site title

Topic: chaos

More Notes on Contest Format

04-20-12 by Lauren Gundrum. 2 comments

A few months ago, I outlined a contest formula called “Hot Topics,” which has become a staple in CHAOS’s site-promotion efforts. For those who missed that post, Hot Topics initially worked like this:

Pick a topic of the week, and enter everyone who asks a question related to that topic into a random drawing to win a prize. The number of entries a person gets is equal to the number of questions they ask about the topic of the week.

We now have a few variations on this contest format.

Variations on the Hot Topic Format

  • Highest-scored post – Like the name suggests, instead of raffling off prizes, we reward the question or answer that has the highest score.
  • Most-viewed post – Similar to the “Highest-scored post”, in this variation we reward the post that gets the most views during the contest.
  • Showdown – Showdown contests are slightly different than Hot Topic contests because they involve two topics, pitted against each other. Our first showdown contest was Skyrim versus Modern Warfare 3 – a battle to see which game got the most views and which users asked the top-voted question and answer in each category.

Skyrim vs. MW3 successfully engaged the Gaming community, but it hinged on a manufactured rivalry that didn’t make much sense. Because of that, we’re now using this form of contest when there is a pre-existing event hinged on a showdown scenario. For example, Marvel Comics’ blockbuster event for 2012 is the mini-series Avengers vs. X-Men. Just as the series pits two premier super teams in battle, the current Avengers vs. X-Men contest running on SciFi goes right along with that by pitting our Avengers questions against our X-Men questions in a battle for views.

Drawbacks of the Hot Topic Format

The Hot Topics contest and variations thereof are generally successful in engaging the community and celebrating important events, but there are some drawbacks:

  • They primarily incentivize posting. While posting questions and answers is arguably the most important component of the Stack Exchange model, there are several other actions that keep our sites running too – voting and sharing to name a couple.
  • Only a few people can win, and whether you win is largely left to chance. That is, while you can promote your post by sharing it with your social networks, it’s mostly out of your control how many votes or views it gets.
  • Because there are only a few winners, the competition tends to be very selfish: you can’t vote for or share other people’s posts without hurting your own chances of winning.

Our Newest Contest Format: The Mission

Mass Effect 3 Mission 6

To rectify the shortcomings of Hot Topics, we’ve come up with a new kind of promotion: the Mission. Here’s how it works:

The Mission promotion is pretty simple: design a series of levels, each one more difficult than the last, and give prizes to everyone who completes them.

We first tried this style of promotion to celebrate the release of Mass Effect 3 on Gaming, and it was wildly successful. We ran the contest for 3 weeks, and ended with over 900 questions tagged Mass Effect 3! Nine people completed the entire series of Missions (6 total), and over 50 completed Mission 1.

Our second contest with this format was held on Ask Different to celebrate the release of the new iPad. Instead of 6 Missions there were 3 Levels, and numbers were adjusted accordingly. Additionally, there was a voting requirement.

Benefits and Drawbacks of Missions

There are several benefits to this type of contest in comparison to Hot Topic or Showdown contests.

  • You can incentivize activities besides just asking and answering questions. You can also change the numbers and actions according to what is most appropriate for the site.
  • The first Level/Mission is relatively easy to complete, and they get gradually more difficult. Therefore, users can choose the extent to which they want to be involved.
  • Instead of giving prizes to a set number of people, everyone who completes a certain set of tasks wins. We do put a limit on the number of prizes we can give out per level just so we don’t go bankrupt, but we try to set the limit to be higher than the number of people predicted to complete the Mission based on average site statistics. (As those of you who completed Level 3 in the iPad contest know, we vastly underestimated you! For this we apologize and will try to do better in the future.)
  • Because multiple people can win each Mission/Level, the contest tends to be less competitive. You can vote for and share other people’s posts without hurting your own chances of winning, which better preserves the way the site works naturally.
  • Winning is more controllable. That is, each Mission or Level lays out a few actionable tasks, such as “ask or answer 35 posts and share 15 posts.” We do impose a minimum score requirement on some of them, but the minimum score is always achievable without having to game the system.

These benefits don’t mean that the Mission-style contest is perfect; here are some drawbacks:

  • Sub-par posts are a concern in Mission-contests for a few reasons. First of all, later Missions require users to post a large number of questions and answers, and the focus on quantity may reduce the quality of the posts. Additionally, the extrinsic motivation that large prizes introduce can cause a flood of new questions, which can overburden the moderators and the community in general (see meta threads here and here for more detail).
  • Asking people to share a set number of posts may cause them to exhaust their social networks, making sharing less effective in the future.
  • Mission-style contests require a large time commitment to complete, and we give out a significant number of prizes. Therefore, they are only appropriate when coupled with a very important event in the community, such as the release of a highly anticipated game or product.

Clearly, choosing a contest format depends heavily on the site and the event. Any site that is receiving CHAOS attention is eligible for a contest. However, as stated above, Mission contests will probably only be run on sites that already have  big events happening in their community. I’m optimistic that with these few basic contest models and the suggestions provided in meta, we can continue to improve and come up with something that fits our sites even better.

Question [Closed]… and it’s probably best that way

11-30-11 by Sam Brand. 8 comments

If you’ve poked around our network, then you’ve probably noticed that we hate fun at Stack Exchange. Hard-line Q&A is in our evil DNA. And you know what, I kinda like it that way. But I haven’t always been onboard…

Flashback to late September, when I asked the following question at our Skeptics site:

New York pizza is the best pizza, sure. But is it really because of “the water”? 

I would link you to the question, but it no longer exists; it wasn’t just closed, but deleted forever by a moderator because the question did not improve the Internet. Or maybe it was because the question was “extremely off topic,” or because it was based on a false premise, or maybe because I did not prove with a hyperlink that anyone, other than myself, actually believes NY pizza is the best in the world. In any case, my lazy grab at an objective answer for a subjective question is now banished to the sewers of the Internet where only one of our savvy devs can retrieve it. It’s probably best that way.

But at the time, I thought the moderator might have closed my question because of his own personal taste. His surname is spelled with double consonants and ends in a vowel. He must be, I thought, a hardcore pizza traditionalist. But now I know he’s just a good mod.

I know this because the Skeptics site works. It is one of my favorite sites in the network. But I also know this because I’ve seen the light. Even as my questions continue to get shut down across the network, I’ve come to realize that the conservative school of community moderation is the right school of community moderation, at least for Stack Exchange.

When Joel & Jeff first sat around the campfire and dreamed up Stack Overflow, they did so with an insight in mind: They weren’t going to just create a forum where a user can receive an answer. SO (and later, SE) would be a platform to encourage intelligent, invested answers deserving of links across the Internet and useful for generations to come.

Too local? Take it to Yelp. Too easy? Take it to Google. Too subjective? Take it to Quora. Too fun? Take it to Facebook.

Stack Exchange is about objectively correct answers that stand the test of time. There is little room here for questions that ask for something less correct or less permanent.

Of course, this focus on “canon” — a word we find ourselves using a lot around here — has its drawbacks. Try promoting Stack Parenting to moms who want to share personal insights about child rearing. Or try selling the Bicycles site to an overwhelmed blogger who seeks for his readers an online outlet where they can continue “the discussion” he started at his own site. Stack Exchange can do little to instantly appease these Internetters. And that makes my job hard.

But the toughest jobs are very often the most rewarding. (My job does kick ass.) And the most rigorous answer is very often the most helpful. (See here for just one of countless examples.) Hard human work isn’t necessary to participate in Stack Exchange, but power users and bursts of focused use are the biggest assets we’ve got.

Which brings me to yesterday. It was late afternoon. The sky was gray. And I watched over Joel’s shoulder as he personally closed a question that was causing some buzz at the Travel site. Joel said the question was crude and intentionally provocative. I suggested maybe there wasn’t enough information available to make an assumption about the user’s intentions. Joel said maybe, and he proceeded to close the question. I swiveled back to my desk and got back to whatever it was I was doing.

We’re pretty serious at Stack Exchange. And I’m pretty sure we’re better off because of it.

Stack Exchange – Bringing Writers and Fans Together!

10-27-11 by Brett White. 0 comments

Stack Exchange – Bringing Writers and Fans Together!

If the dozen+ action figures on my desk here at StackHQ doesn’t give it away, I’m a pretty big comic book fan. Like, really big. Naturally I gravitated towards the Science Fiction & Fantasy site, where my abnormally high-levels of X-Men/Buffy/Star Wars adoration raise few-to-no eyebrows. I fit in somewhere, guys! Sci-Fi is still a Beta site, which means it has a lot of room to grow. Eventually it will graduate and get a fancy site design (like Cooking or Gaming) and all will be right with the world. Yes, goodbye poverty and war! The universe will go the way of Star Trek once the Sci-Fi site has graduated!

Since I am a pretty big proponent of peace and harmony, I’m doing my darnedest to expand the scope of Sci-Fi.SE and spread the word to potential users. Come on, the people that know the entire history of Bib Fortuna are the exact same people that have a million questions about him. The site is incredibly useful if you have questions about everything ranging from story identification to crazy-detailed explanations of pseudo-science and everything in between. There’s now a new area that I can foresee some Stack Exchange sites excelling at and benefiting from, one that I’ve been testing out for a while now: direct creator/fan interaction!

In a site like Sci-Fi, users are asking questions about works of fiction. The answers to these questions can be quite speculative, and when it comes down to it, the only person that knows the answer is the person who actually wrote it. Users benefit from having writers on the site, answering questions about their work. “But Brett,” you’re now saying out loud to your computer, worrying your co-workers, “that sounds JUST like a forum, which is EXACTLY what Stack Exchange wants to avoid being!” First, your co-workers now think less of you. Second, I see your point! But where do we differ from a forum? Creators can ask questions too. When you’re dealing with shared universes like the Marvel and DC Comics ones, who knows the minutiae of continuity more than the fans you are writing for? Our site definitely lends itself towards comic book editorial staff; now instead of doing the exhausting Google searches yourself, you can crowd-source with your actual fanbase, who, because they are on a Stack site, are providing accurate information and hyperlinks and etc.! Wow!

So far I have implemented this 3 times, and I’d call all three of them a success.

  • On September 6th, I asked a question on behalf of comic book writer Fred Van Lente, who asked via Twitter if She-Hulk could get a haircut. User Martha F. replied with an incredibly detailed list of short-haired Shulks…with pictures!
  • On September 25th, someone asked “How does the Hulk change mass?” I tweeted this question to “Hulk” writer Jeff Parker, who tweeted an answer back. I answered the question on his behalf and BAM, accepted answer.
  • On October 25th I asked a question about “iZombie” and tweeted it at series writer Chris Roberson. Robserson then actually registered with the site to answer my question, providing the most direct creator-to-reader interaction yet on the Sci-Fi site! I’m assuming. Seriously, I doubt that George Lucas has answered “Is C-3PO a slave?

I want these types of interactions to be a daily occurrence on Sci-Fi. I honestly believe our site is beneficial to professionals in the field of creating science fiction, and I want them to use it! After all, the more people that get involved in the site the quicker it can graduate…and then we all get world peace.

World peace!