James Tanner posted: MyHeritage Creates New Community-Powered Question and Answer Hub
The new MyHeritage Community is at: https://www.myheritage.com/community
Will the new MyHeritage Q&A impact GF&H SE's plans to expand?
James Tanner posted: MyHeritage Creates New Community-Powered Question and Answer Hub
The new MyHeritage Community is at: https://www.myheritage.com/community
Will the new MyHeritage Q&A impact GF&H SE's plans to expand?
Put concisely: No.
This site has co-existed throughout its life with other Q&A sites and we aten't dead yet (to quote my grandmother 10 years before life caught up with her).
I did an analysis 3 yrs 6 months ago of one of our competitors Analysis of 100 questions on Yahoo's Genealogy answers and I've no reason to believe that either that site or any of the "generalist-all-comers-all-questions-no-matter-how-ridiculous-volume-matters-more-than-quality" sites have raised their game.
But it doesn't matter if they have -- we've always been in a saturated market and trying to stake out our niche versus message boards/mailing lists, forums, Q&A sites, specialist websites... the list goes on).
Even I (pass the smelling salts) use other sources of information. Much as I love this place, it has not (in the past) helped me much identifying really local place names in a census or linked me with local experts who can translate my Welsh documents -- we don't have the critical mass everywhere in the world.
So we really need to identify our niche (quality questions with quality answers that you can apply to your family history problems if you're willing to step back and consider how our suggestions might apply -- but not if your questions are really local?).
No doubt somebody here can put a marketing spin on this... and then the assembled brains can determine how best to sharpen our focus and trumpet it to the world.
Let's assume for the moment that we are software developers, creating a new type of genealogical software that is different from what anyone else has ever seen before.
While we are in the midst of our development cycle, MyHeritage comes out with Family Tree Builder and gives it away for free. What's the appropriate response?
We're basically in the same position as someone writing open source software. Not everyone wants to write it -- not everyone wants to use it. If the commercial venues all exploded and went away tomorrow, would that magically drive all their users and developers to us? I don't think so.
The genealogical community is full of places to leave queries -- what's one more?
We have the opportunity here to build a site which is completely different from anything else out there -- and we aren't taking advantage of it.
Every commercial site, every magazine, forums all over the internet, have created places for people to leave queries and get answers to them. We don't need to be yet another place where someone asks "I have a John Smith in 1760 and does anyone else know this family?", where the answer is "I have a bunch of stuff, I'll send it to you offline" which helps no one except the one person.
With our self-answered questions, we can be like the professional genealogists who share their work in the journals, writing up our Q/As as case studies, so that others can see how we solved the problem, and can learn from what we did.
And with the questions that are not self-answered, we can demonstrate that you don't have to find someone who is already studying your own family's surname, or the exact town that your family came from.
As for building the community -- let's think a moment about why we are here. I came here because someone told me about the site, who was already involved in other sites. When I got here, I discovered that many of the community members were people I already knew. Sure, it took me a while to figure out what Stack Exchange was all about. But I stayed because it was useful to me to take a break from my own research, and work on someone else's problem. I dug in and researched things. I learned new things as I wrote up answers.
You'll note that that last paragraph is in the past tense. It's not useful to me to write answers to vague questions written by people who show no research effort. It's not fun.
So my response is -- MyHeritage is starting their own Q/A site? Good! Let them take the questions from the people who only know how to ask "I've searched (MyHeritage) and I didn't find anything!" Let them have all the "I want to know everything about my family!" posts and all the other vague, unanswerable questions which are off-topic for this site.
Just upping the raw number of questions per day is not enough -- we need to figure out how to attract good questions.
There's a quote attributed to the late Yogi Berra -- "If people don't want to come out to the ball park, nobody's gonna stop 'em." We want to advertise, find, and pull in the people who do want to come to the ballpark -- not the ones that wouldn't come, no matter what effort we make.
It may present a problem, but that's far from certain.
Being on a major genealogy website will certainly bring users to "MyHeritage Community". But I think the effect on G&FH.SE will depend on the size and nature of that user base. It may be that exposing more people to Q&A sites will actually "grow the market" for such things. In that case G&FH.SE can position itself as an alternative, perhaps for the more "discerning" genealogist.
Update Mar 2017
I've popped back to MyHeritage Community a couple of times recently to have a look. I haven't tried posting there. I wouldn't say the site is thriving, but there is a steady stream of questions. Eyeballing it, I'd say it averages 2 or 3 questions a day, but can reach double figures or be zero. So maybe a bit more than G&FH.SE, but not substantially so.
The site seems to have acquired a strong central/eastern European focus. There are lots of questions regarding translatiion to/from German, for example, and plenty from Poland, Russia, Scandinavia etc. Relatively few questions concern UK/USA/Canada.
I'd guess (very) roughly half of posts get an answer, and mostly that occurs within a few days of posting. That's probably because there is still (as far as I can tell) no search function, so the only "easy" way to find older posts is to click "Next" a lot. The questions do appear to be indexed by Google, so questions can be found that way, but from within the site older questions appear dead and buried. Learning from answered questions is not going to be a big "thing" at Community.
So MyHeritage Community has clearly found a useful niche, and is helping a modest number of people with their research. It is probably becoming a valuable tool for European researchers, in particular. But given MyHeritage's apparent huge user base, the number of active Community users is rather tiny. The UI/UX are awful - no search, no help, primitive filtering, one image per question, no posting guidelines - and I suspect it turns off far more potential users than it attracts. Because of this, it doesn't function effectively as a proper Q&A site, but it does work as a translation and "tell me info plzz" request site, and that's what many of the questions appear to be.
Based on this, I doubt that Community is growing significantly the market for Q&A sites. It may even be shrinking it! The question in my mind now is: will MyHeritage persist with the Community site? They haven't attempted to improve the site since launch, so I do wonder if MyHeritage consider the site worth the resources it costs to run.
I submitted a comment to James' blog post about MyHeritage's new Q&A hub. I said:
It's too bad more people aren't using the Genealogy & Family History Stack Exchange Q&A site at: https://genealogy.stackexchange.com/
Somehow, word of keyboard has just not made enough people aware of that fantastic resource where people share their knowledge with everybody.
James replied with:
I will look into it. Thanks.
Hmmm. That seems to indicate that James, a prolific blogger in the genealogy world, did not know about our site.
I'm curious as to what style of Q&A that initiative will have to offer.
I know that unless it has wiki-style editing of questions and answers, that allows its community to improve every post, the impetus for me to try it will not be there.
Why is this site so different from discussion forums? (a guide for new users) provides the rationale as to why I think our value proposition should not be affected if MyHeritage Q&A turns out to be just another Q&A site featuring long back and forth discussions rather than clear questions and answers.