|
|
|
|
|
by ameister14
2963 days ago
|
|
So are you saying that you don't allow them to say no to the first-stage, and have it pop up immediately after, or that you pop it up every time they open the app? I don't think it's innately condescending to ask someone for permission and outline exactly what you need the permission for, but I don't know the copy you are using. I know that in context it makes sense, but people read things and don't think about them in larger context all the time. They think about them individually - do I want to give this thing permission to use my camera? No. Do I want to give it permission to use my camera so that it can do this thing I want it to do? Yes. That's why outlining the purpose as in the second case makes it more likely for people to say yes. Have you tried putting the reasoning on the second dialogue or is this a native one that is uneditable? You might be right if they are spending less than a second, but I've found with websites that a surprising number of people read everything. It'd be an interesting test if it's possible. |
|
Basically we lock them from going further in the app by repeatedly showing the dialog immediately after a "no" answer, because at that point they need to scan barcodes and if they can't then the entire app is completely useless anyway.
>I don't think it's innately condescending to ask someone for permission and outline exactly what you need the permission for, but I don't know the copy you are using.
It just feels like it to me. We found it difficult to explain how you MUST say "yes" to the next prompt, it's for barcode scanning (which explaining this alone feels condescending, the app is called "x barcode scanning" FFS), the app cannot function without it. Just asking to ask alone feels wrong. I want my applications to be as easy to use and straightforward as possible, and doing stuff "automatically" rather than making the user manually do it is like 40% of my job, so it feels really wrong when I need to make it worse in that way.
>Have you tried putting the reasoning on the second dialogue or is this a native one that is uneditable?
Yeah it's the native one, so you can't change what it says.
It's tough, i can understand not wanting to allow websites to spam notifications constantly, but the "you only get one chance" really sucks.