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1 Human Computer Interaction Week 10 Web Usability.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Human Computer Interaction Week 10 Web Usability."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Human Computer Interaction Week 10 Web Usability

2 2 Introduction Usability rules the Web The Web is the ultimate customer empowering environment All the competitors (Other Web Sites) in the world are but a mouse-click away

3 3 Fundamental Errors in Web Design (1) Business Model Treating the Web as a Marcom brochure instead of a fundamental shift that changes the way of conducting business. Project Management Managing a Web project as a traditional project, leads to an internally focused design. Instead, a website should be managed as a single customer- interface project.

4 4 Fundamental Errors in Web Design (2) Information Architecture Structuring the site to mirror the company’s structure. Instead, the site should be structured to mirror the users’ tasks and their views of the information space. Page Design Creating gorgeous demo pages, resulting in response-time delays. Instead, design for an optimal user experience even your demo will be less “cool”.

5 5 Fundamental Errors in Web Design (3) Content Authoring Writing in linear style. Instead write in a new style that is optimized for online readers who frequently scan text. Linking Strategy Treating your site as the only one. Instead, remember that hypertext is the foundation of the Web and that no site is an island.

6 6 Web Usability Page Design The most immediately visible part of web design. Content Design Users visit your website for its content. Everything else is just the backdrop. Site Design Never explicitly represented on the screen. But from a usability perspective, site design is more challenging.

7 7 Web pages should be dominated by content of interest to the user. Many sites spend more screen space on navigation than they do on the information. Navigation is a necessary evil that is not a goal and should be minimized. Page Design (1)

8 8 Page Design (2)

9 9 Page Design (3) Designer have to be considerate of users with small screens, but there is no need to suffer in your own use of the Web. Users are rarely on a site to enjoy the design; instead, they prefer to focus on the content.

10 10 Page Design (4) Simplicity should be the goal of page design. Ensure that page designs work across a wide range of platforms and they can be accessed by people who use old technology.

11 11 Content Design (1) Ultimately, users visit your website for its content. Everything else is just the backdrop. The design is there to allow people access to the content. Analogy: When people leave the theatre, they are discussing how great the play was and not how great the costumes were.

12 12 Content Design (2) When users get to a new page, they look immediately in the main content area of the page and scan it for head lines and other indications of what the page is about.

13 13 Guidelines for Writing for Web The main guidelines: Be succinct. Write for scannability. Use hypertext.

14 14 Site Design (1) The site itself is never explicitly represented on the screen. From a usability perspective, site design is more challenging and usually also more important than page design.

15 15 Site Design (2) “Under Construction”

16 16 Site Design (3) All websites are always under construction. Don’t tell users what you don’t have. That’s only frustrating. Don’t release a partially finished website.

17 17 Home Page Home page is the flagship of the site and should be designed differently from the remaining pages. Should share the same style but there are differences. Don’t have a Home button. Should have a larger logo, company name, or site name.

18 18 The Goal of Home Page Answering two questions: 1. Where am I? 2. What does this site do?

19 19 Three Features of Home Page Main Content Areas (Navigation) Summary of the most important news or promotions Search feature.

20 20 Navigation The Web is a navigational system. The basic interaction is mouse clicking. Navigation interfaces need to help users answer the three fundamental questions: 1. Where am I? 2. Where have I been? 3. Where can I go?

21 21 Site Structure Hierarchical Structure Tabular Structure Linear Structure

22 22 Search Capabilities Nielsen (2000): 50% search-dominant users. 20% link-dominant users. The rest are mixed-behavior users.

23 23 Summary Simplicity. HOME-RUN Websites: (H)igh-quality content (O)ften updated (M)inimal download time (E)ase of use (R)elevant to users’ needs (U)nique to the online medium (N)etcentric corporate culture

24 24 Further Reading Nielsen, J. 2000, Designing Web Usability: The Practice of Simplicity, New Riders Publishing


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