Post by mdjuwel0203 on Nov 12, 2024 15:01:07 GMT 5.5
For example, when Buzzfeed was creating a sample snippet for “The Top Story,” they decided not to change the lead paragraph in response to user suggestions. Initially, their format was to express three news bullet points in one sentence, separated by commas. Users told them that it would be clearer if presented in three bullet points, rather than being perceived as one long sentence. "While reading I didn't realize that point two was not a continuation of point one until I saw point three." In first version of "The Top Story" summary, BuzzFeed uses commas to distinguish different stories top_story_2 After receiving responses, BuzzFeed made adjustments to separate different news with bullet points + line breaks.
However, the day after releasing this version, they sms promotional campaign received a large number of messages telling them that the previous version was better. buzzfeed_internal_mail Received numerous requests from readers to reply to Page 1 (internal BuzzFeed correspondence) After digesting reader feedback and adjustments, BuzzFeed launched a third version: keeping italics, changing comma paragraph spacing to complete sentences to separate different news. This presentation was liked by more people, so it was adopted as the final version. top_story_3 The final version of The Top Story "We found that this is not a matter of form. Bullet points or textual narratives are not the essence of the issue.
User opinions cannot be regarded as the Bible. In addition to listening to their opinions, you must also understand the problem. Only in essence can we truly solve the problem. Attention to details – even small changes can improve user experience Feedback from outside the industry can often uncover small details that are not easily noticed. Comments like the one below led BuzzFeed to decide to put the “And a little extra” section next to “The top story” and keep the placement of the images consistent to make them appear to belong to the same news.
However, the day after releasing this version, they sms promotional campaign received a large number of messages telling them that the previous version was better. buzzfeed_internal_mail Received numerous requests from readers to reply to Page 1 (internal BuzzFeed correspondence) After digesting reader feedback and adjustments, BuzzFeed launched a third version: keeping italics, changing comma paragraph spacing to complete sentences to separate different news. This presentation was liked by more people, so it was adopted as the final version. top_story_3 The final version of The Top Story "We found that this is not a matter of form. Bullet points or textual narratives are not the essence of the issue.
User opinions cannot be regarded as the Bible. In addition to listening to their opinions, you must also understand the problem. Only in essence can we truly solve the problem. Attention to details – even small changes can improve user experience Feedback from outside the industry can often uncover small details that are not easily noticed. Comments like the one below led BuzzFeed to decide to put the “And a little extra” section next to “The top story” and keep the placement of the images consistent to make them appear to belong to the same news.