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| Accessibility and Usability Forum Discuss topics related to website accessibility and usability. Subjects include; testing techniques, tutorials, guidelines and legal issues. |
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Dear Usability Professionals, Advocates and Friends!
I would like to gather "Usability Tips/Quotes" to provide them here, on my web site and my forum as "Quote of the day" or "Quote of the week". Therefore I would appreciate your tips/quotes! That can be useful for all of us, or? Thanks in advance for your kind support!
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"Being an expert isn't telling other people what you know. It's understanding what questions to ask, and flexibly applying your knowledge to the specific situation at hand. Being an expert means providing sensible, highly contextual direction." Jeff Atwood SEO Workers - Search Engine Optimization Consulting Company | SEO Analysis Tool | Webnauts Net SEO |
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Great post ScottNorton!
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"Being an expert isn't telling other people what you know. It's understanding what questions to ask, and flexibly applying your knowledge to the specific situation at hand. Being an expert means providing sensible, highly contextual direction." Jeff Atwood SEO Workers - Search Engine Optimization Consulting Company | SEO Analysis Tool | Webnauts Net SEO |
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1. Don't assume your visitors know anything about you or your site.
No matter how clever, how smart, or how important you think your site is, your visitors aren't going to care if they have to fight through clever marketing terms and confusing links. 2. Treat your links well. Links are gateways into your site: Underline or unequivocally identify text links and make buttons look clickable. Write meaningful link labels. If you use icons, label them clearly. 3. Don't force users to register until it's absolutely necessary. On shopping sites, let users purchase without registering; on content sites, show some content first; on service sites, give them a sample before making them register. 4. Don't be shy. Don't hide your contact information. Credibility comes from easy access to your digits. If you sell products, put your e-mail and telephone number on your homepage. 5. Don't employ radical navigation just to be different. Some sites employ unusual navigation and terminology to stand out from the crowd. Most of these sites eventually retreat to conventional menu systems. Unless your site is experiential, stick to common navigational practices. 6. Keep your pages lean. If you're peddling products, services, or information, don't slow your users down with unnecessary graphics and animation. Free pass to art sites, designers, and entertainment portals catering to high-bandwidth users. 7. Make your homepage a gateway. Your homepage should highlight the main activities of your site. "Bubble up" content to show users what they'll find. Define a start point for new users. Don't let your homepage look like all your others. 8. Don't hide search. If your site has search, put a search box on every page. If the search is limited, let the user know. Don't put two search boxes on a page, even if they search different areas of your site. 9. Stay on message. Keep informational copy concise. Use bullet points, paragraph headers, and active sentences. Expunge marketing babble. When you're done, go back and cut your word count by half. 10. Run guerrilla usability tests. Find five people to test your site. Watch them navigate and attempt tasks as they "think aloud" their actions. It's a problem if more than one tester can't do or find something. Remember, it's not the users' fault if they have trouble: it's a design flaw.
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WebCritica Usability Matters. www.webcritica.com http://home.earthlink.net/~dtomere/logo-wpw.gif Custom usability evaluations |
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usermonster excellent post. I also have visited your website and I was impressed.
If you ever would like to make an affiliate program, I would gladly like to work with you.
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"Being an expert isn't telling other people what you know. It's understanding what questions to ask, and flexibly applying your knowledge to the specific situation at hand. Being an expert means providing sensible, highly contextual direction." Jeff Atwood SEO Workers - Search Engine Optimization Consulting Company | SEO Analysis Tool | Webnauts Net SEO |
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Quote:
__________________
"Being an expert isn't telling other people what you know. It's understanding what questions to ask, and flexibly applying your knowledge to the specific situation at hand. Being an expert means providing sensible, highly contextual direction." Jeff Atwood SEO Workers - Search Engine Optimization Consulting Company | SEO Analysis Tool | Webnauts Net SEO |
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