Your Website Should Not Need a Manual

If Your Site isn't Usable, Who Will Use it?

Usability. Boring but crucial, it’s about making your website easy and intuitive to use.

Users shouldn’t need to learn how to use your site. Put stuff where people expect it. Don’t put the navigation bar on the right or the bottom, or make non-clickable content indiscernible from clickable content. Don’t force users to hover their mouse over a button to see what it does and never obscure the user’s browser toolbar (the bit that contains the back, forward and refresh buttons).

Designers like to show off and be different, but different isn’t always better on the web so be prepared to reel in your designer.

Here are some tips:

•    Have a search function on your site. Many people prefer searching by keyword rather than browsing.
•    Don’t have a “Flash” intro - a multimedia presentation that’s played upon entering your site. Your website is not a television commercial. If you had to sit through an ad every time you phoned a supplier, you’d soon be taking your business elsewhere.
•    Keep the navigation consistent across your site.
•    Include navigation on every page of your site. Visitors may find your site through a search engine so will not necessarily enter through your home page.
•    Place a “Contact us” link on every page. Don’t just link to your email address, provide a fill-in form, telephone number and postal and street address.
•    Use “breadcrumb navigation” to show the viewed page’s category and subcategory. Make each of those category levels a clickable link. Essentially you’re leaving a trail for users to follow so they can jump back a category or two without continually using the “Back” button.
•    Don’t use “frames”, where parts of the web page scroll but others stay fixed. Frames make it difficult, if not impossible, for users to bookmark your pages. Try bookmarking the membership page on www.aa.co.nz, for instance. Search engines don’t like frames, either.
•    Name things intuitively.
•    Minimize the number of clicks required to perform important functions on your site, such as placing an order or making an inquiry. Amazon’s “1-Click Ordering” is the epitome of efficiency.

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