SciFi and Fantasy Book Club discussion
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New GR book page

My Chrome library add-on that tells me my library availability doesn't work now, and honestly every single thing I can think of has been made worse or less useful.
I don't think that GR is going the way of Shelfari, but I do think that they are trying to make the site more app-like and aesthetically appealing for mobile, but ruining the usefulness of the pages and community/friend features as they do so.

I don't like the new book page eiter and I've already sent my feedback to goodreads. It's too much white space, some information is even redundant, the font is awful in Firefox and the features I actually use are harder to use.
My thoughts on this are: As a usability professional, I have to say, usability of this page from a community-building standpoint is horrible. Since amazon has enough money to hire good professionals, I have to assume it's intentional. Amazon wants to minimize the community aspect of goodreads and maximize the marketing and selling aspect.
But I am not surprised, I mean I knew that as soon as I heard they had bought goodreads, and I honestly think nobody who knows goodreads belongs to amazon should be surprised. I mean, there is a reason why monthly book of this group are often on sale on amazon before we read them: It's an automated algorithm and this group is large enough to make it useful for amazon.
Community management and moderation is hard and expensive and it doesn't bring in money, marketing and selling does. People who write professional reviews and have a large following, authors or publishers who pay for their books being featured in recommendations etc., buying books off amazon directly on the goodreads page and so on.
Of course they are doing it.
That being said, I am not particularly tied to goodreads. There are other pages and yes, I know, the community etc., but it just takes some people to start.
My thoughts on this are: As a usability professional, I have to say, usability of this page from a community-building standpoint is horrible. Since amazon has enough money to hire good professionals, I have to assume it's intentional. Amazon wants to minimize the community aspect of goodreads and maximize the marketing and selling aspect.
But I am not surprised, I mean I knew that as soon as I heard they had bought goodreads, and I honestly think nobody who knows goodreads belongs to amazon should be surprised. I mean, there is a reason why monthly book of this group are often on sale on amazon before we read them: It's an automated algorithm and this group is large enough to make it useful for amazon.
Community management and moderation is hard and expensive and it doesn't bring in money, marketing and selling does. People who write professional reviews and have a large following, authors or publishers who pay for their books being featured in recommendations etc., buying books off amazon directly on the goodreads page and so on.
Of course they are doing it.
That being said, I am not particularly tied to goodreads. There are other pages and yes, I know, the community etc., but it just takes some people to start.

That got me to thinking about what I use that page for, sort of ranked by how often I use/check for them:
-awards
-year of publication
-pages
-my shelves
-Series info (click through to series list)
-Readers Also Enjoyed similar books...
-Friends' rating average
-Friends' ratings
-Friends' reviews
-Following's ratings
-Following's reviews
-Community reviews
-Filter community reviews by # star ratings
-Friends' activity / comments / shelves
-Following's activity / comments / shelves
-My activity/rating/shelves (usually I launch this from the "My Books" page, not the book page)
-Books by this author (often click through to author page)
-About This author (often click through to author page)
-Discuss this book
-Goodreads rating
-Quotes from this book... click through to see all quotes.
-Recommend It
Things I occasionally do when I notice them on the page, but I don't think of them until I see them:
-Lists With This Book
-Stats
-Genres
-Get A Copy ( i have personalized the library links)
-Reader Q&A
-Articles featuring this book


Use this email address: gr-book-beta-feedback at goodreads dot com

edit: Well, we do have a button that says Amazon, but it's not the large one with the price like I see when I'm not logged in.
edit2: I haven't seen the beta book page's US version, so I don't know how that looks. And I've blocked a lot of the one I have from memory, trying to pretend it doesn't exist.
I don't see a "Kindle"-button, but I do have the unmovable amazon-Button on the old and the new book page. Additionally, the new book page does not take into account my customized order for other shop websites, which makes the feature irrelevant to me, because the top pages are us shops.

I didn't realize that there were different regional pages. I screenshotted the one I see in the US (under the spoiler tag so as to not overwhelm the thread), with Annoyance Commentary(tm). Ugh... Going through and pulling all of this made me realize that it's even worse than I thought.
(view spoiler) ["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>

I certainly noticed that when I tested the Beta, it is one of my most-used and valuable pieces of info on Goodreads. Of course I assumed they are not running it through a calculating/database yet because that would be crazy to not include that?!
Also, what are you saying about "shelving"? It will be harder to get to / see? I mean, they would not get rid of it. would they? Existing users would blow a gasket.

The number of gaskets blown re: previous "improvements" hasn't changed GR's mind about anything, so don't hold your breath.
No, I'm not still mad about the homepage?!?!?

Make it good. Then once it gets good enough, Amazon will buy it, just like they did IMDb.org and Goodreads.
{cheerfully} 'cause that's how they roll! 😂
I don't mind if they make huge "Buy on AZ or..." buttons, I suppose they do want to pull in a little more cashola. As long as they keep the Useful and Good Stuff too!

Yeah, that's what I mean. I can entirely understand why they wouldn't want shelvings without ratings/reviews to be visible, especially after the cluster-eff policy change regarding reviews that were "about the author, and not the book". (IE: if an author was harassing people, and you mentioned that in the review space to warn others, that would and still likely does get your review deleted.) As a workaround, people started shelving the books "not for me" or "Nope" or similar "not gonna read this" type shelves... and my guess is that authors have complained that this is turning people off of their books, and Goodreads has decided to nix users ability to see that on the book page. Gotta make the authors happy.
I have nothing against authors in general, but this is supposedly a site for READERS, and yet so many of the functions that READERS use is getting the axe because negative shelving inhibits sales.

The number of gaskets blown re: previous "improvements" hasn't changed GR's mind about anything, so don't hold your breath.
No, I'm not still mad about the homepage?!?!?"
Same. That's why I've given them feedback, but I know that it won't matter, and I'm just gonna have to adapt or leave.

OK, I'm getting way too angry, better stay out of this thread and pretend all is fine.

I will look at the Beta page again this week and send feeback. Then will adopt Anna's strategy.

Uh huh. I'm sure they regret replying to me. I was not very gentle in my reply, though I did tone it down from the original version in the end... in the spirit of "this person isn't the decision-maker, but I'm not going to hide my displeasure". #Sorrynotsorry
So, here are some things I've determined since yesterday:
- Top shelves has gone away in the beta. GR is using our crowdsourced shelvings to create "genres", but then has decided that mass shelving data (as seen here: https://www.goodreads.com/work/shelve...) is not to be visible/accessible from the bookpage anymore. I believe that if one knows that URL and the book ID, it could still be adjusted and used to get to the shelves page, but, you know... that's a pain in the ass just to see shelvings. And that's IF they don't remove that page entirely from being visible since it's no longer linked from anywhere or "necessary".
This is more evidence for the burying/removal of visible book shelvings (can't let all those "not-interested" shelves impact sales!) but it's also a problem for book eligibility validation for groups and challenges like is done here - like if a lot of people have shelved something as "non-binary" but not enough to make it a "genre", so it would be very difficult to validate whether a book qualifies for a challenge like the Amazin' 8s unless you've already read it.
- The "missing" review issue I mentioned yesterday is actually a "feature" of the new bookpage. This is apparently the new way that we are to do edition specific reviews, or review a different edition re-read, etc, because they removed the "Review X Edition" link. Because I wasn't looking at the edition I had actually reviewed, the review and star rating doesn't show, so it's like I never reviewed it at all. (Not sure why a random selection of shelves sometimes does, but whatever.)
The problem, of course, is that there's nothing indicating the book has EVER been reviewed (and "read" is not sufficient, as that's a shelving, and not a review), so it will likely cause lots of people a lot of confusion if they think that their review has been deleted, or never posted, or went missing, etc. So, I foresee a lot of frustration from people who then have to rewrite reviews, and/or flock to GR Help to report the issue of their "missing" review, etc.
- These links are just gone:
Stats (https://www.goodreads.com/book/stats?...)
Recent Status Updates (https://www.goodreads.com/user_status...)
Recommend It (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/4...).
- The beta bookpage doesn't show reading progress, shelving updates, or status updates. User shelving updates and status updates currently also exist on the My Review page, but... I'm not sure if they will change to be edition specific (they aren't currently)...
But it's also not possible to get to the Review page until you've written (or at least POSTED) a "review" in the new version. Today, I can view the review page by clicking on "My Activity" from the bookpage, which takes me to the review page, but not the "edit review" page. That no longer works in the beta version, and you must go through the edit review process to get to the same Review page. Click "Write a review" (which isn't what I want to do) and then... Post a nothing review. Then I get to see the Review page.
- Friend reviews/ratings show now in some random order, instead of being prioritized according to Text review (likes high to low), then Ratings. Shelvings without ratings/reviews aren't visible at all in Beta.
- "Other Editions" is hidden under the "more info" section, which explains why I wasn't able to find it even after the search reported there was one. I have been keeping that section minimized just to reduce the amount of scrolling necessary, because this page is insanely huge now.
Sorry for the wall-o-text. TL;DR version: They are doing away with a hell of a lot of useful functionality, and changing site behavior that's been in place since Goodreads launched, and it's not at all clear or intuitive and will undoubtedly cause a whole lot of confusion and aggravation... which they'll ignore until either the complaints or the users go away.

NOT the review of that edition.
Here's two examples, for books that I have read and review multiple times (don't judge me! lol). The Beta, regardless of edition, links to the same review, despite what is actually showing on the bookpage, whereas the current bookpage links to the ACTUAL review of that edition:
The Shining
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
Beta: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Current: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
B: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
C: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/2...
B: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
C: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
B: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
C: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
IT
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/8...
B: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
C: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1...
B: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
C: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/6...
B: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
C: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/8...
B: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
C: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
Every single time I think it can't get worse... I'm wrong. Off to email the lovely folks on the Goodreads Bookpage team again.
There's an adage that says if something is free, you're not the customer, you're the product. And I get that? But I also think we've proven demonstrably that word of mouth is extremely important for sales, and if F*cebook shows us anything it's that community and poking emotions can be extremely lucrative. So it's sort of a given to me that they're going to want to "use" us in some way, and that the way we will be used will be profitable to them. I just don't get why they aren't doing anything with the community aspect when that's what really separates this from a spreadsheet. If I can't see what friends are doing and talk to them easily, if I have to scroll several times to get to FREE DATA the community has given to Amazon, then really, I can log this all in Excel. I just want a place to talk and track books. If I can't do both here, then I can do them each separately somewhere else.

Sure. And I'm Queen of Mars.
I know that when I design development projects in my day job, it's ALWAYS recommended for the developers to give a beta/test version that contains none of the actual functionality the end product will deliver, with no explanation or context. "Here it is! Test it out!"
"Oh, none of what you expected, need, or want is there? We're still figuring it out. If you complain ENOUGH, or get enough people to complain about the stuff we decided you don't need, maybe we'll add it. Partially."
Sometimes I wonder if Goodreads is actually a large social experiment testing how loyal a userbase is. "How much will they put up with losing before they bail? What is it that keeps them here? Let's find out!"

Also the new series page. RAGE! So much rage. I can't fucking believe they're choosing to mutilate what they call the DESKTOP version, to make it look prettier on phones, when they should be focusing on fixing the app, which is supposed to be designed to be used on phones.
Breathe. Breathe. Breathe. Get out of this thread.
edit: I understand why they want to make it prettier. I have nothing against making cosmetic changes, but I hate that we always lose functionality because of it. I can easily add to my million lines of CSS fixes to combat any ridiculous visual crap they throw at us, but I can't add key functions when they remove them.
The API (which is a way for people who develop their own apps/tools/etc. to access goodreads data), which was always part of goodreads' open policy, is also being deprecated, meaning it won't be supported in the future. They say they are still supporting the people who already have an API key, but keys are being deactivated already.
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/...

That depends on the nature of the testing that they want done. If their goal was actually usable functionality, they would ensure that functionality was testable when they made the beta version available... but your point is still valid.
They absolutely did rely on "new user" feedback, those coming from sites like Shelfari where they were used to more colorful and pretty displays... and the users who were like "OMG GR looks so BORING" won the day. The users (like me) who don't care what it looks like, but definitely CARE WHAT IT DOES lose every time.
Back to the Beta... The limited users who are even able to see the beta and try it out aren't given any information about the changes, they aren't given a list of "enhancements" or what the goal of the change is supposed to be... they are relying on users to catch what's important to them and report it missing. Statistically, if I'm the only one who is like "I need the Friend Average Rating!" they will not gauge my need as important, and adios to that feature. Even if everyone wants something back, they'll decide based on business decision, like how much the perceived "negativity" of shelvings impacts sales. They can and will likely argue that crowdsourcing shelvings for genres is enough, and there's no need to see all of the user-created shelves for a book... if we want to see user shelves, we can go to the user's profile for that.
I'm convinced (and will never be persuaded otherwise) that they removed the GR Feedback group because they wanted to remove all public negative reaction to the very unpopular changes being made. Now, there's the "help" page, where you can ask questions, and as soon as it's answered, the thread is locked. They dissuade any "feedback" there and refer it all to email or the "contact us" link - both private, and you can't even view question threads except in the general search results. I was a heavy Feedback user, and was invited to be a "Goodreads Community Ambassador" for the new "Help" page, but I had concerns about the new version and what would be expected of me, which were never addressed, and it turns out that the gig apparently ended up being GR Community Shill. No thanks.

Exactly. That's why I keep telling them I don't mind if they want to make it prettier, that's understandable, but it can't be at the expense of functionality.
Becky wrote: "I'm convinced (and will never be persuaded otherwise) that they removed the GR Feedback group because they wanted to remove all public negative reaction to the very unpopular changes being made."
Yes, another thing that still makes me ragey. I think I've used "Help" like three times since it launched, and it's always absolutely useless. Feedback group was great. I still rely on the FGPS group for info about bugs, etc. (I think they're closed to new members.)

Agreed. Might as well be shouting into the wind though.

One of the many complaints I have made is that it isn't even pretty. Huge areas of white space and words in giant print don't make anything look better.
I did get an email saying "a lot of the features [I] request are still in progress", but they didn't specify which.
Also, because of professional honour I have to add, it is absolutely possible to make a piece of software look good and modern AND make it usable for different target groups. You just have to... well, want to. And maybe we are not one of the target groups.
Also, because of professional honour I have to add, it is absolutely possible to make a piece of software look good and modern AND make it usable for different target groups. You just have to... well, want to. And maybe we are not one of the target groups.

(I'm not doing a very good job staying out of this thread.)


I don't know if it would work on the Kindle though...

(And I know for sure that everyone doesn't have it yet because I also use the mod account, and it's not there.)

That's not a dumb question, Lori. It's common practice (both in GR and in general, in my experience) for test/beta versions to only be available to a subset of people, probably so that the volume of feedback isn't completely overwhelming. Even when the GR Feedback group was still active, not everyone would be included in beta testing, but everyone (who was a member of the group, or cared to join) could chime in/add to feedback around it. AND they would have a heads up that changes were on the way, and not be completely blindsided by huge changes.


Believe me, I am! :)



Do you mean shelving as in adding your own tags, seeing your own tags, or ..."
No, I had meant that I rely on seeing the ways users have shelved books. On my kindle, I have an extreme number of customized shelves- or Collections as kindle calls them- but I haven't gotten around to doing this in Goodreads. But hypocrite that I am, I look at other people's shelving on a given book listing.

I think we'd need to be clear that genre-style top shelves is still useful and should remain visible.

Here's the link to the screenshot I took of the "Shelved by" section of another book. It shows a couple names (2 or 3) plus however many additional friends have shelved the book, but it's not clickable, expandable, viewable or anything. And since only ratings and reviews show in the Friend Reviews section now, it's just a mystery to who they are and how they shelved the book.
https://images.gr-assets.com/photos/1...
And I don't mind my inclusion in your screenshots a bit, Lori. :) No worries!
I know this is a place for being mad, and I agree but also?
I'm just so thrilled by all of your analytical skills and your consent-based communication! This is why GR is so hard to leave, even when they try to make everything terrible!
I'm just so thrilled by all of your analytical skills and your consent-based communication! This is why GR is so hard to leave, even when they try to make everything terrible!
Books mentioned in this topic
The Thirty Years War (other topics)The Thirty Years War (other topics)
Spirits Abroad (other topics)
Stories of Your Life and Others (other topics)
I'll have to find workarounds. I've already started figuring and of them out because I don't think I'll be using the book pages much after they roll out their "improvements".
Goodreads is staying on trend - taking a useful part of the site and making it visually more appealing (if you're into that) but functionally worthless.