Last week, we posted here on Meta about the new feature that we are launching, called the Staging Ground – a place where newly registered, low-rep users would receive help from higher-rep Stack Overflow users to improve their questions before their questions become public on Stack Overflow. Our vision is for the Staging Ground to be where new users can get guidance in a learning environment from volunteer experienced users to improve question quality.
Our research included a diverse group of Stack Overflow users. We do not know if our analysis will hold across the network or within our other tech sites (these are all questions that are outside of the scope of this initial work).
Past user research indicates that new users often have difficulty participating on Stack Overflow and perceive participation barriers on the site and that more experienced users want to ensure that the questions on the site are high quality. Given that, the Staging Ground is ideally a win/win concept which would enable new users to ask better questions, thus increasing the overall quality of questions on the site.
We want to thank the hundreds of people who have participated in the research for the Staging Ground. We truly appreciate your time and feedback. If you’re interested in participating, opt-in to research participation in your email settings so that we can contact you for future research studies.
What we have done
We conducted a five-phase research program to assess a diverse group of users’ thoughts about the Staging Ground concept and to determine how to build the MVP. We obtained feedback from three Stack Overflow user groups (Anonymous users, Newly Registered/Low-Rep users, and Reviewers) from geographically diverse areas to capture a wide array of experiences.
Anonymous users: Users who have not registered on Stack Overflow.
Newly Registered/Low-Rep users: Users with under 200 rep who have registered within the past 12 months and have been seen on the site within the past three months.
Reviewers: Users who have 500+ rep and who have (in the last year) been active with reviewing, close/reopen flagging, or editing.
Phase One: Exploring Whether the Staging Ground Holds Value for Different Users
In the first phase of research, we wanted to find out whether our idea of the Staging Ground held value for a diverse set of users. We conducted three surveys completed by a total of 918 users, including Anonymous users, Newly Registered/Low-Rep users, and Reviewers. We learned that this concept has significant potential and that there is strong interest. We also learned about the opportunities and hesitations that users had about the Staging Ground and we used these learnings to iterate on these concepts.
Key Findings:
The survey findings indicated that a large portion of all groups thought that the Staging Ground idea was extremely valuable or very valuable.
60% of Low-Rep/Newly Registered Users thought this new feature would be extremely valuable or very valuable, and 50% percent indicated that they would be more likely to ask questions if we implemented the Staging Ground.
42% of Reviewers thought this new feature would be extremely useful or very useful.
56% of Anonymous Users felt that this new feature would be extremely useful or very useful, and 57% stated that they would be more likely to ask a question for the first time.
All three user groups were interested in the feature, especially Newly Registered/Low-Rep users. Reviewers thought this new feature would be helpful yet expressed concerns about how they would be rewarded for helping new users, and they also expressed concerns that they may not have enough time to review questions. As we develop the Staging Ground, we will think about ways to streamline the review process (e.g., UI, topic filtering), and we will seek out feedback to determine what form of incentives we will provide to Reviewers.
Phase Two: Digging Deeper into User Feedback
In the second phase, we dug deeper into the research findings from the three surveys conducted in the previous phase. We conducted one-on-one interviews with Low-Rep/Newly Registered Stack Overflow users and Reviewers. These insights further revealed what we could improve and gave us additional valuable user perceptions of our core concepts.
Key Findings:
All Newly Registered/Low-Rep and Reviewers interviewed found significant value in the feature and expressed interest in using it. Along with the previous findings, we validated that the Staging Ground is seen as valuable by a diverse group of users and that we should develop this concept.
Among Reviewers, we learned that the benefits they saw in the Staging Ground included allowing beginners to make mistakes in a safe learning environment, decreased fear of Stack Overflow amongst new users, and maintaining high-quality questions on the site. They were concerned that some Reviewers would not provide friendly feedback, and concerned about the time between asking a question and it going public on the site.
Among Low-Rep/Newly Registered users, we learned that the benefits they saw in this new feature included increased comfort in asking their first question, higher quality questions and answers on the site, and receiving help from an experienced user. The concern about a time delay was also present with this group.
Phase Three: Internal Ideation Stakeholder Workshop
We conducted a workshop internally with various departments across the company. We discussed the existing findings and brainstormed ideas of what this could look like. Our aligned mission statement was: “How might we create a space where new users can more successfully ask a question, thus lowering barriers to participation and increasing question quality on the site?” We came away from this workshop with a variety of strong ideas about what we should include (and not include) in the Staging Ground, and we were able to diverge and then converge on ideas for the overall product direction.
Key Takeaways:
The Staging Ground should be a learning space where users can write good questions and improve their question writing skills.
We should provide significant guidance and support to new question askers—info on how to write high-quality questions, step-by-step guidance, and how to use the Help Center.
We should reward Reviewers with badges and potentially other incentives. We should think about how to streamline the question-reviewing process and make it more efficient.
Phase Four: MVP Concept Co-Creation Sessions with Users
We conducted interactive one-on-one co-creation interviews to better understand how to design the MVP. Together with a virtual whiteboarding tool, we envisioned what the design and functionality could look like. We learned about the mental models users have about the Staging Ground, and we heavily leveraged these insights to create the MVP designs.
Key Findings:
All of the Newly Registered/Low-Rep users and most of the Reviewers we spoke with expressed strong interest and felt that it would be a valuable addition to the site.
Among Reviewers, we learned that their perceived benefits of this feature included helping new users ask better questions and building a stronger community. Their concerns about this feature included avoiding the urge to answer a question and that users have to go through another step and wait to receive an answer to their question.
Newly Registered/Low-Rep users saw the benefit of educating new users on asking good questions, less insecurity about participating, and providing users with a place to learn. The concern about the time delay with questions was present as well.
Phase Five: Refining the MVP Designs
We conducted one-on-one MVP design assessment interviews with Low-Rep/Newly Registered users and Reviewers. We discussed the concepts in the previous sessions and the feedback on our MVP designs to understand what users thought. We gained valuable insights about our direction and used these insights to improve our designs.
Key Findings:
Both Reviewers and Newly Registered/Low-Rep users found the Staging Ground to be highly valuable and had positive reactions to the MVP designs.
Both Newly Registered/Low-Rep users and Reviewers were interested in participating and appreciated the step-by-step nature of the MVP, as well as the support provided (e.g., tips and links to the Help Center). They also liked that it felt like a “safer” psychological space to receive feedback.
Some users indicated that the feature should feel a little different from Stack Overflow and feel more celebratory and inviting.
The process of working through each step should be more precise. For example, some users had difficulty figuring out how to edit a question in the Staging Ground; this confusion could be reduced by making the edit button more visible and providing more workflow guidance.
We want to hear your thoughts about these two open research questions:
We’ll most likely reward Reviewers who participate with a unique badge for being among the first to participate in the Staging Ground. Once it moves out of the MVP phase, we’re considering an evergreen incentive where Reviewers will be rewarded with milestone badges. What do you think about this?
During the test period of the Staging Ground, new users who are opted in will not be able to remove themselves from the test. Reviewers who are included in the experiment will be able to opt-out. The plans right now are that if/when it goes live, that all eligible reviewers will have access to the Staging Ground, with the option to opt-out/hide it if they so choose like any other earned privilege. New question askers will remain in the Staging Ground till we determine the qualifications of them being allowed to exit/opt-out. For example, should it become default opt-out after users have asked a certain number of questions in the Staging Ground?
Update
I wanted to clarify a few things that are generating discussion. We are aware of the issues being brought up. We have discussed them internally. Right now, we are working towards a test of the Staging Ground to see how well it could resolve some of the issues on the site regarding low-quality questions.
We know that this and the prior post don't offer many details. That is intentional, as we wanted to establish why we are doing this experiment before showing the nuts and bolts of how it will work. The next few posts we have will go over that in more detail and be an excellent place to provide feedback and critique on what we have so far.