Click Here to download our free whitepaper on The Rewards of VoIP Implementations

Recent Articles

Showing Top Commenters Only On Your Index Page
I recently wrote that I don't like Top Commenters plugins, in fact I used a very strong word loathe. There are some benefits to introducing Top Commenters to give some level of special recognition, but whatever SEO benefits...

Website Features That Convert Visitors Into Customers
Recently I had a conversation with a voiceover expert who had paid a good chunk of change to Google for his Adwords campaign. His complaint? He got lots of...

Who Needs Website Quality?
Back in the days, to get into the search engines you only had to submit a site to them and it'd show up in the results (or you could just get listed in the Yahoo directory). Nowadays, doing that doesn't warrant...

The Holy Grail Of CSS
Someone asked me recently why I liked Cascading Styles Sheets (CSS) and what makes CSS so great. The answer only makes sense if you know what CSS is. The Holy Grail of CSS it to separate the content of a web page...

Accurately Predicting Potential Website Traffic
Wouldn't it be useful if your SEM company could accurately predict how much organic search traffic they could get your organization? I was trying to figure this out today and there are many variables/metrics...

Back Up Your Blog
It was a very scary moment. I was looking at the home page of my blog, and there was nothing but a Wordpress database error of some sort. The irony of it was that I had just gone in, for the first time, to try and...



Click to Play

Judge Rejects Webcasters...
Internet radio broadcasters were dealt a blow this week when a panel of copyright judges threw out requests to reconsider a ruling that raised the royalties they must...
04.18.07


Why Simplicity Is Essential To Web Design

By Gerry McGovern

A simple website charges you less time. A complex website charges you more time. Time is your most precious resource.

Simplicity is highly overrated, according to Donald Norman, a design thinker I very much admire. "I'm a champion of elegance, simplicity, and ease of use," Norman writes. "But, as a business person, I also know that companies have to make money, which means they have to deliver the products that their customers want, not the products they believe they should want. And the truth is, simplicity does not sell."

So why do we buy complexity even when the simple option would be better? Three reasons. Firstly, because we do judge a book by its cover; we do think beauty is skin deep. If something looks complicated, then we immediately assume that it must be powerful; must have greater value.

Secondly, we love to show off. Complexity is like the peacock's feathers. It is brash and impossible to miss. Complexity lets other people know how clever we are and how rich, because we can afford such complexity.

Thirdly, buying complexity is like buying insurance. We might not need all these fancy features right now, but there might be some time in the future when we will. Buying complexity insures us against future need.

"When users choose a feature-laden product, they may not be exhibiting a desire for complexity," Joshua Porter writes in his very interesting article, Simplicity: The Ultimate Sophistication. "Instead, users are anxious about predicting their future needs."

None of the above conditions operate on a website for the following reasons. First, we don't pay for visiting a website with our money; we pay for it with our time. The longer we spend on a website the more we pay, so there is a strong motivation to spend as little time as possible.

Second, websites are about the present, not the future. Investing in a product is about predicting all the future uses we may have for it. Visiting a website is about now. We have a particular need and we visit the website to meet that particular need.

Click Here to download our free whitepaper on The Rewards of VoIP Implementations

Website behavior is not about insuring against future conditions but rather about reaping the benefits of past actions. In other words, we like websites that resemble websites we're used to visiting, because they are more familiar and easier to navigate.

Third, we can't wear a website, drive around in it or show it off at a party. Browsing a website is essentially private behavior. When we go to Google we are usually alone. We search for cheap flights, but we certainly don't go around advertising that we're cheap.

If people loved complexity on the Web, then everyone would be using Advanced Search. We'd all be going to the 10th page of search results instead of clicking on one of the first three results on the first page.

We may still end up buying complex products on the Web, but our web behavior will remain relentlessly simple and hugely impatient. We use the Web during the ad breaks for Desperate Housewives. We simply don't have time to waste on complex navigation, convoluted language, or the vanity publishing of navel-gazing organizations.


About the Author:
For your web content management solution, contact Gerry McGovern http://www.gerrymcgovern.com

Subscribe to his New Thinking Newsletter: subscribe@gerrymcgovern.mailer1.net

About WebSiteNotes
WebSiteNotes is written by successful website entrepreneurs for their peers. Learn from the success of others and figure out the nuts and bolts of web business success. WebSiteNotes delivers Hands-On Advice For Webmasters.

WebSiteNotes is brought to you by:

WebProNews.com Jayde.com
MarketingNewz.com SalesNewz.com
CareerNewz.com InvestNewz.com
eCommNewz.com ManagerNewz.com
AdvertisingDay.com ManagerNewz.com
SoHoDay.com CRMNewz.com

 
-- WebSiteNotes is an iEntry, Inc. publication --
iEntry, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
2007 iEntry, Inc.  All Rights Reserved  Privacy Policy  Legal

archives | advertising info | news headlines | free newsletters | comments/feedback| submit article


">Unsubscribe from WebSiteNotes.
To unsubscribe from WebSiteNotes or any other iEntry publication, simply send an email request to: support@ientry.com
Hands-On Advice For Webmasters WebSiteNotes News Archives About Us Feedback WebSiteNotes Home Page About Article Archive News Downloads WebProWorld Forums Jayde iEntry Advertise Contact