people can turn it into something that makes sense" So then, like, 10% of the questions, max.
    – Servy
    Jul 27, 2017 at 17:51
  • If the OP only posts a nonsense and leaves, yes. Their feedback would be vital. Without the OP giving clarification of what they mean, the question will go to the great roomba in the sky. Jul 27, 2017 at 17:52
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    This seems like too many steps/too much effort. The goal here is to improve the new user experience. Right now they come to a site and ask a question, and endure some level of obstacles before they get an answer. You want to introduce an entire extra website into that mix? They have to ask their question on multiple sites? Register multiple times? etc.? Integrating a toolset and workflow into Stack Overflow is a much better solution. Otherwise we will just see people flagging posts as "crappy, move to SOQuestions.SE" and no one bothering to answer questions on another site.
    – TylerH
    Jul 27, 2017 at 18:08
  • Question posters would just use it as an excuse to post even less-effort questions. I honestly would not know what to do about questions that are in worse shape than many on SO main - it's bad enough there. Telling posters that they need to provide inputs, outputs, error-messages, test details and debugging info just gets you flagged or libelled on meta as a jerk/troll. It would be even worse on a 'Good bad question' site:( Jul 27, 2017 at 18:29
  • @MartinJames At the same time, though, all that sort of commenting might be a good thing on this other site, even one of the main points. If you don't add all the necessary details, somebody needs to prompt you to. Of course, this means that new users can still get offended... Jul 27, 2017 at 19:56
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My impression is that the principal problem is that new members of StackOverflow are able to ask a question from the moment of joining.

It is not uncommon to see just-arrived members asking fairly complex questions. My reaction is often: what on earth are you doing asking others to help you with a question of that complexity when you've not helped a single other member with anything...?

But of course, this isn't the new member's fault. The setup allows for it.

I'd be tempted instead to suggest that you can only ask a question when you have answered 5 or 10 yourself. (No matter whether your answers or accepted or not or even good or bad... what matters is that you at least show willing to want to try to help others before asking others to help you).

The process of answering 5 or 10 questions would give new members exposure to well-formed questions. Thus, by the time they asked their first question, they would already have an idea of how questions ought to be presented.

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    I think your idea has merit, but the implementation would lead to a whole lot more low-quality answers to low-quality questions. The new user is burning to ask their question, and they'll rush through to answer the 5 easiest questions they find, which are likely duplicates or low-quality. Jul 28, 2017 at 15:20
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    I wonder how much crap a simple time delay would cut out, e.g. not being able to ask a question within 24 hours of registering. Jul 29, 2017 at 12:03
  • I take your point @silencedmessage, it's a good one - but it reinforces the idea that SO is a place where new users primarily sign up to have their questions answered. An alternative perspective - though not one that prevails at present - is that SO is a place where new users primarily sign up to share knowledge, teach, educate and help others. Guided by this perspective... the point where you need a question answered is really not the point to suddenly decide to become a new member of SO.
    – Rounin
    Jul 30, 2017 at 11:21
  • Perhaps the way to deter a barrage of low quality answers would be to require 5 upvotes on answers before granting question- asking permissions. That could be 5 upvotes on a single answer or one upvote on 5 separate answers (or anything inbetween)?
    – Rounin
    Jul 30, 2017 at 11:31
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I keep going back to this idea ...

A problem is defined by the root cause, therefore we need to examine the root cause ...

The problem isn't the number of questions or the quality of question.
The problem is that users aren't able to get the answers they need.
The symptom is the number of questions and flow of new users generating them.
You solve the issues the users are having & you solve everyone's problem.

Note, it's not just new users, though they are the biggest group of those who suffer - also fixing that problem will probably remove the sockpuppet effect of people not staying with one user.

I like that mentorship is on the ball! I think there's two paths to this one. First, exactly what you're doing. Second, some reworks on the side bar - which is extremely helpful but doesn't honor the search bar preferences.

Part 1: Chatroom

A chatroom with bot tools ...

  • Make the first chat room they enter an interactive tutorial, allow them to try typing question & then give them alternative synonyms to use for those words - draw from the S/O db. Then dump them into a moderated room if they are unhappy.

  • Augment the mods with "quick replies"

  • Cover any shortage by having the bot go into answering mode when all mods are idle or a question goes unanswered too long

Part 2: Sidebars

Also, really would help reduce the work if there was some improvements to "Linked", or "Related" questions on the side bar. If there's a better place to chat this one up - let me know too!

Please note this scope only deals with the side bars linked/related questions section

  • Control of what a user thinks is important to be shown (perhaps re implement or apply the same search bar to the sidebars - doesn't have to be on by default - infact as working now, but the option to control if desired please!
  • Ability to order the sidebar suggestions
  • If possible track links followed already and either UI shows or auto-hide till user clicks unhide previously viewed option?
  • Ability to go to a hierarchical tree (generated by categories or whatever metric you want?)...maybe cloud words of both subjects / synonyms or just lists by common phrasing.
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I think having a chat-bot kind of interface would be great like Siri. Of-course there will be lots of challenges. It should ask lots of trouble shooting kind of questions to the user and capture what they are looking for. If user is still not satisfied with the bot's answer, draft a SO kind of questions based on the communication and show it to the user if that is what they are really looking for. If yes then publish the same. Any ways SO has so many active members who will quickly look into the problem and possibly answer the same.

Interaction example would be

  • Bot: How can I help you?
  • U1: How to do xyz?
  • Bot: What have you tried? ( or asks a better question)
  • U1: I have tried xxx in python
  • Bot: Which version of python?
  • U1: 2.0
  • Bot: It may not work as per my knowledge, try 3.6 version
  • U1: It is a production system I cannot go to version 3.6
  • Bot: Ok I will check if there are some good solution/workaround. If I understand your problem correctly this is your problem >> Problem detail << Please confirm
  • U1: Yes, I would like to add that I am using windows 2000
  • Bot: Oh! I missed asking that, will add that and post it in SO. Hope some expert will help you. Thank you.
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  • Wow!! Down voters care to comment? @Kristina Lustig: Down-voting is also one of the thing that puts people off answering or raising a question. I guess you will have to dig into the huge data of SO and then come up with statistics such as what are the types of questions people ask or answer, understand the frustration shown in the comments etc. It will be a good data mining problem. You will be able to come up with lots of answer to improve SO. I still think my answer is good, unless somebody correct me.
    – keyr
    Jul 29, 2017 at 14:54
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    Developing an artificial intelligence engine of a sufficiently high quality to be useful in this context is far outside of Stack Overflow's core mission. So while what you describe might be useful, it is far too theoretical to consider at this point, unless you happen to have some working code available in a GitHub repository. Apple spent many years and billions of dollars on Siri, and that's after they purchased her from her Norwegian parents. And then there's the fact that chat is a better way to present this type of AI than an interactive wizard on the Ask page. Jul 30, 2017 at 9:49
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    Also, complaints about downvotes are one of the things that puts people off commenting on Meta answers. Jul 30, 2017 at 9:50
  • Thank you Cody, these comments helps rather than simply getting downvotes. So it will be a good idea to have downvotes should strictly have a comment or it should reduce big point from the downvoters.
    – keyr
    Jul 31, 2017 at 5:01
  • BTW having a bot, to start with a simple one, may not be difficult. I am sure there are lots of SO members who are proficient and willing to work on it. Let me see if I can also come up with something.
    – keyr
    Jul 31, 2017 at 5:06
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    I'm not going to explain why I don't like this idea, beyond the idea of I work in voice recognition and text recognition - and I hate using Siri. I just wanted to point out that people downvote on meta without commenting because they mean something different here. Also, there has been a bit of discussion on requiring downvotes.
    – LinkBerest
    Jul 31, 2017 at 14:57
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I think those are great ideas. But here's something else that could work in combination of the chat.

I think that the best way to avoid bad questions would be a "forced to watch" video of 2-3 minutes before they can ask a question. The video should look a lot like those at lynda.com. A warm welcome with a bubbly personality and a quick explanation of what we expect from them. After watching the video, the user should have the choice to go a head and ask the question or go to the next video explaining the inner works of the website.


EDIT In the light of all the downvotes I think I need to explain the idea a little more, LOL.

https://www.singlegrain.com/video-marketing/just-stats-science-video-engagement/

https://www.wyzowl.com/video-marketing-statistics-2016.html

There are a lot of online marketers research available explaining that.

Before reading any text, 60% of site visitors will watch a video if available.

A video is a lot more effective as a tool than a wall of text. The idea is to call a lightbox upon clicking the ask button for the first time. The video starts right away with a welcome and a quick guide on how to ask a question. If the spoke person has a great personality he should be able to keep them all to the end. The research says that longer the video and fewer chances to keep them all the way to the end. So keep it short and fun all the way.


The reason I am pointing to lynda.com is that below their videos there's a line by line script highlighting what the video says. So somebody that can't hear or does not have any speakers can still follow what's going on.

The forced to watch feature ensures the user knows how to ask a question and what is expected from him in order to get answers. This feature can work with other suggestions here and should help a lot in the educational success rate.

If after watching the video the user still asks his question in a bad way, I am afraid nothing else will ever work to educate them. Only a closed question might get his attention on him doing something bad and want to learn what in order to get his answers.

Just my two cents ;-)

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    If you force people to watch a video they will just mute the videos sound, switch tabs to do other work and continue with the question after the video ends all without ever watching it.
    – Joe W
    Jul 26, 2017 at 14:57
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    @JoeW Or just leave and not ask their question. Lots and lots of that one.
    – Servy
    Jul 26, 2017 at 15:00
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    @PatrickSimard So you're saying that the people that skip reading the rules are going to skip reading the video, meaning the only people who'd actually benefit from the video are the ones already reading the rules. So then, why bother with a video?
    – Servy
    Jul 26, 2017 at 15:01
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    An average consumer wanting to buy a product may not be 1 on 1 comparable to a programmer wanting to ask others to help solve their problem. I also don't believe a video marketing company boasting that video marketing works. But luckily I've got nothing to do with marketing, so I may be wrong.
    – CodeCaster
    Jul 26, 2017 at 15:08
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    @PatrickSimard You're basically showing research that video ads get people's attention more than text ads. That's certainly true. It annoys people to no end to see them, but they will instinctively react to them, making them effective advertisements. And note that those stats aren't saying that people are watching the video to the end, only that they're noticing that the video exists and seeing a few seconds of it before they're able to turn it off or tune it out. That's...not what we're going for here.
    – Servy
    Jul 26, 2017 at 15:09
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    @PatrickSimard There are already lots of tutorials on how to use SO on youtube, for people that specifically want to get the new user information in video form, rather than text form, so that benefit already exists.
    – Servy
    Jul 26, 2017 at 15:29
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    @PatrickSimard As you can see from this question here, that's not true. When the go to ask a question they're shown information on how to ask a question. But people don't care, they just want to ask their question, so they ignore the information shown. They're going to do the same with a video, for the same reasons. If you try to force them to watch it, they'll just get annoyed and either leave, or have a strong dislike to the site for making them sit through it.
    – Servy
    Jul 26, 2017 at 15:52
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    Before reading any text, 60% of site visitors will watch a video if available. I must be one of the 40%. I would much rather read about something than have to sit through a video to explain it to me. I often skip video based stories or tutorials, opting for something written. Only advantage video has in my eyes is you show "actions" better. But anything else is just a waste of my time. Jul 26, 2017 at 15:53
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    Maybe it's because I'm getting old, but I'm also allergic to sites that force me to watch videos. Also, not everyone around the world has unlimited downloads, some people don't like their precious megabytes being chewed up by videos.
    – PM 2Ring
    Jul 26, 2017 at 16:43
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    I think making a video available is a good idea. I often prefer to watch a video than read a page of text. However, if a website tries to force me to watch a video, I'm gone. You won't be able to effectively force users to watch your video, but you will effectively annoy a large percentage of those who hit the page. Jul 26, 2017 at 17:42
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    @Servy I don't think you can argue that the existence of advice on how to use SO on YouTube creates the kind of value that an (optional) video on the "How to Ask" page could potentially provide. Jul 26, 2017 at 17:44
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    said statistic (60% prefer video if available) may not be representative of the audience that SO has. (or maybe it is, who knows. it hasn't been measured tmk.) I much prefer something i can ctrl+f. I do know that there is an audience here for video content, but, i disagree with forcing it being at all useful.
    – Kevin B
    Jul 26, 2017 at 18:10
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    While video content and help is likely useful, we have absolutely no plans to force users to watch a video to participate.
    – kristinalustig StaffMod
    Jul 26, 2017 at 18:21
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    I think this is a terrible idea, but it also points out the problems of the original idea. If people don't want to read a wall-of-text, and don't want to watch a video- why do we think they'd want to enter a chat room and discuss how to improve their question? I'm upvoting you just for pointing this out. Jul 27, 2017 at 0:20
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    If a site starts auto-playing a video (especially with sound) my immediate reaction is to close it as quickly as possible and never return.
    – LisaMM
    Jul 27, 2017 at 15:31
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