What Are the Benefits of Good Design on the Web?
Let's examine how important
Web Design is to the success of any Web-based marketing
campaign. In a September 2003 report from Forrester Research
titled "The Best and Worst of Site Design, 2003" the authors
stated, "Most of the problems we found were self-inflicted
wounds resulting from site managers who naively allow
designers to: hide value, turn interfaces into dexterity
tests, favor “white space” over information, and leave users
hanging.” The traps are subtle, but good design is a triumph
over more than the pitfalls. Good design is the result of a
process of deep thought. And therein lies the biggest benefit
of good design: visitors to the site who are thinkers know
that the designer is a thinker. They know that the designer
was not acting out of ego, but of thinking of the needs of
others.
Sites that exhibit good design—those that
anticipate the needs of their visitors, prospects and
patrons—are directly rewarded with ROI: return on investment.
Using scenarios and personas to truly step inside the
visitor’s likely situation(s) give designers clear priorities
in the numerous decisions around navigation, use of imagery,
arrangement of content, linkages within the site, and required
functionality. Without clear objectives and a firm grasp of
the audience, misuse of the opportunity to communicate value
to each and every visitor is the likely outcome. Using
technology to dazzle does little to convey meaning, much less
compel thinking customers to stay. For those who use the Web
as art, technology prowess is fine. For those who are intent
on conducting commerce and generating qualified leads, the
name of the game is conscientious, concise, controlled
experience of the features and benefits of the products or
services the site owner offers.
There is more to
achieving a site’s objectives than good design, and we will in
future issues address some of them, but at the first view of a
Web site is the visitor’s impression of the whole site formed.
If it’s not positive, the rest of the site and its intent is
fighting an uphill battle. Thinking becomes the most important
step in any site design. Who are the visitors? What are they
looking for? What is their situation, are they rushed? Are
they knowledgeable? Are they looking for opinions or facts?
Are they the kind of prospect the site owner is looking for?
Knowing the answers to those and more questions will better
inform a designer than any images, cool Flash techniques, or
PHP application. Author
Name: Stephen DillAuthor
Email: srd@srdinteractive.comAuthor Website: http://www.srdinteractive.com
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