(
Good
Content Must Suck (like a vacuum sucks)
- Why designing for scent is
more successful than designing for navigation
- How to design for scent
- How to find out if you’ve
succeeded
What
we’ve found: Scent
- The best sites are rich with
content
- Content sucks users towards
it
- From every likely page where
the user might want that content
- Every link gives off scent that users follow
- As the scent gets stronger,
the user gets more confident that they are going in the right direction
- The secret: Design for Scent
- And your content will suck
(them in)!
“If your
users are using the search engine 70% of the time or more, it’s probably
broken.”
Search
Engines are Scentless
- Avoid search engines
- Users click on them when they
don’t see a link with good scent.
- They type in the words they
wanted in the link
- We call them trigger words
- Users are trying to make
their own scent
- Except they don’t know if
the designers have anything that matches
Designing
for scent:
- Start with a content page
- Figure out from whwere users
will likely want to get to that page
- Put links in all the places
people would most likely want to find your content
Good design
= confidence
- Every design element that
makes scent stronger contributes to the user’s confidence
- Before they click
- Link quality, navigation
graphics, info organization
OTHER
LEARNINGS:
- Short links don’t emit scent
- Short pages reduce scent
- Keep links and pages long
- The best links are 7 – 12
words
- Myth: users don’t want to
scroll. In short, if the content has value, they’ll scroll.
- Users were scroll through
many pages of text if the design invites them to do so (editor’s note: I
completely disagree with this… there are exceptions of course).
- Horizontal rules across a
page…. Users won’t scroll through it
- Site Maps have a lot of
scent… but are hidden by a name with no scent “Site Map”
- Try turning site map into
your home page… you’ll get tons of fan mail.
- Myth: blue underlined links
are probably the worst combination for a link (men start to lose their
sense of blue in their 40s… women in their 60s).
- You cannot design great sites without testing
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