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PRIORITIZING WEB USABILITY
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Introduction How the Book Study Was Conducted Tested 69 users ages 20-60 Broad range of job backgrounds and web experience Used a Windows machine with Internet Explorer “Thinking Aloud” Method Site-Specific Testing Study Scavenger Hunt Web-wide tasks Purpose: To asses how well sites support the most typical goals users have when visiting them
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The Web-User Experience How well do people use the web? Majority have a 66% success rate How people use sites Search engine dominance 88% go to search engines first when looking for solutions Spend 30 seconds on home page Spend 45-60 seconds deep link pages Scrolling Users are “Information Foragers” Your Website is their snack “You have less than two minutes to communicate the first time a prospective customer visits your Web site. This is the basic fact about the Web experience: As far as users are concerned, every page must justify its claim on their time. If a page doesn’t do that immediately and clearly, they go elsewhere. Most don’t even bother scrolling to see what’s further down the page.”
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Revisiting Early Web Usability Findings 8 Problems That Haven’t Changed Dense content and un- scannable text Links don’t change color Breaking the back button Opening new browser windows Vaporous content and empty hype Violating Web-wide conventions Design elements that look like ads Pop-up windows http://www.useit.com
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The Art of “Searching” Internal Search Engines are good! Search Interface Needs to be easy to find on Web site Search Engine Results Page Search Engine Optimization
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Navigation and Information Architecture Match structure of site to user expectations Be consistent Reduce clutter and avoid redundancy Be specific with links and label names Dropdown menus Direct links on homepage Clickability Cues “You’ve come to our website like most for information, but unlike other websites we’ve filled it with surprises. So have fun, go find the surprises!”
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Typography: Readability and Legibility Use the 10-point rule Choosing fonts Veranda is most readable Moving Text Users associate this with ads, don’t do it! Be smart when mixing fonts and colors Text images Only for snippets of text Customize for your target users http://nihseniorhealth.gov/
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Writing for the Web What turns users away? Confusing content Understand how web users read Have strong visual cues Write for your reader Use simple language Don’t go overboard on promotional lingo Format text for readability Highlight key words
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Providing Good Product Information Display price and extra fees clearly Support comparison shopping Tables Customization Win customer confidence Describe product Provide pictures Layer product pages Display bona fides
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Presenting Page Elements “Three-Click” Rule Common layout mistakes Interactions too complex Too many elements Should you design for scrolling? Guide users step by step Keep similar items in the same area Use white space correctly http://www.nba.com
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Balancing Technology With People’s Needs Use multimedia when it benefits your audience Accommodate low-tech users Underestimate users technical knowledge Detect users bandwidth Stick to familiar interface conventions Practice simplicity “Keep your users at the center of your design project. Be humble. Listen to them. They’ll make you successful.”
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