Why Do People Prefer My Old Blog’s Layout To Substack’s?
When I was first considering moving to Substack, I asked my readers what they thought . They thought various things, but one of them was they hated the layout. At some point I turned this into a formal survey, and: …yep, they preferred the SSC layout Last summer, I repeated the experiment , this time after I had made the switch: A few months ago, I wrote a post called Why Do I Suck , which discussed some people’s com
Metadata
- Published: May 04, 2022
- Source: https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/why-do-people-prefer-my-old-blogs
- Document ID:
2022-05-04_why-do-people-prefer-my-old-blogs_full
Category Map
Books
- Why Do I Suck (1 mentions)
Brands
- Apple (16 mentions)
Organizations
Platform
Publications
- Slate Star Codex (23 mentions)
- SSC (15 mentions)
- Whither Tartaria (3 mentions)
Full Primary Source Text
This keeps coming up. When I was first considering moving to Substack, I asked my readers what they thought . They thought various things, but one of them was they hated the layout. At some point I turned this into a formal survey, and: …yep, they preferred the SSC layout Last summer, I repeated the experiment , this time after I had made the switch: A few months ago, I wrote a post called Why Do I Suck , which discussed some people’s complaints about the new blog. In the comments, lots of people said their main complaint was that Substack’s design was worse than SSC’s. EG: I think that all of this together is pretty strong evidence that most people prefer the old Slate Star Codex layout to the new Substack-mandated ACX. This is weird, because the old Slate Star Codex layout was - mostly something I threw together in a day or two. I am widely recognized as not having taste, and the only website I ever developed before this was a Geocities site that was even worse. A few of my web designer friends helpfully smoothed over some rough edges (in one case literally, Apple-style), but the basic design remained my amateurish rush job. Slate Star Codex: Original version Slate Star Codex: After some web designer friends spruced it up Meanwhile, Substack is run by tech industry veterans who probably hired a team of really experienced designers and thought really hard about every aspect of their product. It doesn’t make any sense at all for me to do a better job than them. So what’s going on? Is it selection bias? My previous readership is, by definition, people who liked my old blog, so of course they like my old blog more than some new one? I’m including this because I know someone will bring it up in the comments if I don’t, but it seems unlikely; surely most people selected themselves in for the content, with the design a distant second. Is it something something mobile? I put no effort into optimizing my old design for mobile phones, so maybe that adds another layer of complexity. But I think at some point some web designer friend made a version that worked for mobile, so this can’t be too hard. Is the dichotomy not me vs. Substack, but WordPress (also a great tech company) vs. Substack? I think this explains some of it. But some of the people in the comments talked about the colors and layout in particular. Substack probably remembers the history of MySpace vs. Facebook. MySpace let people customize their page however they wanted, and most people made them into some sort of