On having good manners – a website Code of Conduct
User research, user experience design, user focused design; the aim is to always keep the user at the centre of the design process – and without doubt, this is an admirable goal. But always try to keep in mind – the user is a person too.
I access the internet all the time on my phone and my computer, and I never feel like a user. I feel like a personJulie Dodd, Head of UX & Design @publiczone [via currybetdotnet]
I heartily agree!
Have you ever been at a meeting where a particular solution is proposed and although many people openly admit “that really annoys me” or “I hate it when they do that”, that feature, or trick, still gets implemented? This is often excused by ‘business requirements’, or the difficulty of doing it another way. However I think the problem really lies in not having enough respect for one’s customers and for not accepting that they are real people (people who find your solution annoying).
I recently had the pleasure of seeing Dr Harry Brignull present his Dark Patterns. These dark patterns, he argues, are more than just the product of lazy designers or misguided business requirements. Dark Patterns are carefully crafted with a solid understanding of human psychology, and they do not have the user’s interests in mind.
(The Dark Patterns library is a great resource and if you haven’t been through it, you really should). Nov ’11 update: Harry’s recently been featured on A List Apart.
This started me thinking that actually, a lot of these poor experiences (whether they are deliberate or the result of laziness) are actually the result of having very little respect for your users/customers/audience. And that by having better online manners and treating people with more courtesy, we can help focus the work required to fix them.
Of course the worrying thing about dark patterns is that they have been deliberately designed to fool people (often out of their money). So heartfelt pleas aren’t likely to dissuade their creators from such practices. However, Dark Patterns is starting to have some success by publicly naming and shaming errant companies into action. See, for example, the heartening response from Audible following their listing. But maybe what we need is a more defined ‘Code of conduct’ or maybe a badge to wear with pride in our footers?
I read with interest that super model Erin O’Connor has recently been speaking out against the fashion world lying to women. Having put up with airbrushing and trickery in fashion advertising for many years, several key players have called for industry regulation against these practices. Their suggestions include kite-marking to show digital tampering or a “golden star” system rewarding the use unaltered photographs.
Whilst I don’t want to draw a comparison between poor web usability and fashion’s obsession with youth and perfection (and the harm this can do to young women), perhaps we should be looking at similar schemes that reward respectful, person-centered, website owners?
The Internet is Facebook
The always entertaining SitePoint podcast (#98) spent some time contemplating the possible demise of OpenID and the shift towards Facebook Connect.
This had me thinking; knowing the difficulty some users have in differentiating the Internet from their browser (or from their broadband provider or email for that matter), I started wondering how soon it would be before Facebook’s support department started getting calls that the Internet was broken. When an inexperienced user is clicking on Facebook buttons to log into a ‘Connect’-ed website, it’s understandable that they might start thinking that other website is Facebook.
In one of those wonderful moments of serendipity the internet offers, I then came across Ryan Carson’s post on Facebook being the Internet. How long before a major corporation does away with their .com presence and moves wholesale onto Facebook? What impact will that have on our jobs?
Proceed or Continue
A lot of the time in UX design, the devil is in the detail.
Using one term (‘continue’) in the paragraph and another (‘proceed’) on the button isn’t an earth-shattering mistake, but it adds an extra cognitive load to already stressful procedure.
Mental models
For a few minutes of comic relief, I love catching up with the latest posts on clientsfromhell. Some of the stories are scarily familiar and others just plain terrifying. But there’s a category of story that is amusing because it misunderstands something so familiar to us as “computer people” that they make us see the things we do in new ways. more »
A real page turner
I was listening to the excellent I.A. Podcast with Jeff Parks the other day. In the episode titled “Working in the post-industrial era” with Dorian Taylor they spoke about many interesting subjects concerning modern working practices.
Early on in the conversation Jeff and Dorian discuss some of the drawbacks inherent in following UI metaphors too closely. Making an operating system resemble a home office certainly allows an inexperienced user to start working more quickly, but there are times that the computing power available in modern personal computers can be leveraged to process and display information in far more interesting ways. more »
The End of Unlimited Data
Could O2′s decision to end unlimited data tariffs slow the boom in the mobile web in the UK?
There’s no doubt that smartphones, particularly the iPhone, have contributed to a phenomenal boom in the mobile web. Before Mobile Safari the Internet was a painful place to get around. However, I would argue that the primary reason mobile browsing suddenly exploded was due to the introduction of unlimited (fair use) data tariffs. more »
CSS3 buttons, adding a simple level of interaction
CSS3 and HTML5 (note the lack of space between the L and the 5 – see Jeremy Keith for more info) are set to make a big impact in the next few years. Already, the developments around video alone, have made HTML5 a hotly-debated technology.
As noted previously, one of the exciting things about working in a technology-related industry such as web design, is the continual technological progress that keeps the dedicated designer or developer on their toes. Learning something new is always fun, but learning something new that makes your life easier is liberating. more »
Browsers, browsers everywhere…
Because Firefox 3.6 keeps crashing on the Guardian’s website (started happening all the time after Snow Leopard update but has often been a problem), I’ve now set Chrome to be my default browser, so that when I click on a link in Twitterific, Chrome launches not Firefox. more »
Site visits
It’s always fascinating to take a look through your server logs or visitor stats. This little old blog gets a tiny number of hits a day but recently that number has been climbing. Interested to see how people are finding me and what they are reading I had a look through my recent visitor numbers. more »







