Looking at Yahoo Answers again two years after its launch, I think I was wrong to think of it as a question answering website.
Despite the name, Yahoo Answers is a discussion forum. People are using it like a newsgroup, chatting about various topics. They are not using Yahoo Answers as much to generate authoritative answers to questions.
For example, looking at the "popular" answers right now, I see these questions: "Rudy Giuliani vs. Hillary Clinton?" "What's the last CD that you started out LOVING, but you played it so much you 'retired' it indefinitely?" "Egypt: when did I feel sad in Egypt?" "Name 5 one hit wonders of the eighties?"
These are not questions that have any objective answer. Rather, they are a discussion started with a subject line in the form of a question. People are "answering" a question not to provide an answer, but to engage in a conversation and chat with other people.
If Yahoo Answers is a discussion forum, it has a few implications. First, it should be compared not with the now-defunct Google Answers or Google's NLP question answering work, but with Google Groups, Slashdot, and other popular forums.
Second, those seeking to emulate Yahoo Answers probably would be mistaken to focus on question answering over community. People using Yahoo Answers are seeking conversations, not truth. The site is successful because it creates fun discussions and entertains people, not because it yields knowledge.
Third, Yahoo Answers itself may want to emphasize features that favor discussion and deemphasize features focused on generating high quality answers. In particular, while the "best answer" feature creates a fun, winner-takes-all type of contest, ending the discussions after a short period of time may be undesirable if the discussion is still attracting attention. In addition, if promoting discussion is the goal, features that help people find discussions they want to join would be beneficial; search and browse features may want to favor that over finding direct answers to questions.
I have to admit, I am late to the party in understanding the true purpose of Yahoo Answers. Two years ago, when Yahoo Answers launched, Gary Price said, "Will Yahoo Answers simply be the next generation of an online bulletin board?" Looks like he was right on.
See also my Dec 2005 post, "Yahoo Answers and the wisdom of the crowd", where I, mistakenly it appears, focused on Yahoo Answers as a question answering tool.
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3 comments:
I think you're on the right track, but missing one piece of the puzzle.
What makes Yahoo! Answers work is that there is a mix of serious knowledge seeking questions and fun discussion. The discussion keeps people on the site for extended periods of time, during which the chances that they will stumble upon a more serious question that they have expertise in go up.
There are a plethora of examples of great answers to specific questions mixed in with the fun discussion that you've pointed out. Here are just a few that I found in the last min:
Are my recent dividend reinvestments taxed at the short term or long term capital gains tax rate?
Electrical (only) cars: are they more energy efficient ?
What does it mean to be somewhere 'with bells on'?
So, again, the key concept here is that "everyone knows a lot about something" and I think what we're seeing with Answers is that if you can keep them coming back and on your site long enough, they'll run into questions that match up with their particular brand of expertise.
Udi is right on. It's a mix of the two, which is what makes it powerful. The key is that, instead of having a rigid hierarchy of forums or USENET groups, there are just loose topical tags which can exclude some of the more narrow and non-relevant discussions. It's better for question-asking than the traditional USENET structure, better for integrating into organic search answers; but still also not bad for procrastinating by discussion.
"People using Yahoo Answers are seeking conversations, not truth."
Is it not better to answer a question through discussion w/ others? Not everyone will give an appropriate response, but a couple of good answers might surprise w/ new perspectives one might have overlooked.
Much like life, believing in only the right and wrong while ignoring the gray areas can be short-sighted. Some things can't be explained in absolutes.
Well, my two cents.
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