FAQ Design, Twitter Tools and Crowdsourcing – The Monday May 30th Roundup
Big roundup this week, since we have some left over material from last week. I think we have a total of 10 posts, on subjects ranging from email to eyetracking.
Specifically, this week, we have FAQ design, cool twitter tools, working with custom reports AND variables, and a study on incentives in crowdsourcing.
Create
We start this week off with Six Revisions guide to designing effective FAQ pages. The best part? Their first step is to “say no” to FAQ pages. “The FAQ page supports the rest of the website’s content; if it doesn’t enhance what’s already there, it shouldn’t be a priority.”
Facebook has implemented a “send” button. Unlike “share” or “like”, “send” puts your content into a message and sends it to the friends they select. It’s basically the Facebook equivalent of “Forward to a Friend”.
Inspired Mag has a bunch of cool twitter tools. Some include Buffer, which spaces out your tweets so that you dont overload your followers, and Backtweets, which lets you find who is sharing a URL.
Analyze
Google’s Asia-Pacific conversion room blog (god that’s a mouth full) has posted a guest post on using custom reports to identify useful pages. This is actually a really useful post, as it gives direct exampled of how you can use GA to find deeper insights about your ecommerce store.
Finally, and coolest of all, Crowdflower has a post, and study, on designing incentive systems for crowdsourced workers. The interesting thing here is how standard incentives didnt work that well, while economic punishments did (quite opposite of the last study I read on this subject, which found that increasing economic incentives didn’t have much of an effect).
Kent Clark
Some have compared him to the Dalai Lama, others to Kublai Kahn. When he isn't teaching third world children how to purify water with nothing more than a plastic bottle and a garden hose, he is creating mad waves for surfers off the west coast with little more than a paddle. Some say there is a boat involved, others that he walks on water.
Little is known about his background. he appeared from nowhere 15 years ago and claims heritage from a land with neither want not need. He makes little comment, stating only that it was a pretty cool place.
Fire does not burn him, cold does not hurt him. Words could... but they don't. When he passes, pedals fall off branches. When he speaks, hair tugs at skin, pulling just slightly in his direction.
He does not sleep but he does dream. He has muscled his way into the lives of the famous and whispered his way into their hearts. And in the wee hours he plays oboe softly, as if to sooth the night to sleep.