How do I know this? I got a copy of the website analytics.
The bounce rate for LessWrong's home page is 60%!
To be clear: Over half the people who visit LessWrong are going away without even clicking anything.
Yet how many NEW visitors are there? Almost half of the visitors are new!
Granted, new visitor statistics aren't perfect, but that's a LOT of people.
Simple math should tell us this:
If we got the bounce rate down around 30% (a reasonable rate for a good site) by making sure every visitor sees something awesome immediately, AND make sure that each visitor can quickly gauge how much they're going to relate to the community (assuming the new users are the right target audience), it would theoretically double the rate of growth, or more. There's a multiplier effect if the bounce rate is improved: you get better placement in search engines. Search engines get more users if they feel that the engine finds interesting content, not just relevant content.
It's been argued that it's possible that most of the bounces are returning visitors checking for new content. Well if half the visitors to the site each month are new, and we did a wonderful job of showing them that LessWrong is awesome, then the amount of returning visitors could double each month. We're getting a tiny, tiny fraction of that growth:
http://www.sitemeter.com/?a=stats&s=s18lesswrong&r=36
Why did I write you guys so much in the home page rewrites thread? Because I am a web professional who works with web marketing professionals at my job and to me it was blatantly obvious that there's that much room for improvement in the growth of LessWrong. Doing changes like the ones I suggested wouldn't even take long. Because I like this site, and I knew it had potential to grow by leaps and bounds if somebody just paid a little bit of attention to real web marketing. Because I was confused when I first found this site - I had no idea what it's about, or why it's awesome. I closed the home page, myself. Another friend mentioned LessWrong. Curiosity perked up again. I came back and read the about page. That didn't make things clearer either. I left again without going further. Friends kept telling me it was awesome. I came back one day and finally found an awesome article! It took me three tries to figure out why you guys are awesome because the web marketing is so bad. The new proposals, although they are well-meaning and it's obvious that John_Maxwell_IV cares about the site, are more of the same bad marketing.
I've been interested in web marketing for ten years. It's a topic I've accumulated a lot of information about. As I see it, the way these guys are going about this is totally counter-intuitive to web basic marketing principles. They don't even seem to know how harsh users are the first time they see a new website. They tend to just go away if it doesn't grab them in a few seconds. They're like "well we will put interesting links in" but that's not how it works! The links don't make the site interesting - the site has got to be interesting enough for users to click the links. Thinking the links will make the site interesting is backward. If you want to improve your bounce rate, your goal is to be awesome immediately in order to get the user to stay on the page long enough to want to click your link. If it wasn't usually hard to get users to click links, we wouldn't track bounce rates. These guys know this particular group of users better than I do, but I know web marketing principles that they're not even seeing when pointed out. To me, they seem to be totally unaware of the field of web marketing. The numbers don't lie and they're saying there's huge room for improvement.
If you want to grow, it's time to try something different.
Here's a thought: There is a lot awesome content that's on this website. We need to take what's awesome and make it in-your-face obvious. I wrote a plan for how to quickly find the most effective awesome content (the website statistics will tell you which pages keep new visitors on them the longest), and how to use them to effectively get the attention of new users - copy the first paragraph from one of those pages, which was most likely constructed by a competent writer in a way that hooks people (if it's keeping them on the page then it's essentially proven to!) and place that as bait right on the front page. (There is also a wrong way to do this.) Then of course, the user needs to find out why the LessWrong community might be a place where they belong. I shared ideas for that in "About us - Building Interest".
Don't let's assume that growth is going to be good. You're going to get more internet trolls, more spam, (there's a way to control spam which I would be happy to share) and more newbies who don't know what they're doing (I provided some suggestions to help get them on track quickly, preventing annoyance for both you and them). There will be people with new ideas, but if the wrong audience is targeted... well. We'd better choose what audience to target. I saw an internet forum take off once - it seemed to be growing slowly, until we looked at the curve and saw that it was exponential. That of course quickly turned to a dazzling exponential curve. Suddenly the new users outnumbered the old ones. That could happen here -- even if we do nothing. YOU can get involved. YOU can influence who to target. They're taking suggestions on rewrites right now. Go to the thread. I invite brutal honesty on everything I wrote there. Or pick my brain, if you'd prefer.
What do you want, LessWrong? Do you want to grow optimally? Who do you want to see showing up?
Volunteer web pro here: I'm a professional web developer. I primarily do CGI programming. I am also capable of front-end web design / graphic design, database work, and other related tasks. Related tasks: ensuring the host's sysadmins do things correctly, solving random technical issues, and various tasks that make use of cpanel / root server access. I've done a lot of work with a search engine optimization expert and a marketing coordinator, and have read quite a bit about web marketing over the last ten years or so. I'm not specifically a marketing professional, but I know a lot more than a non web professional and I'm willing to do the following things:
Review the Google analytics data (requires access to the account), present LessWrong members with ideas, come up with a plan for growth that is popular and takes all significant criticisms into consideration, present the solutions to an authority for approval or changes, implement those solutions (assuming the solutions are not so time-consuming that I can't fit them into my schedule but so far the ideas are not too large... though I definitely want a good plan for preventing an overwhelming number of new users incompatible with the culture, for sure, before doing things that will increase the risk/speed at which one is invited, and in fact, this protection may need to be added regardless if there is not already a plan to prevent it, so that could easily end up to be the #1 priority were LW to accept this offer), review the situation and data afterward to see what the result is, and either put it back to the way that it was or try an improved plan.
If there are unrelated requests, I may grant them, depending on whether they are within the realm of my capabilities and time constraints. Feel free to ask about them.
I can provide one or two freelance references (I'm F/T so I don't have a long list of freelance references), a criminal background check, credit check or other reasonable checks to an official LW authority assuming they agree to maintain my privacy. I would like to point out that so far two opportunities have presented themselves that seemed like potential opportunities to hack into the website, and I reported them promptly. You don't know me, but you've already tested me twice in that way.
I assume Eliezer gets so much email that he will ignore anything I attempt to send him. If you or another prominent LW member wants to present this to him, that would work a lot better.
Thanks! Would you email me to discuss further?
You're right that contacting Eliezer directly isn't going to be the most successful entry point into dialogue with SI.