Posts Tagged ‘usability’


Contact us - If you can

Friday, December 4th, 2009

Most nights driving home from the office I listen to NPR.  As a proponent of user contribution, peer to peer sharing and most things Web-social I am always pleased to hear the comments of listeners read (or played) over the air.  Even if I disagree I enjoy hearing dissenting or opposing opinions. This is the new world publishers live in and clearly NPR gets it – right!  Well, maybe not.

Here’s how it unfolds.  Regardless of the particular program, each night after listener comments are aired the host typically says something to this effect:

“If you’ve got comments – we’d love to hear from you.  Go to our Web site and click on the link that says comments at the bottom of the page.”

Wait a minute, did you catch that?

If comments are desired and appreciated why is it that in order to make them you have to scroll to the bottom of the page?  In the Web design world we refer to anything below the viewable area on your browser as “below the fold”.  It’s generally where we put the less important stuff.  So users who want to comment are required to scroll through all kinds of content to find the link.  This is a mixed signal for sure.  Ultimately the motivated commenter will always find that link – they have a desire to contribute beyond the average listener.  That doesn’t make NPR’s handling of this feature right.

Here’s my solution.  If you REALLY want user feedback make it a design priority. To illustrate my solution I have tapped our expert interaction design team to produce these before and after images (actually I just did it myself with Photoshop). (more…)

Helping Web users stay focused

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

One of the great ironies of Web site design is that, despite our efforts to create an experience that keeps users on our pages, we constantly invite them to move away. This is largely because information architecture (how we organize sites) is linear in nature (like reading books). The result: users have to leave pages in order to view related content. Unfortunately users are often forced to back up and start over to navigate through our content.

In fact, according to Jakob Nielsen, the “back button” on Web browsers is the second most used navigation feature.

This navigation problem is painfully apparent in sites tied to a company’s financial success, like e-commerce sites.  I’ve experienced this first-hand:  prior to coming to D2 I spent most of nine years developing and managing e-commerce businesses.  I know that most site managers struggle to get visitors to their sites.  Why is it then that we make them jump through hoops to buy products from us? (more…)

Freeing the mind of the user

Thursday, May 21st, 2009

One time my old boss built a new edit room. This was at a time when you had to buy three tape machines and a separate audio mixer and video switcher.  I asked him, “There’s so many great new switchers on the market, and you had the budget - why did you buy the same switcher?” He explained that with editors moving from room to room, it was much easier if they didn’t have to rethink the process every time they wanted to do an effect. This is a discussion I often have with software designers: functions that are familiar (close, save, next, previous, play, pause) need to be designed and placed in ways that will be familiar to users, even if there is a more elegant, “sensible” way. Intuitive…is a relative term. There are exceptions of course but exceptions should be made giving consideration to the goals of the program (not the programmer). We want to free the user’s mind to focus on the content, so the less mental effort spent on learning the user interface, the better.