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Exploring and understanding audience, encouraging communication, announcing excerpts and celebrating book releases. Just basically talking about websites... and the occasional cupcake.

Good signage

Let’s take a moment to praise good signage — otherwise known in the web world as good navigation. But my example below is with signage, and understanding the mood of your audience.

Recently I traveled across country to meet up with my extended family at Disney World. Had I been by myself I am sure I would have napped on the flight, or watched a movie on my laptop, or at the very least gotten some work done. But I was with my toddler, so these were not options for me, even though my always-ready-to-help mother sat on my child’s other side. It was a long flight.

The Orlando Airport is big and confusing. Luckily the staff are incredibly helpful. But I am baffled that the signage isn’t clearer. Why there aren’t a plethora of little yellow signs with nothing but a silhouette of Mickey ears on them with an arrow is beyond me. I was one of many, many people wandering, frustrated, asking for directions while chasing after small children who, after almost ten hours of car seat to stroller to plane seat to stroller to plane seat, were ready to RUN.

Good signage should never be taken for granted. By the time we located the DisneyWorld Shuttle area we had had to stop and ask directions four times. Absurd.

Even though the people we spoke with were kind and helpful, it shouldn’t have been so hard. Take that lesson to a home page. If you are a plumber, chances are that the only time people are looking you up is when they are frustrated. If you are a small business solutions provider, chances are people are contacting you because something isn’t working. Consider these moods your audience is likely to be in.

For authors, chances are people are coming to your site in a good mood. They are potential fans. You are lucky. But don’t make them work to order your book. Don’t make them search for an excerpt. Good navigation doesn’t just happen. It needs to be thought through.

And when it works, it makes for a wonderful experience. When it doesn’t, it colors the experience with hassle.

3 Comments

  1. Posted May 24, 2008 at 6:55 pm Permalink

    Omigosh, you’re prescient, Emily. I just returned home from a gate fiasco, when we should’ve been on the east coast right now. Luckily our li’l one’s a trooper, even on long-haul trips to Asia.

    Regarding site nav: Sometimes I have to wonder at the expense that goes into a site that’s impossible traverse. Too much whiz-bang stuff that makes it cool as a first-time treat, but is a frustrating exercise forever more.

    Keira-who-loves-hyphenated-words :)

  2. Posted May 25, 2008 at 12:08 pm Permalink

    Keira, sorry to hear about your gate fiasco. And a toddler to Asia? I can’t imagine.

    In terms of “Sometimes I have to wonder at the expense that goes into a site that’s impossible traverse,” I hear ya! What is probably happening there is that the client is dictating the navigation: “I want a button for this and this and this.” Most web designers are not also information designers so they take what the client says and just build it.

    And while clients definitely have vision, web design is not usually their area of expertise. It is the good over-all web designer who can take the client’s vision and shape it into really good user flow through well-thought-out navigation. But that requires information design expertise, and the resources in the budget to work on it. A lot of designers can produce a site on-the-cheap if they skip the information design.

    –Emily, who also finds power in hyphenation

  3. Posted June 1, 2008 at 4:20 pm Permalink

    Emily, just found out you and Julie are at BEA this weekend. Hope you’ll blog about your experience. And I hope it was a successful weekend for WC (your site, not the toilet).

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