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Web NavigationDesigning the User Experience
navigation, structure, and usability for serious web design
"Until recently, most of us thought clean code and pretty graphics were the key to a successful site" - Lynda Weinman
Web sites have sometimes been described in terms of 'generations'. David Siegel for instance describes how first generation sites were rapidly thrown together with no greater ambition than to get pages of HTML code onto the Web. The second generation added graphics, started to be concerned with page layout [even though HTML code is not designed for that purpose] and often added eye-popping special effects. Third generation sites have brought some of these excesses under control, and are designed to make the user experience more meaningful.
The book's structure reflects the clarity of her purpose. There are six chapters on the foundations of navigation design, then in the second part an analysis of successful sites. There are four appendices: technical tips, a glossary of navigational terms, a list of web resources, and a bibliography. The accompanying CD comes with trial versions of software (including the highly praised Dreamweaver) and it has a marvellous 'netography' with listings of articles, web sites, and online resources covering navigation, usability and testing, organisation of information, information design, document markup and scripting. [I loaded the disk, browsed the sites she recommends, and all the links were working.] Her advice is to provide clear, simple, and consistent navigational aids - and she offers a particularly strong warning against using metaphors such as the office or the supermarket [though curiously, the CD uses icons]. Navigation that works should:
Now that's an important free lesson for you! She is in favour of any interactivity, such as rollovers ('OnMouseOver') which provide feedback, and is sceptical of the 'Back' button on the grounds that users might enter a site at any page. Where would they be going 'back' to? She also raises other interesting navigational questions, such as 'where will you be when you've finished reading a page, and where will you wish or need to go?' She recommends multiple navigational routes and aids, plus guidance. For instance, a site might have a framed and 'no-frames' version, a graphics and no graphics version. It will certainly have navigation hot spots at the top and bottom of every page, maybe a contents list in left-hand frame, plus icons, labels, and anything else which helps users find their way around. One of the interesting features of her approach is that she illustrates her argument with detailed reference to the work of other 'information architects' such as Jakob Nielsen, Clement Mok, Edward Tufte, and David Siegel. The reader is thereby presented with a range of approaches to this relatively new subject. There are lots of bibliographic suggestions and URLs in side-bars on the page - and those I checked were all up-to-date, which is an important feature in such a fast-changing medium. It's a book aimed at professionals. For instance, her descriptions of the site design process assume that there will be teams of designers in sessions at a corporate level using flipcharts, video recordings, and even team-working software. There's lots on brainstorming and chunking in what are now called 'focus groups'. But these principles could be followed by what I suspect is more likely to be the average reader - somebody working in a spare room at home. This is a book for people who want to take web design seriously. It's significant that she spends so much time discussing the thoughtful planning, research, and testing of a site, rather than the creation of flashy effects and animated gimmicks which adorn so many KEWL sites. She has powerful and revealing arguments in favour of a consistent design process (so that the arbitrary element of success or failure can be removed). This is fairly obvious when you think about it - but that's true of many good ideas. She includes a full account of professional designers at work, with pointers to the resources they use - such as David Siegel's free downloadable 'profiling' materials at www.secretsites.com for instance. This is the business studies version of web design manuals, packed with thought-provoking information on determining user goals and expectations. She describes the use of personal interviews, people 'shadowing' users throughout the working day, and 'disposable camera studies' where users record what they find interesting. Not many individuals will have the resources to be so thorough, and sometimes the 'feedback-usability-testing' approach makes this all seem like a science rather than the sales-pitch that it is - as if we can predict how many people will come to our site to buy widgets. In the second half of the book her notions are put to work analysing the navigational methods and structure at sites built for shopping, entertainment, learning, and community services. This struck me as slightly less interesting than the first part, but still worth reading for the revealing tips and guidance notes embedded in her analysis. The observations, as before, are that successful sites are customer-oriented, and that they give extra consideration to online customers because they lack the navigational support provided during comparable user experiences in libraries, airports and shopping malls. If there is a weakness in her examinations, it's that these are often not much more than descriptions of sites - though they are nevertheless well-illustrated mini-lectures, with plenty of screen captures. For instance, she heaps praise on Amazon.com for their search facility and one-click ordering system. However, this doesn't take into account that the company, despite its multi-million dollar turnover, hasn't actually made a profit so far. It's worth noting that a lot of what she says about helping users through the layers of a site is based on the US-centred assumption that people are going to spend a lot of time browsing - because they have free local telephone calls. But European (certainly UK) users will not have such luxuries. They'll hit a site, search for what they're looking for, then disconnect quickly. This economically-driven difference in user behaviour should be taken into account by anyone theorising about navigation, browsing, and web design. But there are many good tips offered en passant - including some which might seem obvious, but which are often ignored by site designers. For instance, I've noticed that in the UK, quangos and government departments are very often reluctant to display their postal address [possibly reflecting the arrogant nature of these organisations]. But she insists that
Similarly, many UK universities would do well to heed her advice on making themselves more accessible and well-presented. How many times have you visited a university site and found no lists of courses on offer or staff who teach them? She points to the short-sightedness of this approach:
It's good that she chooses different (and challenging) types of sites to analyse. Searching for information is quite a different matter to being entertained or pushing round a virtual shopping trolley. The section on information sites [Lycos, Computers.com] is particularly interesting, because she forces us to think about different types of questions which might be asked of a site, and the different approaches to searching users develop.
Very near the end of the book she presents a simple formula for successful sites. Aspirant site designers would do themselves a favour by writing her tips on Post-It notes and sticking them on their monitors:
Jennifer Fleming has a background in library and information science, and her advice and observations strike me as more seriously well-founded than most of the web design manuals I have ever seen. This is a wonderfully rich and thought-provoking study which anybody analysing or building web sites should put on their list of essential reading. © Roy Johnson 1998 [more INFORMATION DESIGN books] Jennifer Fleming, Web Navigation: Designing the User Experience, Sebastopol: O'Reilly, 1998, pp.253 plus CD-ROM, ISBN 1565923510 |
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