collegewebeditor.com

Live from HighEdWebDev 2005 in Rochester: Steve Krug’s good tips on website usability in colleges and universities

As announced in July, Steve Krug, the author of “Don’t Make Me Think! A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability,” gave the keynote presentation of HighWebDev05 in Rochester yesterday: “Why it S*cks to Be You.”

Brian Phelps, Web manager at the University of the Pacific but also the expert behind PhelpsTeKnowledge has accepted to share his well-taken notes with all of us who couldn’t make it to the conference this year (or the attendees who didn’t feel like taking notes ;-)

What’s usability?

“If something is hard, I just don’t use it as much!”

Krugs 3rd law of usability from his book
Delete half the words, and then delete ½ of what’s left.

Instructions must die

If it’s obvious, then it doesn’t need to be said.

For example,

“Complete the fields in the form below and click submit.”

Introductions must die

No one reads long blocks of introductory text

For example,

“The Graduate School is located in the Office of Research and Graduate Studies (RGS), 214 Knoles Hall on the beautiful Stockton campus, close to the landmark Burns Tower on Pacific Avenue .
The RGS office is responsible for the administration of graduate degree programs leading to master’s (M.M., M.Ed., M.A., MBA and M.S.), educational specialist in school psychology (Ed.S.), and doctoral (D.P.T., Ed.D. and Ph.D.) degrees in over 15 departments in 5 schools and colleges.
The RGS office is the place where the admissions, student records, degree audits, and final checkout for all graduate degrees on the Stockton campus occur, regardless of academic discipline.”

If it’s absolutely necessary, cut introductory text down to one sentence and place immediately in front of related links to related content. Then maybe your audience will read it.

Happy Talk must die

Make text easily scannable

Top 9 reasons why it s*cks to be you

  1. Corporate expectations in a non-profit budget
  2. Stakeholder who can be petty and whiney in ways that wouldn’t dare in the ral world
  3. Find and implement a CMS in your spare time, and herd kittens into using it
  4. Sub-site/Fiefdom hell: “We want our dept/school/project to have its own character”
  5. Multiple audiences: faculty/staff/students/alumni/media/community/etc
  6. Home page death match: everyone wants a piece of the home page pie
  7. Deans less likely to force everyone to toe to the site-consistency line than CEOs
  8. Tons of dynamic content of variable quality and enormous importance (but only to its creators)
  9. Cool-factor: The arms race to stay competitive with your peers and deploy the latest gadgetry or fad (blogs, etc.)

Get navigation down cold

Tell me who you are

What’s the Solution?
Simple, iterative user testing

The problem with usability testing

Instead, do lost-our-lease usability testing

Camtasia ($300) or Morae (TechSmith $1200) records what’s going on the screen, good for usability testing. Uses USB microphone, creates AVI audio and video.