Less Is More - How to keep your website clutter-free
Contributed by Jeremy Jarvis
All glitz and fizz
The past was about 'bells and whistles'. Websites were designed to showcase
the technology behind the web rather than to be an effective communications
medium. Flash was used to "excite" and "engage" -
its effect however was often the opposite. And web navigation was sometimes
an experiment in obscurity making it almost impossible for the visitor
to find their way around. Entertainment was the mantra rather than communication
effectiveness.
We want it now
There are often only a handful of reasons or actions for which the majority
of visitors will be at your site. They want to complete the task in hand
e.g find a price, book a ticket or get directions with minimum fuss.
Unless a site is quick and easy to use it will be a barrier rather than
a gateway. Usability guru, Jakob Nielsen, suggests users spend on average
less than 2 minutes on a website. The key to engaging visitors' must therefore
be simplicity over complexity; the need is less not more - less clutter,
less blurb and fewer barriers.
Why clutter-free design
"When we're creating sites, we act as though people are going to
pore over each page, reading our finely crafted text, figuring out how
we've organized things, and weighing their options before deciding which
link to click
We're thinking 'great literature' (or at least 'product brochure'),
while the user's reality is much closer to "billboard going by at
60 miles an hour."
--Steve Krug, Don't Make Me Think
The Internet is clearly a different form of communication to more established
media such as printed literature. However, it is only in recent years
that its intrinsic differences have begun to make an impact on web design.
I cannot count the number of times I've heard of clients asking their
web designer to 'put our brochure online' - a brief that reflects a common
lack of appreciation of the web as a powerful but very different medium.
Ensuring that the design and layout of our web pages suit the medium
they are used in will help to ensure a positive user experience.
Let's look at a few practical ways of doing more with less to make things
simpler for our visitors:
1) Make pages easy to scan
It's a well recognised fact now amongst web professionals that people
rarely read pages online - they scan, or "speed read". Therefore,
if the information they need is not readily available they will move on
- and quickly. Sensible use of headings, subheadings and bullet-points
help bring a logical hierarchy to the page and allow visitors eyes to
scan through the page efficiently to find the information they needallows
visitors eyes to scan through efficiently to find the information they
need.
2) Give me some [white] space
Subtle and thoughtful use of space in page design helps guide a visitor's
eyes to important information. It also helps to bring logical definition
to different areas of a page, which lightens the load on our brains and
allows us to focus on the task in hand.
3) Copy? Reduce it
Visitors often won't have the time or inclination to read pages and pages
of text in the hope of finding what they're after. We need to prune our
web copy to suit the medium - get rid of paragraphs and sentences that
don't add value.
4) Simplify site structure
Make sure that the sections of the site are divided up logically and
that the navigation is clear and logical. Reduce the number of steps it
takes
to complete tasks, especially when they lead to revenue generation - such
as the checkout process on an e-commerce site.
5) Follow standards
When it comes to labelling navigation links, it's a good idea to follow
standards that have evolved with web development. For example, with contact
details rather than giving it a navigation label, 'call for more information/our
offices', the standard would be 'contacts' or 'contact us'.
In closing...
Some might suggest that these principles constrain creativity. However,
I believe that the 'less is more' philosophy heightens the need for a
more creative approach to communicating ideas and messages - communicating
an idea in 10 words is a lot harder than using 100 words.
Jeremy Jarvis is a designer at Reflex Digital, offering web design services
in Leeds, West Yorkshire and the UK. See http://www.reflex.net/ for more
information.
Article Source: http://www.articlematrix.com
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