Bytestart - The online small business portal
Search over 1500 Articles!


SEO Startup - Create and manage your own professional website and use the Search Engine Optimisation features to get your site noticed by Google. All for just £200 + VAT Click here to find out more.


Web usability: The basics

 print  e-mail 

Web usability is about making your website in such a way that your site users can find what they're looking for quickly and efficiently. A usable website can reap huge benefits on to your website and your business.

  • Every £1 invested in improving your website's usability returns £10 to £100 (source: IBM)
  • A web usability redesign can increase the sales/conversion rate by 100% (source: Jakob Nielson)

Your website has to be easy to navigate

Users have gradually become accustomed to particular layouts and phrases on the Internet, for example:

  • Organisation logo is in the top-left corner and links back to the homepage
  • The term ‘About us’ is used for organisation information
  • Navigation is in the same place on each page and adjacent to the content
  • Anything flashing or placed above the top logo is often an advertisement
  • The term ‘Shopping cart’ is used for items you might wish to purchase
There are numerous other conventions like these that enhance your website's usability - can you think of some more?

Don't underestimate the importance of these conventions - as the Internet matures we're getting more and more used to things being a certain way. Break these conventions and you may be left with nothing but a website with poor usability and a handful of dissatisfied site visitors.

Pages must download quickly

Usability studies have shown that 8.6 seconds is the maximum time web users will wait for a page to download (source: Andrew B. King - Speed Up Your Site). As of March 2004 just 25% of UK web users had broadband (source: UK National Statistics) so it's essential for optimal usability that your website downloads quickly.

To speed up the download time of your website we recommend you do three things:

  • Use CSS and not tables to lay out your web page
  • Use CSS and not images to create fancy navigation items
  • Read this article about how to speed up the download time of your web pages at http://www.webcredible.co.uk/speed

Information should be easy to retrieve

We read web pages in a different manner to the way we read printed matter. We generally don't read pages word-for-word - instead we scan. When we scan web pages certain items stand out:

  • Headings
  • Link text
  • Bold text
  • Bulleted lists
Did you notice that images were left out of that list? Contrary to the way in which we read printed matter, we see text before we see images on the Internet. For optimal website usability don't place important information in images as it might go unnoticed.

Restrictions must not be placed on users

Don't prevent your users from navigating through the Internet in the way that they want to. For example:

1. Every time a link is opened in a new window the back button is disabled. Approximately 60% of Web users employ the back button as their primary means of navigation (source: Usability Interface). If you do this then you're preventing 60% of your users from using their primary navigation - now that can't be good for usability.

2. Don't use frames to lay out your website. Frames can cause a number of usability problems, namely:

  • Disabling the back button (see above)
  • Bookmarking not possible
  • Impossible to e-mail the link to someone else
  • Problems with printing
  • Users feel trapped if external links open in the same window
  • Search engine optimisation issues
There are lots of other ways that websites can place restrictions on its users, ultimately damaging their usability - can you think of any more? Just think back to the last time a website really infuriated you - what annoying thing did it do to make you feel that way?

About The Author

This article was written by Trenton Moss. He's crazy about web usability and accessibility - so crazy that he went and started his own web usability and accessibility consultancy (Webcredible - http://www.webcredible.co.uk) to help make the Internet a better place for everyone.

Posted October 31, 2005





Latest articles in Web Design
 
Top Ten Tips to improve your business website
[February 14, 2008] Some simple tips to help you ensure that your business website remains competitive in 2008.
 
Website Navigation - How to keep your site visitors happy
[October 4, 2007] When designing your small business website (or upgrading an existing one), one of the key things to focus on is the site's internal navigation structure.
 
Poor web page design will turn visitors away
[July 24, 2006] Just as there's no point having a 'great site', when you have no traffic, there is no point generating traffic to a poorly designed site. Business promotion strategies should be viewed side-by-side with web design techniques.
 
Most UK Web Sites Are Illegal under Disability rules
[June 16, 2006] Berkshire Internet Consultant, Graeme Rhodes, explains why a legal website is good for business and how the cost of compliance can be minimised.
 
3 Ways to Optimise Your Site Navigation
[June 8, 2006] Studies show that well-planned web site navigation can help boost your sales by more than 50%. Here are three simple strategies to help potential customers to navigate your site successfully.
 
How to create and promote a Web site that works
[May 24, 2006] Before designing your web site, you need to develop a good understanding of your customers. Remember, your aim is to develop a site your customers will find useful and purchase from.
 
Web Design Resources
[May 14, 2006] Links to some of the finest small business web design sites and resources.
 
Wise Business Decision Making: Outsourcing your Logo Design
[May 10, 2006] Problems designing a logo in-house stem from the fact that it is often difficult to picture an effective marketing image when one is too closely tied to the business itself
 
How to deal with copyright infringement - website copying
[April 13, 2006] With many businesses and organisations presenting themselves on the Internet it is unsurprising that copying by others, especially by competitors is not uncommon. Some background and how to deal with the problem if it occurs.
 
The Secret Benefit Of Search Engine Optimisation: Increased Usability
[April 12, 2006] A higher search engine ranking is what many website owners dream of. What they don't realise is that by optimising their site for the search engines, if done correctly, they can also optimise it for their site visitors.
 
Our Partners
Hiscox Office Insurance
Instant Online Quotation

Bibby Financial Services
Funding your business

Cashflow Problems?
Try Invoice Financing

Save on Car Rental
Discounts with Budget

Public Liability Insurance
Get online cover now

2 Years FREE Banking
Alliance & Leicester

Company Formation
Instant online setup!


Key Services
£20 Free Postage
& 30 Day No Ties Trial

SEO-friendly website
for just £200

Virtual Office Service
For full details click here.

FREE Call Answering
Hot Office - More info

Click Here

Key SEO Guides

 










Blue Egg Ecommerce
Web Design, search engine optimisation service, ecommerce solutions and emarketing specialists.



Free Bytestart News feeds