Web Design Tips : Help! My Web Site Sucks!
By Dana Greenlee, Co-Host WebTalkGuys Radio
Youve been around a web site or two. And if youre like me,
youve bumped into a few where you came away fairly confused about how to navigate or
even what they were about.
Ive
seen a few that are so 1990s that need a good dose of basic principles of simplified
design: too much needless text, too many huge images, the whole site on one long page, the
antiquated and folksy welcome to my site greeting. Ive got my pet
peeves, I guess.
I know what I dont like, but a web usability study will show a web site owner what
really works in a web site to make it useful and clear to everyone. Bad web site design
affects everyone who is online:
- If youre a web site visitor, you want a site to be obvious about what it has to
offer and a clear path to what you are looking for.
- If you are a web site developer or have a business site, how your web site performs will
be critical to your success. Your web site is as important to your business as the
telephone. With customer expectations high, web site visitors want as good a service
online as visiting you or talking to you personally.
Since we
cant all be web usability experts, I turned to author and usability consultant Steve
Krug, for advice. Krug has solved fundamental Web design problems for companies like
Apple, AOL, Barnes and Noble, Excite@Home and Netscape, evaluating and improving their
online web site presence. His Massachusetts-based consulting firm is Advanced Common Sense
at www.sensible.com.
Krug talked to us about his top dos, donts and golden rules when it
comes to website design. He has recently written all his advice in his book Don't
Make Me Think: Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, currently ranked at
Amazon.com in the top 200 books.
Listen to the audio interview:
33 min @ 20K Stream.
Real WinMedia
Q. What exactly is web site
design usability?
Krug: Usability just makes whatever youre working on easier to use.
For the last five years Ive been doing mostly web usability, which means fine-tuning
web sites so that people can make their way through them with a minimum of effort and get
what they want to do done.
Q. In your book, you mention that to design effective Web pages, you have
to learn to live with three facts about real-world Web use. Can you run these down for us?
Krug: It finally dawned on me that one of the big problems was the big
gap between the way designers and marketers think people will use the site as opposed to
the way people actually use it. We tend to think people use it in a fairly orderly
fashion. But if you ever sit down and watch people use the web, which is part of what
usability people do, the three things I boil it down to are, first, they dont read
pages. They blow through them on their way to finding something to read. Along the way
they kind of just scan, looking for words that jump out.
The second is how they make choices. We think they're reading the whole page to begin
with. Then theyre going to stop and assess all the options weve offered them
on the page and make a choice based on their interest. The fact is, it's more like they
find the first thing that even vaguely resembles what theyre looking for and then
they click on them. Thats the nature of the Web: we find things, you click on them
and they take you closer to what youre looking for. We satisfice, a cross between
satisfying and sufficing.
Finally, the third fact of real-world Web use is when were designing stuff, we think
that people are going to figure out how it works. In reality, people are teetering on the
brink of disaster most of the time. They have no idea how it works - and they dont
care. All they care about is getting to the stuff theyre actually using.
Q: Lets look at the Home Page, the first impressions we have of a
web site. Give us some basic elements of design and layout of that page?
Krug: If you dont get it right from the beginning and people get
off on the wrong foot - forget it! The likelihood is high that people will start stumbling
off in increasingly wrong directions and not recover.
Your home page should convey the big picture. What is the site about? Use a good short tag
line and welcome blurb. Rotate site promotions. Remove everything nonessential.
The main thing that goes wrong is that, because the home page gets so much traffic - by
definition the home page is going to get more traffic by the factor of ten than any other
page - all the stakeholders on the page, the marketing people and everybody, have a strong
interest in getting their content on the that page. Over time it kind of deteriorates the
home page. What gets squeezed out as a result is for people to come to the home page and
right away have a concept of what this site is, what its about, what it has to offer
- just the main points. Instead, what you end up with is a lot of things to entice people
to go further into the site - which may or may not work.
You want to divide your home page between things that entice and demonstrate the range of
what you have, like a magazine cover has little blurbs for all the stories inside. But you
also need to devote enough navigation to give people a clear idea of where they are and a
clear idea of who is talking to them. There are five questions you want to answer on the
home page, which I explain in my book. The main question to answer is what do you
do.
Part 1 of 2 : Click here for the continuing talk with Steve Krug: well drill down
deeper into usable web design with Steve Krug and his take on effective navigation, the
best use of images on a site, and the dichotomy of a site designer seeing their work as
great literature while a site users reality is much closer to a billboard
going by at 60 miles an hour.
Steve Krugs website is at sensible.com. His book is Don't
Make Me Think: Common Sense Approach to Web Usability.
WTG
(Dana Greenlee is president of LoudVox.com and
co-host of the WebTalkGuys Radio Show. WebTalkGuys, a Washington-based talk show featuring
technology news and interviews. It is broadcast on CNET Radio in San Francisco and Boston,
on the web at CNET Radio, WebTalkGuys Radio and via the XM satellite network and on NexTel's
Wireless Web. Past show and interviews are also webcast via the Internet at http://www.webtalkguys.com). |