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Why Web Site Design is so important:
Ask an average Internet user what makes a site seem credible and trustworthy
and you'll get thoughtful answers like these: a good privacy policy, accurate
information, awards, and business affiliations. That's what visitors say they
want, but researchers recently found an astonishing contradiction. While they
had hoped to see people use more rigorous strategies for evaluating a Web
site's credibility, the researchers found that a site's design was actually
more important than any other feature!
Visitor Preferences Studied:
Two surprising studies were published recently that showed an unexpected gap
between how people say they judge Web sites and the criteria they actually use:
The studies asked Internet users to evaluate the credibility and quality of
information they get from various Web sites. Even though visitors told
researchers they looked at many different aspects of a Web site when deciding
whether to trust its information, researchers were surprised to discover that
visitors were more swayed by a site's design than anything else. Visitors were
asked what characteristics would make them trust the information on a Web site.
Few people (if any) told researchers that they would trust a site more if it
"looked good." However, that's exactly what researchers discovered after asking
participants to evaluate a number of different Web sites!
What Visitors Really Look At:
Visitors first evaluate a site's overall design, including its use of
multimedia. Beau Brendler, director of Consumer Web Watch noted: "While
consumers say they judge on substance, these studies demonstrate that consumers
judge on aesthetics, and get distracted by bells and whistles." So, after
spending all this time developing great, valuable content that visitors can't
find anywhere else on the Web, does this mean nothing matters but a cool color
scheme and fancy flash animation? Fortunately, it doesn't. The Stanford study
noted specifically that while a site's design is the first indicator of
quality, it isn't the only one: ".the visual design may be the first test of a
site's credibility. If it fails on this criterion, Web users are likely to
abandon the site and seek other sources of information and services."
Implications For Your Web Site:
The similarity of the results for both studies indicates that a site's design
really matters! Your web site design should present a polished, professional
look. You certainly don't want your visitors to parrot this comment from one of
the survey participants: "The design is sloppy and looks like some adolescent
boys in a garage threw this together." So take a close look at some of the
particular design aspects that study participants noted:
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Good color choices. Coordinate your colors to draw attention to important
elements. Be careful with background images. Choose a color scheme that
reflects your audience's preferences - not your own.
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Typography. Use fonts that are easy to read.
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Layout. Create a clear navigation structure and place page elements so they are
easy to read. Use color, bullet lists, section headers, and pull quotes to
highlight important points.
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Images and Multimedia. Be careful with images and multimedia. They should
compliment your site and reinforce your message - not annoy visitors.
Information Is Important Too!
Design is very, very important, but don't get so carried away that you forget
that information is what visitors are really after! A web site should be
designed to deliver information to visitors. Part of that delivery system is a
pleasing, easy-to-use layout, but should also include good information
structure and easy navigation. A good design may convince visitors to take a
closer look, but they won't look twice if the content isn't useful and well
organized.
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