Homepage Usability Deconstructed
Best of Breed Website Design Tips, Part 1
By Dana Greenlee, co-Host WebTalkGuys Radio
Ah, the web page. Your home page is your company's electronic face to the world. It's
important to make a good first impression. Most of the time, were preoccupied with
making our sites work, adding "cool" features, and assembling mounds of content
has left us forgetting the most important part of the web: the users.
Listen to the audio discussion with
Homepage Usability: 50 Websites Deconstructed"
author Marie Tahir
42 min. into 20K Stream
Real WinMedia

Read Part 2 of this article:
Homepage Usability: Use Your Words Wisely
Read Part 3 of this article:
Homepage Design Statistics: Don’t Buck Conventional Wisdom
Since
we cant all be web usability experts, we turn to author Marie Tahir for advice.
Tahir recently co-wrote a book with usability guru Jacob Neilson called Homepage
Usability: 50 Websites Deconstructed, where she painstakingly picks apart popular
home pages in an uncompromising autopsy of usability.
Tahir has culled tons of usability tips from years of research as Director
of Strategy at the Nielsen Norman Group. Marie also worked at Lotus, where she pioneered
field research and user profiling methodology and was responsible for the usability of the
SmartSuite product line. She is now Director of User Experience at Intuit.
We asked Tahir to offer her tips on the landscape of the home page, its links, navigation,
content presentation and how to make a home page easier to use.
Q: What was your core reason to write a book about a websites home page?
Tahir: Design teams spend a great portion of their time on the home page.
Rightfully so, because the home page is the first impression you make with your customers.
Its one of the most valuable pieces of real estate in the world because in this tiny
little space you can have millions of dollars pouring in and out of a company, so
its worth giving it its due time. However, what Ive found from working within
the industry is people focus on the wrong things. We want to give some constructive
guidelines on how to do it right and what mistakes to avoid.
Q: When designing a home page, your guidelines say to put up the highest priority
tasks you want your visitors to do. A lot of sites have too much going on in the home
page. How many should a page have?
Tahir: Between one and four of your highest prioritized tasks should be
emphasized. This is one of the toughest challenges for designers because the whole company
often gets involved and there is a lot of pressure to make the home page a democracy to
represent every little silo of the company, no matter how unimportant it is to the
customer. Thats really not paying due diligence to your customer.
Q: What are some effective ways a site can convey information about the company?
Should that information even be on the home page?
Tahir: I think the information should be on the home page. One of the big roles
of the home page is to explain what the company behind the service or product is all
about. Thats important to potential investors, journalists and the customers. This
is especially critical for a smaller companies credibility or if its not clear how
you make your money. People are smart and they will feel skeptical if that information is
not placed up front. The guidelines for doing this are pretty simple, but are often
broken. One thing that is very simple is you can put all the information that pertains to
the company in one place rather than scattered all over the home page. You should
definetly have one page that is dedicated just to About with your company
name. Then you can group job listings, investor information - all
that corporate info.
Q: The web is nothing if not a series of links that take you from place to place.
What are some guidelines to links on the home page.
Tahir: Its so critical to get it right on the home page because it is
serving as the portal to the rest of your site. One of the best things you can do is to
help users know where to go - but more importantly where not to go. A lot of times
companies get focused on the short term goal of click-through - wanting people
to click on things whether they would be interested or not - and thats actually kind
of tricking people. People dont like being tricked. You really have only so many
wasted clicks in a session that someone will spend on your site. You can only do it so
many times, saying Hey, dont you want to come in here, and the person
clicks and sees thats not where they want to be. Theyll do it a couple of
times before they give up on you. Its so much better to worry about
follow-through rather than click-through. Get people to the right
place as fast as possible.
Q: Are the words you use in your navigation the key?
Tahir: One of the best ways to do is make all the links as differentiatable from
each other as possible. Make them scannable, because people dont read carefully
online. They scan through, and often what they do with a bunch of links in a row is look
for the first word and try to figure out how the first words are different from each
other. You dont want to start all your links with your company name. The Federal
Express site does this. They mention all their sub-company names and they start them all
with Fed Ex, because thats actually the real name of the branches of their company.
What that means is youre trying to quickly scan the navigation and youre
seeing FedEx, FedEx, FedEx, instead of seeing
Big Packages, Small Packages, Business Packages or
whatever. You want to put those most important words first.
~ WTG
Read Part 2 of this article:
Homepage Usability : Use Your Words Wisely
Read Part 3 of this article:
Homepage Design Statistics: Don’t Buck Conventional Wisdom
Dana Greenlee is producer and co-host of the WebTalkGuys Radio
Show. WebTalkGuys, a Seattle-based talk show featuring technology news and
interviews. It is broadcast on WebTalkGuys
Radio, Sonic Box, via Pocket
PC at Mazingo Networks
and the telephone via the Mobile Broadcast
Network. It's on the radio in Seattle at KLAY 1180 AM
and KVTI 90.9 FM. Past shows and
interviews are also webcast via the Internet at http://www.webtalkguys.com.
Greenlee is also a member of the The International
Academy of Digital Arts & Sciences.
PC World magazine names WebTalkGuys "Best of Today's Web Hidden Gems" in their August 2002 issue.
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