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Welcome New Buzz User. Now Get Outta Here!
Last November I took a look at the user experience for a new user who attempts to access Twitter.com. Tonight I’d like to provide the same new user experience for a person attempting to use Google Buzz. I don’t plan to touch on the privacy issues which seem to be the big topic as of late. In my opinion, the user experience is miserable and probably pushes away many new users (especially those who aren’t “social media experts”). For the purposes of this post, place yourself in the role of a new user no matter what your so-called expertise level is. You should also read Adrian Chan’s Google Buzz breakdown.
Let’s begin with a simple question — what exactly is Google Buzz? Is it a new type of messageboard/forum? Should a mainstream user be able to compare the user experience to something they already know? Or is this a brand new type of online user experience?
Accessing Google Buzz
When a user agrees to use Buzz, the only link to Buzz appears inside of Gmail on the left menu under their Inbox. Is Buzz a folder like the Inbox, Sent Items and Spam are? No, Buzz is an entire entity – welcome to confusion. Let’s assume Buzz remains inside of Gmail, the link to Buzz needs to be moved away from the folders. Frankly it should become a “module” similar to the chat module. This would also allow for customization and some items could be pulled into that left menu module as well based on user requirements.

ignore the 669 new messages in the inbox, I use Gmail mostly as a newsletter catcher
So I’m In, Now What?
I click on the Buzz link and assuming I have some contacts that are also using Buzz, I should see some content on the page. I am apparently “following” 65 people which means that any content they share on Buzz will appear on the page. In the image below, you can see that there’s a lot going on.
- First there’s a note that I can read items from RSS/Atom feeds – what’s an Atom feed?
- Some more people are now following me – I can select to follow them back which I think means I will see their updates on my page and I can also block the user
- Then comes the meat of the page. There’s a refresh button which I’m not sure what it actually does since the page updates on its own?
- Next comes what appears to be the beginning of a thread – similar to the very well known experience of using a messageboard/forum

The “thread”
Below is an example of a threaded discussion on Google Buzz. I’ve removed the initial thread message for clarity. We can see that 31 people liked the message including two of my followers plus a bunch of other people.
Now we get into the worst mess of Buzz by far. Look at how sloppy the presentation of the thread is. At least on Friendfeed (you know, the service Google didn’t copy), the usernames are to the right. With the way Buzz is currently organized, the names make it nearly impossible to read a discussion. I want to read from top to bottom and then look to the right (or somewhere else) to see who posted the update.
Some of the popular user’s threads go on for miles with no break. Considering that there is just text with no design, it’s shocking that a company with tens of thousands of employees and a market cap of $172 billion, that they can’t make the flow better.

WTF?
Want to confuse the new user even more? What in the heck is the image below? I can only guess that maybe it’s other messages from Francine? Are they threads Francine started? Are they comments she made? Were they comments on the same topic or another thread?

Topics – who needs topics!
A message board allows you to find content you are interested in based on a topic. When I go my HTMLCenter forums and want to ask a question or learn about SEO, I select that category. When I want to find out about the Holiday Inn points program, I select that forum on FlyerTalk. It makes sense.
On Buzz, I have to put up with every cat photo, baby photo, “i just ran 4 miles in 2 minutes”, “my photo has changed again and I am a bigtime Internet blogger”, “i can’t sleep”, etc. And if you follow the people who are big sharers or big yappers, the stream gets overwhelmed with their content. Apparently Google made a change to muzzle the yappers but does that mean now I don’t see everything? And let’s not even talk about what a new user’s experience looks like when they sign onto buzz and have no content on their page.
I assume Google wants you to use search to find the content you are interested in. But a typical messageboard/forum experience is with browsing, not with search.
Content
It appears that sometimes Buzz pulls in whole blog posts and other times just a link to the actual content. I will address this in another post as it requires additional commentary. My general thought is that Google is doing everything they can to keep you inside of Google.
Summary
Maybe Google isn’t targeting the mainstream user with Google Buzz. In my opinion, Google needs to make Buzz private and only allow the people already in to continue to use the service - the early adopters. I’ve read many messages that note that Google had to rush Buzz out the door – I have no idea why they would do this. To me the experience is a hot mess and is frankly worse than the new user experience on Twitter.
Suggestions for improvement
Later this week I will offer some quick suggestions to try to fix the new user usability problem on Google Buzz. Feel free to leave your suggestions in the comments and I will incorporate them (and give you credit) in the suggestions post.




I still don’t buy to use Buzz, I mean 2 or 3 social medias is enough and I already have 3, the information I get to much. Unless I can drop 1 and change to Buzz.
I think the UI of buzz is consistent with the UI of gmail. It’s not so confusing when you’re using Gmail, which many buzz users do already.
Your points are valid. The UE is not optimum. However, give it a chance, the service just started out and at them moment, I guess their top priority is fixing the privacy issues that you mentioned. Being a photographer, I really love how photo-friendly buzz already is. On my blog I even posted a video tutorial on how to setup google buzz for photographers: http://SmokingStrobes.com/buzz. Yes, there are some flaws and the UE might be one of them. But don’t let this stop you from using it.
Best regards,
Michael
when i try to turn off notification of follow comments – it asks for a login (I never signed up).
thanks
Allen great post – I agree, Google Buzz has a lot of work to be done – but Buzz does a better job at user identification (see post http://bit.ly/c73XI2) which in the future will allow for more authentic short form conversations.
[...] for Google Buzz moving forward. Now Google, please go and work on the User Interface issues (as Allen Stern over at Center Networks pointed out so elegantly last night) and the Privacy Issues (documented by Robin Wauters over at [...]
Have you ever used GMail before. From what I am reading it looks you never have used Gmail on a regular base
Maybe therefore you come to all these findings.
Using different Google products most of the users are using search instead of sorting and putting information into folders.
What I am missing are stars and the possibilty to collabs comments, but I guess we will see als these features in the near future.
What I have found on buzz in the short period, are a lot of new contacts, that I follow and with whom I have had a lot of engaging discussions.
Nice article.
The problem with Google is that it only employs geniuses. The problem with that is a lot of their products (eg AdSense, Analytics etc) – expect too much of the user & are way too complicated.
Buzz is another example of this…
http://www.twitter.com/nickdonnelly