Internet Psychologist Graham Jones
From the media? CLICK HERE FOR MY MEDIA INFORMATION
Follow me on Twitter at twitter.com/grahamjones

 

Search this site


 

Get these
articles sent
directly to you
each day

Your Email Address:

 

RSS Feed RSS Subscribe

 

Previous Articles

What do Tony Blair, Lance Armstrong and Mark Zucke...


Online businesses need more refined targeting


Blogging could cure your ills and boost your staff...


Imagine the brains of your readers and wonder what...


Social networks are the place to be


Internet marketers need to get inside each custome...


Why the Google advertising change doesn't matter


Internet training courses might not help you


The Internet World is all about relationships


The World Wide Web is just a baby


 

Archives

 

Topics

Internet Marketing

Blogging

Social Networking

Internet Shopping

Online success

Internet Psychology

Future of the Internet

 

 

Your Free Guide
to Internet Success

 

Free Guide To Internet Success

 

Claim your free guide to success in the age of the Internet

 

Name

Email

 

 

 

Thursday, May 15, 2008

How central is user testing to your business?

Experts in "usability" gathered in London today to discuss several issues surrounding this topic. The meeting had been called by TechSmith, the producers of Morae the leading usability testing software.

It became apparent during the discussions that usability testing is often seen as something that is performed at the end of the development of a web site. Businesses often perceive usability testing as some kind of process driven function that merely works out if the buttons are the right colour or the sign up box is in the right place.

Usability adds value
However, usability is much more than this; it's about working out whether or not your web site visitors, for instance, are delighted with their experience. In other words, usability testing helps businesses assess the true value of their web site.

Sadly, though, many companies see usability testing as a dispensable "add-on" to web development. And as the budgets get squeezed, testing ends up being thrown out. However, that is madness.

Consider a car manufacturer. Imagine they designed a car, engineered it, created all the necessary production tools and then realised they'd spent all their money and couldn't do any usability testing. "Never mind," they'd say, "those nice folk at Top Gear will tell us if there are any problems and we can change things with the next model."

But without usability testing, the care the hapless manufacturer could produce may have the pedals in a different part of the car to the steering wheel. The mirror may be unobtrusive, but unable to show the view behind the car. And the CD player may not be loud enough for it to be heard above loud road noise. Such issues are avoided because usability is a built-in essential in the design, engineering and production process of making a new car. Motor manufacturers consider the users - or "drivers" as they call them - throughout the process, right from the first concepts.

People are the last consideration online
Yet it seems from their web sites, that many motor manufacturers have not used the same process for their Internet activities. Often the sites are unusable - the last person these companies appear to have considered is the web site user, or "reader", as I like to call them.

It's strange how some businesses put their "user" central to the production of their own products and services, yet effectively ignore their Internet users. Usability is essential to the success of any online venture and should be a central theme to everything that is done towards that web site. As a result, your business needs to consider how people might use your web site right from the very moment you conceive the notion for your online business.

Waiting to do usability testing until the development is done will often mean that you end up with negative comments that you ultimately ignore. Making usability testing a "way of life" for your business means you will adapt and evolve your web development as you go, so that your finished product is much more likely to be usable.

Usability is no longer something you can set aside until later; it is a fundamental feature of web development from concept through to finished site.

Labels: ,


Add this story to:

| BlinkList | BlogMarks | del.icio.us | Digg | Furl | Google | LinkRoll | Lycos |

| ma.gnolia | Netscape | Newsvine | Ning | reddit | Simpy | Spurl | Squidoo | Wink |


Email this story to your friends:

 

Readers' Comments:

Post a Comment

 

 

Permalink: How central is user testing to your business?