I did a study a while back that some of you may have remembered. I visited a 1,000 blogs to see what got me to read more. At a 200 a day pace your site had better do something special to get my attention, at least you would think. Well, when the study was done, I had found plenty of things I hated, but the one thing that always seemed to grab my attention was images. Images naturally draw your eyes attention, and if you want to see more of the same thing you just saw, the best place to start is where you already are. This lead me to one idea though, who wants to look at zits?

Targeted Traffic

zitsYou saw it, you can’t un-see it. Here is an example of a site using images, images of politely put, acne. The site is LexLi Acne Kit. The site sells acne treatment and its supplies. Do images still work here? I mean, who really wants to look at zits? People looking for a cure or a product that cures acne, that’s who.

If your traffic is not targeted, or you are not selling acne products, I doubt anyone wants to look at that, at least not the before picture. Images do draw in visitors though, and if your traffic is targeted they can very easily turn that bounce into a few more pages views, even a sale. On this particular site the image links to even more before and after pictures. If you have acne bad, and are in need of a fix, I think you are not far from making a purchase at that point.

Types of Pictures

If you missed my post about my 1,000 blog analysis here it is: Forcing Eyes Into Content. Strangely, and by total coincidence, it was about skin products as well. Acne for me? No, usually just whiskers.

Jul 192008
 

I don’t see this too often, but here is a problem that could deflect a few of your visitors. Too many fancy terms in the vocabulary. It’s doesn’t just apply to technology sites either. You could have a gardening site, and still bury your visitor with scientific terms that only another professional would know.

Looking at this site, Microsoft Partner San Diego, I found a site that, design wise, had all the pieces in the right spot. My first impression was that they did a great job. Nice logo, tag line, testimonials, and an easy to navigate format. Then I started reading the content. It was too techy! Here is a quote from their home page:

Specifically, Xellent helps strategize, Architect and Implement complex (or extremely complex) Service Oriented N-Tier Applications targeting Microsoft.NET Platform collaborating with other Enterprise Solutions using Messaging/workflow platforms like TIBCO, MQ, BizTalk, Exchange or the like leveraging XML/XSLT.

When this is the main paragraph describing your company, you are going to miss out on some potential clients. Though I am no techno genius, I do consider myself pretty tech savvy, and after reading that paragraph I am no closer to understanding what Xellent Solutions does.

A term that has been around for a long time, and has recently become a little more popular is “Elevator Talk”. Imagine you walk into an elevator as a business owner, and Donald Trump is already inside. He makes conversation with you, and asks “What do you do professionally?”. Would you use the quote from Xellent Solutions above? You only have a few seconds to in an elevator to successfully describe your business. On the web, you have even less time because web surfers fly at an astonishing rate, especially when they are in search mode. Don’t loose out on those potential customers. Write for the general audience, and don’t waste any time saying it.

 

I may have written about this topic before, but after my last post I thought I would stick to an easy one. Fresh coffee is in the blood, and I took a nice long break from the computer.

organicFor this example I will use the site, Organic Plant Food. The question I ask you is this: Do you think the average visitor looking to buy this product is under the age of thirty? They sell organic plant food. I would have to take a wild guess, and say no. With a little research I am sure you will find your average gardener is a homeowner. Being under the age of thirty rakes out a huge amount of the younger generation, and their well performing eyes.

With that said, what happens to those older eyes? Often, especially after forty, they require glasses. Even the spokesperson appears to be wearing glasses. So when designing for a site that is catering to an older audience, you should avoid using small text. The Organic Plant Food site has chose to set their body font size to 11px, not huge, and will most likely be a strain for their target audience.

If it were me, I would design for at least 12px, but I would also not use pixels to define the size. I would use EM. When you define your font by pixels, Internet Explorer is not so kind. If I required to increase the font size using my browser I would not be able to, (CTRL + or -). However,  using EM or percentage, the font size  will easily adjust. Here is a good reason to test your site with different browsers. Firefox will allow you to increase the font size regardless on how it is defined.

For those of you that argue adjustable font size is not really an issue, comment here if you are over forty.

 

I was doing some more site reviews this morning, and a particular issue can screaming out at me today. Matching your sites colors to fit your audience.

Webmasters building a site for themselves? It’s a common occurrence. With this, a common issue is created. They get caught up in designing for their idea, and not their audience. Way to often they pick their favorite layouts, or favorite colors, not even really thinking about who they are building the site for. The visitors are just like me, right? Not.

What really got me going on this was a travel site I visited today. It was a simple blog format, nothing too exciting, and seemed more like an instant site rather than a well thought out travel site. What for surely had to go though, was the choice of colors. They chose to design the site with black as the main color. The logo was black, the headers were black, and the menu was black. Black and white travel site? No way! Travel site colors should be closer to circus colors, not Goth Industrial music colors.

Know Your Audience

You may not be spending thousands profiling your audience for your site, but you should have a general idea. Know that most sites get their visitors from search engines, and most people know nothing about you or your site. They want what they are looking for, obviously, and if they think they are on the wrong site for something as simple as color theme then you are blowing it. Spend some time researching your sites niche audience, and recognize the common theme colors. Look at the leading sites in your niche. Here is a little tip I like to use. Go to eBay.com. Every category has a custom theme color, and they all seem to be pretty well picked out.

 

I did a usability analysis on a site called Affordable Health Insurance today, and they agreed that it was alright for me to write about it here. I don’t plan on doing to much bashing, it was actually a very well done site.

healthinsurance1 300x176

Looking at the home page you can immediately see what the purpose of the site is through its introduction message, and its form. My first impression, excellent. Throughout the site you will find each page is easy to read, well defined by headers, and has a clear purpose. I can only imagine, that with a little bit of marketing they will get a great deal of visitors completing the site owners desired goal. Could they do better though? I believe yes, and I believe substantially.

They reason I say yes, and substantially, is because I don’t believe the site was designed for it’s target audience. I may be completely wrong on this, but I would think that most people searching for health insurance are those over the age of forty. There could be a few falling below this age bracket, but still, I think those under the age of thirty hardly even think about health insurance. So lets assume a high quality visitor for this site is forty and over. Even on the home page the main form asks if you are over sixty-five.

So What is Wrong With Being 40 an Older?

Hopefully nothing, I am forty. Statistically though, many of us begin needing glasses to read though. This can easily be avoided though by the handy little function that both Internet Explorer, and what Firefox has. You can simply adjust your font size to be bigger, and then you don’t need to put on your glasses. Here lies the first problem with this site. They have assigned the font size to a static size by means of pt or pixels, and using Internet Explorer, as many forty and older viewers do, the font size is not adjustable. So now the target audience is those over forty, and only those that can read the font size they have picked. Hopefully this isn’t too large of a percentage. If the webmaster had set the font size to EM the site would still appear the same at first, but the target audience will still be the entire forty over group because they would be able to adjust it.

I’m Old, Stop Making Me Work

Now let’s assume our visitor is a little older. Say they are sixty-five or older. Looking at the screen shot I took above, that is pretty much what I saw in my viewer without having to scroll. Well guess what, there was almost an entire page below that in content. Here is what was below:

healthinsurance2 300x231

It may seem a little silly in thinking that I am too old to scroll down to the bottom half of the page to see the entire home page, but it wouldn’t if you have extreme arthritis, which many people do, especially those over the age of sixty-five. The way I see this home page for the sixty-five and older group is basically, bottom half content, does not exist. How do you fix? Increase the sites width. Right now the site is designed for a 800 pixel monitor. Less than 10% of the global audience uses a monitor so archaic. By making the site wider, you make use of the screen, not the scroll bar. It is much easier and faster to read, then to use buttons.

If you look at their more extensive form to get more health insurance, you will find it is a complete nightmare for those with arthritis. To fill it out, the visitor must switch from mouse, to keyboard, and back, with almost every field. This is bad style, even for those who are young. It’s time consuming to switch back and forth. It’s also a good way to keep a form from getting filled out. Group like field types if you can. To clarify what I mean on this, group your input fields by text, drop down, check boxes, and so on. This will allow the visitor to accomplish more with less physical action.

Over all there were only a few additional items I would change on this site, but by spending the time to understand your audience a little more could make a huge difference in site performance. Right now Affordable Health Insurance is missing out on those who need glasses, and those whom might have arthritis. This is a pretty large group if you consider their target audience.