This is a video made by the BBC published today about the spanish economy regarding real state and it’s possible fall.
This is the homepage of Vodafone.es:
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Nice and simple right ?
They don’t even need to show mobiles or devices because almost everybody know what Vodafone is.
I just have one constructive critic about it:
Why I can just enter login password and hit Enter to submit ?
This simple and stupid thing clearly breaks the natural form usability that users expect when submiting a form. Which brings me back to the other entry about labels and forms. Even big portals have this kind of issues. And I think in the next years this is going to change, because of the high competivity of the internet, everyone will care about increasing usability and return of investment.
Unless you are Vodafone, or Apple, I strongly recommend making home pages that clearly say what do yo do, and what benefit I can get from using your product.
I will be publishing a serie of homepage examples. I want to make constructive critics about some of them.
This image shows the rise and fall (when I don’t blog) of this site:
Note that this site is just starting, because before it was not wordpress so new visits are yet to come.
It’s very interesting the New York Times article entitled Technology’s Untanglers: They Make It Really Work
SOMETIMES there is a huge disconnect between the people who make a product and the people who use it. The creator of a Web site may assume too much knowledge on the part of users, leading to confusion.
DAILY LECTURES
POWERLABS idea:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v
I was thinking about this while navigating the spanish Dell online store. We all like Video, but doest it work allright in all terminals ?
I don’t think so. I use to like the Dell online store, in my opinion it’s one of the most engaging and innovative e-commerce sites online, but today I didn’t enjoyed so much the Dell experience. The reason ?
In the presentation product pages the big flash video and 3D animations made the hole store freeze making a very bad browsing experience.
The PC I’m using at home is not so old :
Intel Pentium III, 931 MHz, 384 MB RAM
This leaves me thinking:
How many people is using old and not so fast computers like this one?
How many of them choose to leave to another sites when this big Flash movies freeze all the computer ?
Is the “eye candy” experience worth the ride or it’s also reducing part of the online sales ?
Flash video and animations are great to show products if they are used with rationality. When using it improperly it just eats all CPU resources reducing the website usability and making a bad navigation experience.
All this rant made me remember the book Creating Killer Websites which advocated splash screens and other design atrocities. Soon it was proved that Killer Websites Killed Business ( And yes, I’m phrasing Jakob here )
My advice is:
Use video, but test it with slow computers, test it again with 10 windows open with less memory and make sure it streams well without freezing your browser navigation. Because this could be just the case of a potential client trying to purchase something at your online store.