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Web usage is changing as users and the tools at their
disposal mature. This article looks at some of the research on the subject that
has emerged during 2006. This looks at how to optimise the user experience when
browsing the web Some suggestions for website owners
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| A user quickly perceives if a site has the quality and quantity of content they are seeking. It take a few seconds for them to decide – A browser will decide if they are going to study a page or move on within 4 seconds. | |
| If a user can’t reach where or what they want to be within 30 seconds they
will abandon that site or search. So burying information through several screens
might be logical but risks loosing the browser. |
A search session is typically less than 4 minutes with under 6 pages
viewed. When people had to dial-up, they developed the habit of capturing pages,
to read off-line at their convenience. This habit of ‘find now – read later’ has
persisted.
All studies suggest that a user will email interesting pages to themselves or
‘copy and paste’ it to a document for reading elsewhere or for future reference.
Reading on-line is still not popular. Simple facts can be checked online, a
weather or traffic report scanned but most serious reading is still done offline
and even off screen. This behaviour is referred to as harvesting.
So the message to website owners is to provide ‘deep links’ to get people to the information they are after.
| Design for finding rather than searching. | |
| Browsers can develop a loyalty to a site but they will no longer rely on a single source for information. | |
| Site managers know that people are ‘agnostic’ when it comes to a particular site. | |
| And the information has to be content rich. | |
| Search engines are getting better at spotting good content. | |
| But people are the best adverts for sites, especially for the under 30s. The have even coined a term for it - viral marketing. | |
| Findability is important and the role of the search engines is
vital. But once inside the site, navigation takes over. |
Because people work in small sessions it makes sense to:
| Adopts a simple layout. | |
| Use easy to read writing style. | |
| Limit choices in any one area. | |
| Structure information to provide relevant entry points and avoid premature bale-out. | |
| Make information easy to share. |
Newsletters are still popular but increasingly sites are using an RSS feed
so
that those who are interested in your content are alerted when something
relevant changes. This is a long way from the idea of the web founders where
the date develops some basic sort of intelligence but it is a small step in an
interesting direction.
http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats7.htm
Chas Jones 2006
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