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Index of Articles
Usability Research You Can Use Today
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We recently presented the
keynote at a conference for public school web
content managers.
Our topic: an overview of web usability
research and how to improve school web sites by
applying the findings. In preparation, we
reviewed the vast amount of usability
information on the web and found invaluable,
practical information.
We thought we’d pass along the fruits of
our efforts. So, in this issue of the E-Writing Bulletin, we’re pointing
you to five of the top usability
resources. We’ve
highlighted some findings that we believe are
particularly applicable to content
providers. You’ll discover that
knowing the results of usability testing will
reduce your development work, help settle
endless web “negotiations,” and justify the
time and resources you need to develop
user-friendly web content. Five Top Usability
Resources 1. Useit.com is “guru”
Jakob Nielsen's website.
Since 1995, Nielsen has published the
bi-weekly Alertbox: Current Issues in Web
Usability.
Never one to mince words, Nielsen has
written tracts such as “Avoid PDF for On-Screen
Reading” and
“Flash: 99%
Bad.” Mission
Impossible To Find. From
Alertbox: "About Us" -- Presenting
Information About an Organization on Its
Website.
Study participants searched websites for
background information ranging from company
history to management biographies and contact
details. Their success rate was 70%, leaving
much room for usability improvements in
About
Us design.
Research conclusion: sites should clarify a
company’s purpose on the home page, present a
tagline, and provide “meatier” About Us
content.
Color Me
Visited. From Alertbox: “Change The Color of Visited
Links.”
Advice: “Using different colors for
visited and unvisited links makes your site easier to navigate and
thus increases user satisfaction.” Seventy-four
percent of
websites do so already, making this a
strong
convention.
2.
The Software Usability Research
Laboratory (SURL)
at Wichita State University provides user
interface design, usability testing, and
human-computer interaction research. SURL publishes its
research findings in Usability
News! To make things
easy, SURL also offers an A-Z
Research Index and a Usability
News
Digest. 3.
User Interface
Engineering (UIE) is Jared M.
Spool’s consulting firm, specializing in web
site and product usability. UIE publishes UIEtips: articles,
commentaries, and interviews on usability, web
design, and information architecture. Check out
UIEtips, including The Truth About Download
Time and The Quiet Death of the Major
Re-Launch. Three Clicks And You’re
Not Out. From
UIEtips: “Testing the Three-Click
Rule.”
Research conclusion: after measuring
both success and satisfaction, testers found
the three-click rule to be a
myth.
It’s Not About Time. From UIEtips: “The Truth About Download
Time.” Research conclusion:
“…when people accomplish what they set out to
do on a site, they perceive that site to be
fast” even when it’s
not!
4.
The Usability.gov site
was developed to help U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services web managers. But this usability site
is not for dot govs only.
Check out the ultra-usable Research-Based Web Design and
Usability Guidelines. Each guideline contains a statement of
the overarching principle (for example, “Use
Clear Category Labels”), an explanation of the
research/supporting information, citations, a
score indicating the "Strength of Evidence"
that supports the guideline, a score indicating
the "Relative Importance" of the guideline to
the success of a Web site, and graphic examples
of the guideline in
practice. An Icon Isn’t Worth 1000
Words.
From Usability.gov: “Use Text For
Links.”
Research summary: Text links are easier
to recognize than graphic ones, as well as more
effective at suggesting the link’s
destination.
Graphic links confuse users who have to
mouse-over to tell whether the graphic is a
link or mere
decoration.
5.
Human Factors
International (HFI) is a
user-centered design company whose mission is
to improve the interactions people have with
computers. HFI publishes UI Design Newsletter
which reviews developments in user interface
research.
You Gotta
Believe.
For example, HFI’s Web Credibility
review revealed that experts and consumers
judge a site’s credibility differently: experts
“…focus on brand, company reputation,
information sources, and internal fact-checking
… In contrast, consumers use characteristics
such as look-and-feel and information design to
evaluate credibility.”
Interested In Conducting
Your Own Usability Research?
Do you have a favorite
usability resource we haven’t listed? If
you like to recommend a usability site or
study, or have conducted usability research on
your site or a client’s site, let us know and
we’ll add it to our Resources
page.
To wrap it all up, keeping
up to date with usability research is worth
doing. The
information is plentiful and the findings are
easy to understand. The ancient Greek
philosopher Aristotle recognized the value of
usability early on.
He said: “The greatest virtues are those which are
most useful to other
persons.”
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(c) E-WRITE, 2004 - 2008.
Marilynne Rudick and Leslie O'Flahavan are partners
in E-WRITE, a training and consulting company that specializes
in writing for online readers. Rudick and O'Flahavan are authors of Clear, Correct, Concise E-Mail: A
Writing Workbook for Customer Service Agents
You're welcome to reprint this article as long as you include the above credit and copyright information, notify E-WRITE at info@ewriteonline.com,
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