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iPad: Digitales Brett vor dem Kopf oder das Erwachen der Benutzeroberflächen

iPad iPad iPad – viele hypen fröhlich Apple hinterher und verlieren sich in den schönsten Fantasien. Nichts gegen Apple, doch was kann das iPad wirklich? Kann es eine “kriesengeschütelte” Branche retten? Die Verlage? Klar, schliesslich lassen sich jetzt endlich digitale und multimediale Magazine erstellen und verkaufen… Wirklich? Hätten wir Technologie und Möglichkeiten nicht schon seit Jahren gehabt?

Warum nicht mehr aus den bestehenden Technologien machen? Viele gestalterische Ideen und User Interfaces liessen sich auch mit bestehenden Technologien realisieren. Klar, das streicheln und swipen auf dem iPad macht Spass. Doch auch bestehende Seiten könnten ihre Usability und User Experience verbessern. Joy of Use wurde nicht erst mit dem iPad erfunden. Die meisten Softwareoberflächen fristen ein tristes graues Dasein mit Standard-Buttons aus dem Baukasten. Auf dem iPad würde niemand eine solche Augenschande programmieren. Warum? Weil die Leute besseres gewohnt sind und weil sie entsprechende Erwartungen haben. Warum nicht die Benutzer herkömmlicher Software mit einem ansprechenden Design und einem durchdachten Interaktionskonzept überraschen? Ich bin mir sicher, die Benutzer werden es danken. Spass ist nicht auf Apple begrenzt. Spass, Ästhetik und gute Usability sind Konzepte, die jeder in seine bestehenden Produkte und Dienste einflechten kann. Was würden Sie wählen, wenn sie die Wahl haben zwischen grau und umständlich oder ästhetisch und einfach zu bedienen? Geben Sie Ihren Kunden was Sie selbst zu schätzen wissen. Joy of Use.

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ZEIT ONLINE Logo

Zeit Online Talk – Das iPad ist da

ZEIT ONLINE LogoHat das iPad unsere Mediennutzung revolutioniert?

Markus Heidmeier diskutiert mit Gästen über das iPad und die Auswirkungen auf die Mediennutzung.

Gäste
Armin Rott, Professor für Medienökonomie an der Hamburg Media School
Vera Brannen gründete 2004 Brannen Usable Brands. Sie ist Brand Experience Design Consultant.
Sascha Venohr, Entwicklungsredakteur bei Zeit Online

Hier zum Nachhören

Die Diskussion geht den Fragen nach: Was kann das iPad, was kann es nicht? Welche Nutzungsszenarien gibt es? Was macht die Konkurrenz?

Für Medienanbieter, zum Beispiel Verlage, schafft das iPad neue Angebotsmöglichkeiten. Zerfallen Printpodukte in Einzelerzeugnisse oder werde Magazine zu multimedialen Formaten oder kann das iPad am Ende sogar die Zeitungsverlage retten?

Auch Zeit Online wird eine solche fürs iPad optimierte Seite anbieten. Zusätzlich wird die gerade entstehende iPhone App der Zeit auch auf dem iPad laufen.

Schließlich stellt sich aber auch die Frage nach der sich ausdehnenden Marktmacht von Apple. Entsteht so nicht eine publizistische Abhängigkeit von den Regeln eines Unternehmens?

Auch für die Nutzer, die sich auf Apple-Produkte einstellen, könnte die Entwicklung aus dem offenen Netz etwa hin zu einem Netz der Apps werden?

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Font Conference – on fonts and branding

How the choice of a font will influence the perception of your brand.

A witty visualisation – have fun.

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Navigation Part 2: How many navigation points?

It is very pleasing to hear in many concept workshops – “A maximum of 7 navigation items, correct?”
This truly shows that core elements of usability have made the round and that people are familiar with them.

However, real life is not always that easy. Let’s look at some issues:

The seven point rule:
It is true and has been psychologically proven that the human brain best can recall 7 items and that the brain capacity after that becomes lower. This is certainly true for example shopping lists. However, from this also the rule: No more than 7 navigation items has been deducted.

Is it applicable? Yes and no.

It certainly makes sense to try to reduce navigational points and keep the navigational structure precise and clear.

However, what are some exceptions?

# Familiarity with a different structure in the “real world”:

For example news sites: Users are familiar with the categories of their daily newspaper such as news, entertainment, sports, weather etc. There it is advisable to retain the structure readers are familiar with.

usability_navigation_1.jpg

# Simply too much content

Sometimes it also can help to add an additional top level item to avoid that the site will have too many navigational hierarchies.

# Linking to sub-sites

For example yahoo links to many sub-sites from its main portal and offers a link to view all other categories. This is another way to structure a huge amount many companies are following: Showing the main entries to everybody and adding an additional link to view all navigation items.

usability_navigation_2.jpg

 

usability_navigation_3.jpg

 

Read the entire series:
Part 1: How to structure content?
Part 3: Dynamic or static navigation
Part 4: Navigation and the customer life cycle
Part 5: Global navigation

 

 

 

 

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BBC Homepage Usability

BBC’s Web site relaunch – topics regarding usability and branding on their new homepage

On March 31st the BBC launched its new Web site and since then they have received over 1600 comments in their blog. Many users are complaining about the relaunch.

Looking at their new homepage, I noticed three main points regarding usability and branding:

 

#1 Fast access to information on homepage

The main purpose of visiting a news Web site is usually to quickly learn about what is going on in the world or in the personal field of interest – for example sports. This means users want to be able to quickly scan the site and then pick an article.

BBC Homepage Usability

It is exactly this which is impossible on the new BBC home page. Counting the visible news (at a 1024 resolution) entries on the home pages of major news sites today:

  • BBC: 9 articles (not counting weather)
  • CNN: 19 headlines
  • NY Times: 18 headlines
  • Yahoo: 14 headlines

Most other news sites make it much easier to get a quick overview.

When the user personalizes the homepage he can get up to about 12 visible entries without scrolling. However, studies have shown that usually only a small percentage of users make use of personalising a site. And why can the user not move the big picture on top; the one that is actually taking up most of the space?

Studies have shown that a minimum font size of 12 px and a bigger line spacing leads to the best results in reading efficiency and information transfer. So this is solved nicely on the new homepage. However, especially on the homepage there is too much unused space. For example the weather and blog quote are huge compared to the information they transfer.

BBC Homepage Usability

#2 Accessing other topics via the homepage

In addition, the user has no chance to quickly access the topics provided by BBC. The user has to scroll to the end of the home page to find these:

BBC Homepage Usability

These links are provided as a general navigation on almost every other news Web site. They allow easy and convenient access to the user’s field of interest. BBC offers those links also on all its subpages. Why not on the homepage?

For example Yahoo has solved those points on their homepage in a good manner: The navigation to the left with easy access to the main topics and lots of information in the content area.

Yahoo homepage

#3 Visual consistency and branding

While the homepage looks like a clear attempt in trendy design with rounded corners, fading colours and light effects all the subpages have a totally different look and feel. They are flat 2 dimensional design, squared corners, no shading. What does BBC stand for?

BBC Subpages

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The three pilars of Good Branding

Benefits of Good Branding

Consistent and targeted brand communication in all communication channels strengthens trust in the company and increases the brand’s value.

The more the branding strategy is in accord with the corporate identity, the stronger the brand will be reinforced with the target group in the long run. By focusing on brand essentials, unnecessary wastage can be avoided and a strengthening of the brand image and therefore also of the brand value can be achieved. The total expenditure for branding activities will not be increased though the overall branding impact will be improved.

The three pilars of Good Branding

Trust in the brand
As soon as the communication strategy in all media is built upon the corporate identity, the user receives a consistent image of the company and its products: with each contact, his trust in the brand is reinforced and affirmed.

Information transfer targeted for your audience
Appeal to the intellect of the user by enabling him to find all the necessary information that he seeks about a service or product. Communicate your company’s message using concise language which is based on the user’s level of experience with your products or services; avoid using trade jargon. Make additional information easily accessible.

Emotional communication
The distinct use of colours, fonts, wording, forms, and images creates the desired emotions and virtual experience of your brand, which should always be based on the company’s corporate identity. The resulting corporate design needs to follow the same rules in all media.

Product and web experience
A user’s interactive experience with the website strongly influences his perception of the company. Flaws in usability and branding can therefore easily lead the user to conclude that the services and products are also inadequate. In contrast, ease of use highly influences the brand

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Personalized start pages: Why I fulfil my information needs otherwise

Have you heard of those great Web sites, so called “Personalized Start Pages”, which will make life so much easier? There was a big hype starting in 2005, and almost all the big portals and news providers jumped on the band wagon – now we can see more failures.

The idea behind the concept sounds tempting at a first glance:
Personalized start pages allow their users to get all of their favorite websites, blogs, news, weather, maps, events, address books, to do lists, email accounts, social networks, search engines, video and photo networks – you name it – in one place, and users then can share the page with their friends.

What are the flaws
Have a look at the screenshot below: E-Mail, Flickr, Youtube, maps, etc.
Now consider the following scenarios and the users’ needs:

  1. He wants to check his E-Mail: Where does he go?
    His start page or his E-Mail account?
  2. He wants to check out the news on Youtube: Where does he go?
    His start page or Youtube?
  3. He wants to upload some images to Flickr: Where does he go?
    His start page or Flickr?
  4. He needs directions: Start page or Google maps?

You get the pattern.

So what are the benefits?
That is the big question. Users will fulfil their needs directly. The obstacles of configuring the start page and the loss of time do not match the benefits. A simple start page where a user can assemble all his favorite RSS feeds can offer a quick overview of all the sites’ news, and weather info is a feature many users appreciate. However, most features offered on those sites only mean a click more for the user, and therefore the user would rather go directly to the desired target such as Youtube, the E-Mail account or Flickr.

This is also why Flickr, Youtube, delicious, Facebook and many others got sold or received substantial venture capital. Despite the fact that several Personalized start pages got impressive media coverage, there is little business hype heard.

Lessons learned:
One of the most important factors for being successful is creating a business strategy that fulfils a concrete user need.
And yes, I am still wondering about the business models of today’s personalized start pages.

Who are the players?

Live

http://www.live.com/ Yahoo

http://my.yahoo.com/ Google

http://www.google.de/ig Netvibes

http://www.netvibes.com/ Start

http://www.start.com/ Protopage

http://protopage.com/v2 Pageflakes

http://www.pageflakes.com/ Inbox.com

http://inbox.com/ My AOL

http://feeds.my.aol.com/ My Lycos

http://my.lycos.com/ My Netscape

http://my.netscape.com/ My Earthlink

http://my.earthlink.net/Who has stopped their services? Mein T-Online http://mein.t-online.de

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What happens to your brand when you don’t focus

It is so true. I have been sitting in meetings like that myself. This happens often, when too many have a say. Then you start compromising and compromising and adding and adding and loosing focus. You never can please everybody.

In the end it is one big wishy washy about everything and nothing.
You want to stand out? Focus on the essentials.

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