Hand Visitors the Keys to Your Web Site
Recently, I wanted to use my car but couldn’t find my car key. The last
I’d seen it, I was handing it to my daughter, two days ago.
First, I “texted” her in school, so she wouldn’t get into trouble for
having a cell phone with her. She typed back, "u hv." Then,
I called my husband, who has amazing psychic abilities an hour away
from home. He has no idea where my car key is. Fortunately, I had a
spare key and of course, later in the evening, my daughter found the
original key sitting by her computer, buried in the world’s scariest
Teenager’s Room.
It took all day to solve the missing car key mystery. I stuck with the
search because I like my car and like to drive it.
Do you ever hope your web site visitors feel the same way about your
web site? Have you driven it around the countryside before offering
them the keys to it?
I've Come to Drive Your Web Site
I recently visited a web site that was redesigned. It looked professional
and attractive. It was ready for visitors, but perhaps not me. My goal
was to find out where the products were and secondly, how to order them.
However, the first big whammo! object on the page was a video of a person
talking about a product.
This isn’t a bad thing. But I’m new. I’ve just nestled
myself into the homepage car seat. I want to look around, play with
the radio, adjust the rear view mirror, figure out where they’ll
let me put my coffee mug and by golly, is that a sale item over there?
I don’t want to watch a video yet and their’s takes up a
huge chunk of homepage real estate, above the page fold. I’m sure
it’s very nice and I’m sorry for scrolling past it. I came
with a mission in mind. Did they build a site for me to carry out my
task?
Farther down the page, I finally discover the Way To Our Products
click path. I click the link, which takes me to another page with a
search function and after a few tries at getting the right search criteria
down, I finally arrive at a product I’m interested in. It’s
been 10 minutes, but YES! I’ve made it down their web site driveway.
It’s a good thing I want to drive their web site because after
10 minutes of figuring out where they put everything, I’m thinking
I want to drive a sports car.
Navigation for web sites, especially large sites, is never easy to map
out. It takes planning and consideration for visitors’ goals.
It has to help visitors complete a task. On this particular web site,
which was very attractive, they didn’t put a “How to
Order” button or link on the product page.
I had no car key. I couldn’t start their web site engine. All
I was able to do was play “pretend driver” and imagine I
was doing something on their web site, because that’s about all
they designed it to let me do.
The moral of this story?
The next time you design a web site, its okay to take it for a joy-ride.
You’ve earned that right. But, make sure you throw the keys to
other drivers and let them take it on the highway or down the street
to Starbucks. These people are your user testing hero’s.
Trust me when I say that many of them crave bumpy roads and purposely
love to drive web sites like maniacs, just to see what that baby can
do.
But, remember to get your keys back when they’re finished.