After reviewing the website Area Rugs Club this morning, I found that they had an very unusual search form. The site has a few different methods to search, and their main one was what got my attention. It was a combination of the method, so I decided to see what the heck was going on.

The Condition

Area Rugs Club sells rugs. In the rug world there are all sorts of criteria. The main ones are: style, color, price, and shape. These are the top ways a visitor will search. So A.R.C. devised three different ways to search. The first is a series of drop downs menus where you can define your ideal rug by the four main methods. The second method was to search by visual clues, by means of icons representing it. See Example of a search for rugs by style: Rugs. The third method is a basic text box search form, so a visitor can search for any product that has the keyword.

The Redundant Search

So here is a screenshot of the unusual search form they have on their home page. It’s a combination of the three search methods they have throughout the site.

form

My first impression was that it was over redundant. Why do you need so many search methods? You don’t need the color icons, it’s in the drop down selection. Why use icons for the brands? Couldn’t they have just put that in a drop down? How about the search box at the bottom? Why not just get rid of all the other options, and just use that? Then I though, it’s a nearly a perfect form.

Why It Works

First thing is first. This rug store needs to have a drop down search by criteria form. Why? Because many other sites have this ability. Online shoppers expect to find a search method like this, and it is a very effective method of finding what you are looking for. Second thing. Those brand name icons sell their site and their product. By having those icons they don’t just help a visitor find what they are looking for, but say “Hey! Look here! We sell the brand you are looking for.” A search form that sells, beat that. Third, colors. Why? For one, it was probably easy to make those icons, and for another reason, it is most likely the second most popular search method. User experiences faster searching by having it. Fourth and last, search by keyword. When all your searching fails, this form will find it, or they don’t have it. End of story, this form is made to work, for the visitor and the seller.

Before you change your search forms to match theirs, make sure you test everything out first. Know how your visitors would prefer to search for your product, do industry research, so you can see how your competitors are doing it, and make sure it is easy to use. I’m guessing every aspect of that form is being put to work, and it is in order of users prefered search method. The users experience was definitely considered in this sites design. Now they just need to get to work on the search form for their blog, Area Rugs Blog. It needs some help, there is no button to click to start the search.

Oct 282008
 

I was asked to do my Basic Usability and Design Analysis on Velnet Web Design yesterday before their site is totally completed, and they said that it would be OK if I shared a few of my findings.

Navigating Text

Right off the bat, I saw something that needed fixing. There is way too much text. What about my site, that’s all it is you say? Well mine is a blog, and you are here to read. Velnet Designs is there to sell, and those looking to buy want quick facts, and an easy method to do so. Here is a possible wake up call to some of you reading this. I am writing a post about their site, did an usability analsyis of their site, and STILL did not read all of the content on the home page. It’s just too much.

So as a visitor how do you navigate all that text. There is bound to be lots of links within it. Usually, when visiting a website, we are used to a link changing color in some way after visiting it. Well in this case clicking the links doesn’t help the visitor.It stays the same color, and when returning to my starting point their are no visual clues of where I have been. In my book this should be the first thing to fix on the site. Make it so the visitor can navigate that text.

Their Forms

If you look at their free ecommerce web design quote form you will see an easy enough form to fill out. What’s slowing down visitors from filling it out though? Dumb stuff. Getting some basic info is important, but knowing the visitors title, or what color scheme they want is really unnecessary. When building a form, get the minimum first. You can fill in the blanks as the relationship continues.

There was also one form missing. The search form! It’s always a good idea to have a search form on your site to help visitors out when your sites navigation fails them.

Web Design

Looking at the UK Web Design page, the reigns need to be yanked on the use of bold or strong. Their lists have the same emphasis as the titles of the lists. Where’s the emphasis there?

No Worries

The beauty is the owner has taken the time to get an analysis before they completed their re-design. They can review all my comments, pick and choose what they want to improve on, and finalize with a clean site. Having an extra set of eyes always helps, and too often webmasters are doing it solo.