tl;dr; — There's a new ad type coming in the form of dynamic text that will lead users to documentation and courses offered by our clients, and ultimately community-curated canonical questions.
When it comes to page views on Stack Overflow and the content that we show, you basically have two types of things happening from an optimist's point of view:
- Stuff that goes right
- Stuff that could potentially go a lot righter
.. and not necessarily in that order.
It all essentially boils down to the goals and expectations that we set for what should happen when someone views a page on the site, and how close we come to meeting those goals. If you were to define stakeholders here, it would be you (the creators), visitors (the consumers), us (the company) and folks that spend money with us — our clients.
As we continue our endeavor to find things that improve our core Q&A experience and contribute to our bottom profit line, we look for intersections where we can make us more valuable to everyone, which often comes in the form of identifying opportunities that we've been wasting because we haven't yet discovered them.
No assumptions are safe, but I'm going to wager that most of you have happened upon developer resources made available by companies like Microsoft, Oracle and IBM. You've probably also seen resources where you might train for certifications that these various companies offer.
While these companies can also be found directly engaging with programmers by answering questions on Stack Overflow, their big compendiums of stuff remain relatively difficult to surface through a lack of exposure. As we've learned through taking care of Stack Overflow, people often find figuring out what to search for to be difficult.
We currently show a number of static ads that look something like this to the majority of visitors that arrive through search engines, let's pretend we're trying to connect to SQL Server using LOGO:
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | Hi, I'm an imitation of an image because Tim was too lazy to make one....... | +------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
That ad would be something letting you know SQL Server or something related to it existed, but it doesn't really help you with your current endeavor. In fact, the ad does little more than get in the way of what you hope is finally the information you've been looking for. Ever grumble out loud while trying to solve a problem in a hurry? Ever neglect to visit the lavatory until you find the solution, and found yourself exceptionally agitated with unhelpful things?
YES, I know you exist, SQL Server! I need to know how to connect to you! Get this out of my fa..
... well, enough with that while we're at work. And you shouldn't hold it in if you really need to go. But what if the ad looked like this instead:
+------------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | I'm an Ad from Microsoft. Here's how to connect to SQL Server using LOGO. | +------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
The ad becomes:
- Useful to the visitor because it puts the information they were probably looking for in a very prominent place
- Useful to our client because the content they invested tons of money into creating is actually being used
- Useful to our active community because it helps prevent a question that probably doesn't need to be asked from being asked
- Useful to us as a company because we make a little more money from a drive-by visit
.. and hey, you'd finally know about LEGO: A database driver for LOGO written purely in Objective LOGO. I'll stop. I know; it's getting silly.
In other words, getting back to my first paragraph, things go a little bit 'righter' on pages where this sort of magic happens. Now, if you will, imagine the same scenario, but the user is presented with a course (or perhaps even book) that would help them with the initial traction they really needed in order to get their head around the problem.
We anticipate quite a few questions about this, so let's get some obvious ones out of the way:
How does this work?
AI magic sees if it can connect the visitor to content that one of our clients would like to get better exposed. If we can understand what the visitor is trying to find, we'll generate one or more ad units in hopes that the user sees them.
The content of the page is currently the major contributor to how this is determined.
What will these new ads look like?
They'll be a sentence describing where a link is going to lead the visitor. It'll be obvious that the link is promoted, the text itself is what will allow the user to judge if the linked resource is relevant to their endeavor.
An example:
What about community-curated posts and tag wikis? Can we get more attention to them?
The current plan is to eventually identify and put 'canonical' FAQ-ish questions in our inventory, and show those when the system has confidence that there's a match.
There will be cases where intersections of interest occur, at which point sponsored content will take precedence. We're not yet at a point to contemplate how or (most likely) if competition between sponsors might occur.
Where will these new ads be shown?
The new ads will respect the reduced advertising privilege. Phew; I had to get that out of the way before anything else. Most of you won't see these unless you're not signed in, at least initially.
We're going to try leaderboard placement, as well as placement in the side bar. While we work out what works best, tests might cause these ads to be placed in addition to, or in lieu of others - we're not sure how long it's going to take to iron it out.
If you have the reduced advertising privilege, you're most likely to encounter these in the side bar, and then only on pages where we have inventory to show. Just keep in mind that we're testing if you visit the site without being logged in.
Because inventory is quite limited, it'll take a little while to see what performs best. We will update all relevant FAQs (including ad product sales literature) as soon as we land on something.
When will these be rolled out?
We'll begin testing these in at some point this week (beginning 20 May, 2018) with a rather sparse inventory, and then roll them out gradually. Performance metrics (as in server loads and stuff), click rate, interest in general and other things need to be gauged from there before we know more, and that'll take some time.
Are these Stack Overflow specific?
Yes. While they could conceivably be activated on any site where we currently display ads, they're going to need to soak for quite a while on Stack Overflow. We'll post a broader update on Meta Stack Exchange if it looks like this might be a product offered on other sites.
Questions? Please leave an answer and we'll do our best to answer it, but please anticipate a whole lot of "we don't quite know yet" beyond what has been explained in this post, at this point.
tl;dr; — we are allowing people to post vlq answers and stick them on top of any other answers as long as they are paying for it
fixed it for you. First the "welcoming" drama and now this, SO is truly no longer what it was.