[Foundation-l] How to make unstoppable petty complaint a feature?
William Pietri
william at scissor.com
Wed May 5 16:13:15 UTC 2010
Thanks for bringing this up, David.
On 05/05/2010 07:31 AM, David Gerard wrote:
> No matter how much work is put into flagged revisions on en:wp, it is
> 100% certain that it will be greeted with deafening whinging.
>
> This is not a reason not to make it as good as possible, but the
> complaint is a certainty. Anyone who's been around Wikipedia or
> Wikimedia long enough can see this is what will happen. There is no
> change that will not be greeted with complaint, significant or petty.
>
> 1. Is this a bug or a feature?
> 2. If it isn't a feature, how can we make it into one? 'Cos we really need to.
>
I'm insanely busy with non-Wikipedia stuff for the next couple days, and
hope to come back to this more later. But even as a person fully
expecting to be the target for a lot of the grumbling, I wanted to come
out in favor of the complaining, or at least some of it.
Good software development is a dialog between the makers and the users.
Through use and discussion, we jointly learn what the product should be.
The future is not generally foreseeable, but we can at least react as
swiftly and smartly as possible to new learning as it comes in. This is
only possible with an engaged audience, and for better or worse, people
are much more likely to speak up when they see a problem than when they
are happy.
What I'd love is a way to foreground the reasonable, thoughtful, and
actionable complaints, while attenuating the other ones. Productive
complaints tend to be specific, personal, actual (as opposed to
hypothetical), limited in scope, future-oriented, practical, and aware
of the situation. E.g., "When I do X, I have problem Y that could be
fixed in way Z." Or, "When I observe a novice user doing A, they are
confused about B, and we could make it clearer in way C, but there's a
risk we will impact people in situation D."
Having no time machine, the FlaggedRevs team can't do anything about the
past, but we're very eager to improve the future, and clear, actionable
community feedback is vital for that.
How to achieve that, I dunno, but we do have a lot of collective talent
in creating, cataloging, and filtering information in ways that are
useful to readers, so it seems like we have a lot to work with. And
perhaps the complaining can be even put to use; is there some way to get
people to complain about bad complaints?
William
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