- Original Poster
- #1
I'm interested in opinions and perspectives on this question.
Whilst it's hard to get everything right all the time on a website there are many many sites that I (and you) encounter every day that have obvious (to me) usability problems. Sometimes we won't know that we've been positively or negatively influenced by a site design or wording (that's what A/B testing shows), but if you know what to look for there are so many easy fixes that could be done, as well as hard ones.
It's not a secret that good customer service including website usability makes a difference to the bottom line.
And yet even trying to give feedback to a site on issues is typically ignored. There are times when I've offered a free review, or actually done a professional review and sent it over and get no response - and I've not been touting for business, just trying to help. There's an element of people only valuing what they pay for.
I've worked in usability related roles for many years and have done a lot of research into what works and what doesn't on digital interfaces of different types. I know objectively many things that will degrade the experience of a website for a customer and lose money for the site owner. When I do paid professional reviews the site owners typically find them tremendously valuable. So I find it frustrating come across usability issues that can so easily be fixed.
It doesn't have to be expensive to discover issues with your site and fix them, but it does require will. My guess is that there's a lot of inertia where site owners are 'doing ok' and are busy. There'll be some who really don't understand that they are not the customer and that they could actually make more money with site improvements.
One cause is engineering houses who offer website builds but have no customer insight. They build pretty but dysfunctional sites. They don't do it intentionally, it's just not their core expertise.
I dream of a parallel universe where there's a prime time tv show or viral social media channel where people laugh at rubbish sites so the owners are motivated to do something.
What's your view?
Whilst it's hard to get everything right all the time on a website there are many many sites that I (and you) encounter every day that have obvious (to me) usability problems. Sometimes we won't know that we've been positively or negatively influenced by a site design or wording (that's what A/B testing shows), but if you know what to look for there are so many easy fixes that could be done, as well as hard ones.
It's not a secret that good customer service including website usability makes a difference to the bottom line.
And yet even trying to give feedback to a site on issues is typically ignored. There are times when I've offered a free review, or actually done a professional review and sent it over and get no response - and I've not been touting for business, just trying to help. There's an element of people only valuing what they pay for.
I've worked in usability related roles for many years and have done a lot of research into what works and what doesn't on digital interfaces of different types. I know objectively many things that will degrade the experience of a website for a customer and lose money for the site owner. When I do paid professional reviews the site owners typically find them tremendously valuable. So I find it frustrating come across usability issues that can so easily be fixed.
It doesn't have to be expensive to discover issues with your site and fix them, but it does require will. My guess is that there's a lot of inertia where site owners are 'doing ok' and are busy. There'll be some who really don't understand that they are not the customer and that they could actually make more money with site improvements.
One cause is engineering houses who offer website builds but have no customer insight. They build pretty but dysfunctional sites. They don't do it intentionally, it's just not their core expertise.
I dream of a parallel universe where there's a prime time tv show or viral social media channel where people laugh at rubbish sites so the owners are motivated to do something.
What's your view?