shahine.com/omar/

homepage | Send mail to the author(s) contact

yet another Microsoft blogger

 Friday, April 28, 2006

From two to one

A few weeks ago I wrote about how we’ve changed the account expiration policies for Windows Live Mail Accounts. That was one example of an anti-user policy that we’ve worked to address in our new product. There are a few more we’ve been working on, and they all share a common thread… meeting the expectations and needs of the customer while at the same time being responsible about our business.

One thread that has remained constant since the first day that we started work on Windows Live Mail is the struggle we’ve had with the advertising experience. We knew that many aspects of WLM would be different from the current Hotmail. We added such features as the reading pane, something that we were not sure would make it into the final product. In an effort to remain consistent with our existing advertising footprint, we simply assumed that we would design our interface with all the same ad formats and number of ads. However, at the same time we generated this concept of flights. A flight is a variation on the default experience. For example, one flight might not have a reading pane at all, one flight might only have one ad etc. We did this so that we could objectively measure the satisfaction of the customers in those flights and make good decisions about such important issues as advertising.

Before I go into what we learned, lets talk about the ad formats. In WLM there are three ads. The first is a square ad and appears in the Today page and the Sent Mail Confirmation page. These ads you see infrequently. Then there is the super banner, which appears at the top of the window. Finally there is the skyscraper ad, which is the tall skinny ad that appears to the right of the reading pane.

Now, the ad that posed the largest challenge to the design is the skyscraper. Because we design for 1024 x 768, the sky scraper simply doesn’t fit. You see, the ad formats are standard in the industry and the sizes were chosen in a pre-ajax world; before you had applications living inside of a window. The skyscraper is great for a scrolling web page, but not for a fixed width and height product. As such we spent many many weeks designing and coding a mail product that tried to maintain an advertising footprint that had both the banner and the skyscraper in a 1024 x 768 window. Let’s just say it wasn’t easy.

Meanwhile, over a period of months we learned a lot from our users about what they thought about our design; they liked it but felt like the reading area was too small.  They pointed to the skyscraper ad as the reason.  The flights we ran allowed us to measure just how users felt about the different experience, and what percentage of them were opting out of the beta. Early on users complained about different problems, but as time went on and as we addressed the majority of feature and service complaints the space/advertising issue bubbled to the very top, and it was time we did something about it.

Now, let’s look at this from a different perspective; that of the business and the advertisers. In order to spend ad dollars you are going to want to go to a company that has ad inventory to offer you. You also want to go to a place that has a lot of eyeballs and engaged users. We are such a place, and as you might guess, our service is funded most significantly by advertising dollars. Any change in revenue needs to be explained internally (ultimately with sound data).  While we were looking at the consumer feedback we were also looking at the advertiser feedback, particularly on the skyscraper.  Was it a good ad offering?  Was it effective?  What would removing it do in their world?  Would removing it make existing ad properties more valuable to them?  Would removing the ad create a better customer experience which would in turn be more valuable to them?  We believe the answer to this last question is “yes”.

Understanding the business of advertising, and the business of being an ad-funded communication service are things that I knew little about when I joined Hotmail 2 years ago. Our team has worked incredibly hard to measure and explain these things in the context of customer satisfaction (consumers AND advertisers) and our goals around growing our customer base as well as the number of minutes they spend in our service. We have gotten incredibly disciplined and downright good at knowing all about these things, while at the same time we’ve done the same with our Quality of Service and features relative to the competition.

At the end of the day why does this all matter? Because this is where all the competitive action is going to take place in the next few years. Google, Yahoo, AOL, and Microsoft are all going to be competing for one thing… advertising dollars. And how are they going to get the most advertising dollars? Better products, better advertising platform, better user experience, more engaged users and ultimately the right advertising inventory.

So, what’s the big deal, and why am I writing this. Well, one of my philosophies, and something I think our team shares is Don’t piss off the customer.

How do you piss off the customer?

  1. Give them a 2 MB inbox
  2. Don’t save their sent mail, or make it difficult to do so, and then delete their sent mail after 30 days.
  3. Make their inbox about advertising instead of about their email
  4. Have crappy Quality of Service.

Sound familiar? It sure does to me. All of these things are anti-customer. What’s the point of offering a service that’s anti-customer? I sure as heck have no intention of working on a service like that. I never would have taken the job that I did if I didn’t know and feel that everyone around me was driven and motivated to fix all of these things, and we have been working on all of these since day I started this job.

Starting next month we are reducing the number of advertising from two graphical ads to a single ad in the inbox. The skyscraper will be gone from Windows Live Mail! I hope people see this as an olive branch from us to the user, and the advertiser. The users will be happier and more engaged, and the advertisers will ultimately benefit in the end. This change and its impact is an investment that we believe is a smart one to make.  Everyone in MSN has been supportive of this decision and we wouldn’t be making it if we didn’t feel that it was the right thing to do and better for all of us in the long term.

Like our decision to extend account expiration from 30 to 120 days, this decision was months of work from dozens of people in our organization. We have more work to do, but the signs are all looking good :-).

 

Friday, April 28, 2006 11:31:50 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
All of this gives me hope that MS will get back on the right track. I abandoned hotmail years ago for many of the reasons you mentioned. The user experience had become miserable. The policy of deleting the inbox was the straw that broke the camel's back. One example from real life to show the real world effects of that policy. During 9/11 I was in the mountains of Tibet on a multi-month trek. I didn't even hear the news until almost a month after the event. When I emerged from the mountains I found my account deleted. Not only did I lose all the mail from that period including friends who had sent first hand accounts of the incident but I also lost an email from a friend sent a few days before by a friend who died in the towers. Devastating and obviously it turned me away from hotmail. Anyway I don't mean to beat you over the head with it, but not only do you guys have to build a great new app, but you have to overcome the anger of the users you have burned.

Here are some other issues you might consider when building the hotmail replacement.

1. POP support. Most people won't use it, but for those that do, it's a dealbreaker. Gmail offers nice POP support in their client.

2. Your ad solution sounds reasonable, but I would urge you to be even more creative. With your userbase you can dictate the format of ads. And the perverse thing is by limiting ads and making them less intrusive you make them more effective. My pie-in-the-sky suggestions:
a) no animation. period.
b) contextual (despite the privacy concerns, these are super effective)
c) black and white only until moused over. This would both make ads less intrusive and make the pop.
d) one small size at the bottom of each email and in the corner of the page.

3. Support for large files (15 meg RAW files are not uncommon these days)...

4. Feeback.

5. Platform agnostic support.

6. Good import and export to an open format.

7. 120 day expiration is still not long enough. If you want goodwill, make the expiration one year.

8. Much much better SPAM filtering. If I leave my windows live account for even a week it will fill up with hundreds of spam messages in my inbox (and many more properly filtered). A google account with the same easy to guess username only gets 2 or 3 spam a week and is much better at putting it all in my inbox.

9. Strong SMS support

10. More options for people with very large screens. For example how about some ajax code that lets us change the size of the div of the main viewing window...

11. RSS feeds of selected email correspondents.
Friday, April 28, 2006 12:20:04 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
As a long-time customer who has OFTEN toyed with the idea of pulling up stakes and switching over to Gmail or Yahoo Mail or one of the other flavors-of-the-month, let me say THANK YOU! This really is a big deal, especially to laptop users who have more limited screen space.

Keep up the great work!
Customer
Friday, April 28, 2006 12:35:22 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
Great!

The only other feature that I really want is automigration of emails to folders (e.g. I'm on mailing lists and it would be nice if those would show up in that folder rather than my inbox and I have to move it). Rules as in outlook would be great, but I would want MSN Messenger to notify me when a new email comes in, to the inbox, or the ruled folder...
Sean
Friday, April 28, 2006 2:08:36 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
Awesome! This would certainly increase the user experience. One more thing would be to limit or eliminate the animated ads. Thanks
Customer
Saturday, April 29, 2006 1:36:14 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
I saw the 11 suggestions above from a customer. I second that. Please get them implemented. I have another one. In OWA if I press the down arrow the next highlight moves to the next email which is now shown in the preview pane. This is a super convenient feature to use preview pane fully.

In the morning I have many dozens of adds. I simply put my index finger on down arrow and keep doing "next email" while reading them in the preview pane.
Employee
Saturday, April 29, 2006 7:38:57 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
Many great suggestions here. (Especially the first one). However I don't want to go without saying how much this is appreciated. Quite progressive, especially for a slow-mover like Microsoft has been as of late. I'm impressed.
Ellis
Saturday, April 29, 2006 4:13:54 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
This is a great move! I used to use Hotmail years ago, but stopped as Hotmail failed to keep up with other systems. With the removal of the "skyscraper ad", this will become a good system again. I might migrate back from AOL Mail (It's not great, but it supports IMAP and I can use it from Outlook on several different computers.)

Supporting either POP or IMAP would also be a great addition. I would prefer IMAP to POP, but either would allow for remote access via standard devices (like cell phones) without needing to resort to a WAP interface.
Glenn Blinckmann
Sunday, April 30, 2006 9:02:56 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
I have a problem with my outlook and Windows Live Mail - and it's simply this: The help tells me to download MSN's software, as it comes with the latest connector for Outlook. But my PC is a bit wonky, and I'm not an MSN Premium user - so is there a way I can get the latest connector to use my Windows Live Mail with Outlook without the MSN installer, or am I stuck forever unless I switch back to hotmail?

Any help would be *greatly* appreciated!

Thanks,

Drake.
Monday, May 01, 2006 6:52:17 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
You should reconsider your policy of showing email addresses. The vast majority of blogs keep addresses private and your should too. Showing them is kind of lmae and simply because spammers have now figured out how to look for strings in all caps in the middle of the address that contain AT and NO SPAM and send SPAM.
jake
Monday, May 01, 2006 9:03:08 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
This is great news! We're glad that you have been listening that 2 advertising banners were just TOO much. However, it seems that it actually depends on user prefences which ad is actually more intrusive.

For those who prefer the bottom view reading pane, the top ad should be removed, giving more room height-wise to read the email and also giving a larger inbox view.

For those who like to use the right side reading pane, the right side banner should be removed giving more space width-wise. The ad should automatically be placed based on how the user likes to view their mail.

Also, there is still just a ton of wasted space below the top banner that needs to be utilized a lot better to make the inbox more viewable. Other than that, I just want to thank the beta team for all their hard work and for listening to what we have to say!

Pete
Pete
Tuesday, May 09, 2006 12:58:27 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
maybe you can merge both the frames....the reading pane and the ad block???
Wednesday, May 10, 2006 1:33:22 PM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
Hmm. You said on 4/28 that "starting next month, the skyscraper ad will be gone". It's now 5/10, and it's still there. Maybe you meant 6/1 ?

Anyway, I awaited windows live mail for quite a while. Now it's here, and it's... Very, very, very slow. Really, it's unbearable. And not really very impressive compared to the really slick AJAX email that's out there. Even netscape's is better. Sorry. I'll wait for Yahoo I guess.
hotfail
Friday, May 12, 2006 6:46:00 AM (Pacific Standard Time, UTC-08:00)
So anyway I guess I'll use my email account for Yahoo.ca since I can NO LONGER open my hotmail account since about 2 weeks after I switched to the mail beta. Isn't it funny how yahoo has offer me the choice to switch back but hotmail has not? Or at least has not offered me the choice in a way that I can access it. I dont even know how to complain about this crap except find every site I can that comments about the beta and complain until I'm offered to switch back. Sorry if I seem a little harse but it's been weeks, I have 46 UNREAD EMAILS, I've tried to log on NUMEROUS TIMES, on 2 DIFFERENT COMPUTERS and it just freezes up. I've also found other complaints about the account and am considering taking the spam I get with yahoo and only using that account, that is of course once I get access to my unread mail and contact list from hotmail so I can email all my contacts and tell them NOT to use the mail beta. Thank you for your time, hope to hear a response soon.
erikalynne
Name
E-mail
(will show your gravatar icon)
Home page

Comment (Some html is allowed: a@href@title, b, blockquote@cite, em, i, strike, strong, sub, super, u) where the @ means "attribute." For example, you can use <a href="" title=""> or <blockquote cite="Scott">.  

Live Comment Preview