Social media: Contextual help on UK newspaper websites
So far in my observations of the use of social bookmarking links on mainstream media sites I have concentrated on the end results - the number of URLs that became popular on a service. Today I wanted to start looking at one aspect of the user interface that media sites provide, namely whether they have any 'contextual help' for users around social bookmarking.
Of course, it could be convincingly argued that actually the job of 'contextual help' here is really down to the target service. It is how Digg or Delicious handle a non-registered user clicking one of their icons for the first time that is the most crucial interaction. Nevertheless, several newspapers and television channels do include their own tips and advice about using social media. In this post I'll be examining those on British newspaper websites.
The Sun
The Sun is the UK newspaper with the most comprehensive contextual help about social bookmarking. Next to their social media icons is a text link labeled 'What is this?'
Clicking this launches a pop-up, with a very clear explanation of what social bookmarking is.
" LIKE the story you've just read? Then share it with the online world by using our great SHARE THIS ARTICLE feature.
At the bottom of some stories you'll see we've added 'quick-link' buttons.
Each button copies the URL of the story and adds it to some of the most popular social-content network sites on the Internet.
These sites allow readers to rate the importance of the content.
The story will then be listed higher or lower on the page depending how YOU vote.
Each of these sites will sit behind registration so you may have to create an account the first time you visit.
Once you have done that, you can add as many of your super Sun stories as you wish!
Each site we have chosen has different merits so you may prefer one over another so try a few out to see which one you like."
The pop-up then has brief descriptions of Fark, Digg, Delicious, Reddit, Newsvine, NowPublic and Facebook. Each of these descriptions contains a link out to the site in question.
Independent
The Independent also uses a pop-up to deliver contextual help about social bookmarking. Next to their icons is a text link 'What are these?'.
This triggers an overlay, which features an overview of social bookmarking, as well as a brief profile of the four social media sites - Delicious, Digg, Facebook and StumbleUpon - that The Independent features as links.
"Use these links to bookmark stories you find interesting on popular aggregator websites Digg, Facebook, del.icio.us and StumpleUpon. Once bookmarked, you can then uses these websites to access your favourite links from any computer, and also share the stories you think are interesting with people all over the web."
The Guardian
The Guardian was the only remaining paper out of the 12 featured in my 'Measuring UK newspaper success with social media' e-book to feature any sort of social media help, and this was negligible.
There were no visible links, but when the user hovers the mouse over either of the two 'Share' icons The Guardian features on each story, a tool tip appears. If the user is at the top of the page, the tool tip explains that the green icon 'Opens a share this page in a new window'.
The icon at the foot of the article has a different tool tip, stating 'Share this on Digg, del.icio.us, Facebook etc'.
When The Guardian's 'Share' menu is fully expanded, there is no further help on offer.
AddThis widgets
When I surveyed the newspapers to check their contextual help, three of them were using an AddThis widget to provide social bookmarking links - similar to the one that I use here on currybetdotnet. These papers were the Daily Express, News Of The World and The Mirror.
The AddThis widgets do not provide any contextual help, but they do provide a link back to AddThis.com. This is more useful for providing information about how to place an AddThis button on your own site, than it is about explaining how social bookmarking works.
No help at all
The six remaining newspapers - Daily Mail, Daily Star, Financial Times, The Scotsman, The Telegraph and The Times - provided no contextual help links in their 'roll-your-own' solutions to social bookmarking links.
Next...
Tomorrow I'll be looking at how much contextual help is provided to social bookmarking novices by the 24 hour news channel websites that were included in my recent social media study.