Post by mdjuwel0203 on Nov 12, 2024 1:31:13 GMT -8
While internal feedback is valid and sometimes less hurtful, we are still the news department of BuzzFeed, not real users. " Start small and test your assumptions Excerpt 1 – “A little extra” buzzfeed_facebook_post BuzzFeed started small - running a summary experiment called "And a little extra" on a news story about the death of Argentine prosecutor Alberto Nisman . Millie Tran (editor of BuzzFeed) posted a sample of it on her personal Facebook feed, asking her friends if it could help readers who didn't know much about a specific issue but wanted to keep up with events to quickly learn about an issue.
This summary form eventually became part of the sms promotional campaign newsletter's content, titled "And a little extra." Even though it's not a finished product yet, BuzzFeed is still engaging with the crowd and talking about it. "This hypothesis is not a new idea: we thought users might miss out on interesting stories because they lacked the entry point (to understand what's going on). I wanted to find out why users started to care about a story, or what made them Decided not to do that. I focused the test on the way we wrote the summary rather than its actual form.
" BuzzFeed editor Millie Tran posted a sample of "And a Little Extra" on BuzzFeed has proven that this is a helpful form of content and found ways to continue improving it. In the end, BuzzFeed combined these ideas from friends and created "And a little extra" that included two news stories: political unrest in Yemen and President Obama's executive action on immigration . Eliminate noise Summary Two – The Top Story top_story_1 When dealing with such small samples that may be subject to selection bias, we must remind ourselves of the difference between personal opinions and large data feedback: sometimes the opinions of users do not help you make the best decision.
This summary form eventually became part of the sms promotional campaign newsletter's content, titled "And a little extra." Even though it's not a finished product yet, BuzzFeed is still engaging with the crowd and talking about it. "This hypothesis is not a new idea: we thought users might miss out on interesting stories because they lacked the entry point (to understand what's going on). I wanted to find out why users started to care about a story, or what made them Decided not to do that. I focused the test on the way we wrote the summary rather than its actual form.
" BuzzFeed editor Millie Tran posted a sample of "And a Little Extra" on BuzzFeed has proven that this is a helpful form of content and found ways to continue improving it. In the end, BuzzFeed combined these ideas from friends and created "And a little extra" that included two news stories: political unrest in Yemen and President Obama's executive action on immigration . Eliminate noise Summary Two – The Top Story top_story_1 When dealing with such small samples that may be subject to selection bias, we must remind ourselves of the difference between personal opinions and large data feedback: sometimes the opinions of users do not help you make the best decision.