Jakob Nielsen
knows a lot about usability. He’s perhaps the world’s foremost
expert on how people use websites. I finally had the chance to
meet Jakob face to face last week (we’ve been trading emails for
some time) in San Francisco at his Usability Week Summit. I was
down there to sit in on his one day session on eyetracking.
No Graphics for
Nielsen
Jakob takes a
pretty austere view of the user experience. One can tell this
from his own website,
useit.com.
Perhaps his most famous quote is “Flash:
99% bad”. He takes a
similarly dim view of animations and large graphics, which lead
to “banner blindness”. In fact, other than the obligatory head
and shoulder shot on his bio page and a small arrow glyph used
to indicate hierarchy in his breadcrumb navigation bar, there
are no graphics on useit.com. He
goes on
at some length about this. Why no graphics? He’s pretty adamant
that they add nothing to the user experience. We’re not in
complete agreement about this, but I get his point.
Jakob’s Nielsen
Norman group has recently added eyetracking to their usability
arsenal. If ever you’re looking for justification for not using
large graphics on a site, look (sorry, no pun intended) no
further than eyetracking heatmaps. In session after session,
users skirt around large graphic blocks, focusing their
interaction on text and navigation. It can be a rude slap in the
face for most graphic designers (there’s a rather amusing
anecdote about one such encounter that happened at the session,
and an example of the phenomenon I’m talking about,
on my blog).
Experience, Not
Exposure
In the session,
Jakob tossed away a line; the import of which I’m not sure was
fully appreciated by the audience. When responding to a question
from the audience about the seeming contradiction between the
need for building of brand exposure and best practices for
usability, Jakob said that online, brand value is built through
experience, not exposure.
Whoa! There’s a
world of wisdom in those 8 little words! Beneath them lies a
whole different way of looking on online engagement. It sums up
something I’ve been hammering away at for years now. A
successful user experience builds brand equity in a way that
hammering visitors over the head with Flash or streaming video
never could. Every single thing on a website should have one
purpose, to make that user experience more successful. If it’s
there solely for the gratification of the designer, or the CEO,
or the CMO, it’s there for the wrong reason. And before you
dismiss this thought, saying it doesn’t apply to you, take a
look at your home page and ask yourself, why are the elements
that are on the page there? Think through the decision process
that placed that element on the page. How present was the user
in the process? Who was asking them for their opinion?
User Success in
Search
This is a best
practice in any website’s design, but it becomes particularly
true when looking at search generated leads. Search visitors
reek with intent. They are incredibly single minded in their
purpose. They’re looking for a clear path ahead to their intent,
and they’ve cast the first few steps down that path through
their search query. They’ve come to the site not because they’re
engaged with your brand, although that may have helped sway them
in your direction, but because they’re engaged with a task. Get
between them and the successful completion of that task at your
peril. Every time you throw something at them that’s not aligned
to that intent, you decrease their chances for success, eroding
the value of your brand in their eyes. If you make them wait 20
seconds for a Flash file to load, that’s 20 seconds of ticking
on a time bomb that could blow your brand to smithereens. If you
throw a large stock photo with the typical generic smiling face
that takes up 70% of your home page, you’re wasting prime real
estate. But don’t feel bad, it happens to the best of us. At
least Jakob practices what he preaches on his site. What would
you see if you went to the home page of Enquiro? A generic
smiling face. But I’m working on it!