Wikipedia.org updated page layout

What we'd like to do...
The Discovery team would like to update the wikipedia.org portal page with a dropdown that displays the languages sorted by article count, instead of the existing long list. It's a change that makes sense to the portal team, but we want to ask the communities for feedback and/or other suggestions for page design for the long list of languages.

The rationale behind this addition
We ran a successful A/B test in June 2016 that showed that more visitors were likely to click through to other links on the page if they could visually see them, without having to scroll down the page. These 'other' links included the newly update sister project links, that now have descriptive text below each project. The test also showed that the rate of non-action (bounce rate) decreased with this page design change.

We detailed the analysis of this test and the executive summary is as follows: We kept the page basically the same - in regards to the language listing by article count in this dropdown. Thus, our avid editors can still keep easy track of where their favorite language is in the overall article count list.
 * One of Discovery’s Wikipedia Portal team’s goals is to make wikipedia.org a more inviting experience. One thing that worried us, from a user experience perspective, was the large section with links to Wikipedia in all the different languages. Specifically, we were worried it might be overwhelming to a new user. To that end, we propose a design change wherein that section is made optional and redesigned to have a cleaner, columnar layout.
 * We ran A/B test to assess the effect of this change for a week, from 6 June 2016 through 14 June 2016. The test group consisted of 3019 users who received the cleaner design while the control group consisted of 2560 users who received the current design.
 * We found that the test group had a 3.64% higher probability of interacting with the page and was 1.07 times more likely to engage with the page than the control group. Furthermore, although both groups received the dynamic primary link feature, users in the test group had a 6.82% higher probability (1.09 times more likely) of visiting a Wikipedia in their most preferred language.
 * Our main goal with this design change was to decrease the bounce rate (increase the engagement rate). We saw a significant improvement in how people engaged with the page when given the cleaner variation, which suggests that we should proceed with this change.

Who will this help?
The people that will most benefit from this addition are all visitors to the Wikipedia portal page, particularly those visiting from a mobile device browser. As worldwide mobile usage is increasing daily, we want to have a page that is easier to navigate to what our users really want to do: search, choose a different language wiki or to visit a sister project.

Why should we not do this?

 * It'll be harder (by having to do one extra mouse click) to view the entire list of languages by article counts

What we need next...
We'd like interested community members to provide feedback on updating the Wikipedia portal page with this new design. We think it's a great refresh to a page we all use and love, but want to be sure that others feel the same.

More information about the Wikipedia.org portal can be found here and a list of recent A/B tests that have performed.