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The Three Core Principles of Great Web Design
By Gerry McGovern
The essence of a website is self-service. There
are three core things that self-service needs to get right: convenience,
speed, and price. Convenience means task achievement with minimum
effort. Speed means that you get in and out of a website as quickly
as possible. People are cheap on the Web.
It's hard to design for self-service. It requires
an absolute focus on simplicity and clarity of message. People
read on the Web like they read motorway signs. They are moving
at speed. There is precious little time to focus, so the message
must be clear.
It's not enough that your website is a little
more convenient. Your visitors are bringing a lifetime of habits
with them. What they need to do at your website, they have done
manually before. They have received help from someone to complete
this task. Now they are on their own. They don't like that.
The deeply ingrained habit inside them is saying:
"This is too much hassle. Let's do it the way we always do
it. Let's do it the way we know." This is a compelling message.
So to win this person over, it isn't sufficient that your website
is a little more convenient. It has to be a lot more.
If there was a convenience meter, I would say
that most websites would struggle to achieve 40 percent on its
scale. There is so much room for improvement. That's understandable.
The Web is only 10 years old. We have made lots of great progress.
Let's keep getting better.
In a plush restaurant, you pay to wait. You don't
pay to wait in McDonalds. You want it fast. Great websites are
obsessed with speed. The Google homepage is 11 KB. Do you know
the weight of your homepage?
It's not just about page weight. There are many
other factors that influence how quickly a webpage will download.
Achieving success is about testing, testing, testing. Success
is also about perceived speed. If you have a six step process
and an equivalent website has a five step process, people may
perceive you as slower, even if your pages download much faster.
The Web: land of free information; home of the
bargain hunter. There is a particular psychology at work when
we are in self- service mode. We're doing it for ourselves, so
what's in it for us? We're saving this website money because it
now has to hire fewer people. So we want some of those savings
passed on. It's only fair.
Even if you are a government or university website,
you still need to think about some sort of special offer. Do they
get an extra week past the official deadline if they fill in their
application online?
For example, the U.S. Internal Revenue Service
website is currently promoting "Free File". "Free
File is online tax preparation and electronic filing through a
partnership agreement between the IRS and the Free File Alliance,
LLC," the website states. "In other words, you can e-file
... free."
No matter what sort of website you have,
if you want to maximize success, you need to be convenient, fast,
and cheap. Adhere to these three principles and everything else
will fall into place.
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