Navigation Part 1: How to structure content?

June 23rd, 2008

In this series I will talk about different topics regarding navigation I have been asked over the last years.

Part 1: How to structure content
Part 2: How many navigation points
Part 3: Dynamic or static navigation
Part 4: Navigation and the customer life cycle
Part 5: Global navigation

First of all you need to define all the content:

  1. your target group wants to know
  2. is important for your business to be communicated

Then the crucial question is what will your target group be looking for? What are their expectations? Are there structures they are familiar with because all of the competitors are following a similar pattern?

There are several ways to structure content - By:

  1. topic, genre, product groups
  2. target group
  3. activity
  4. search patterns

1) Topic, genre, product group navigation
As the title implies – this makes mainly sense when you are selling products or services which can be grouped logically.

navigation_topic_1.jpg

navigation_topic_3.jpg

2) Target group navigation
This one is very helpful when you offer information that is of interest to particular target groups and the all need to find information fast and directly. You often see this on websites of major banks with navigation points such as:
Private Banking | Business Banking | Press | Investors | Jobs
Sometimes it is very helpful to offer this kind of entry on the homepage in case your main navigation is structured by topic. You see this rather often on university sites. See the two examples below:

navigation_target_group_1.jpg

navigation_target_group_2.jpg

3) Activity based navigation
This one is more prominent in software where often activities are more prominent than categories since users want to fulfil certain tasks.

navigation_activity.jpg

4) Navigation based on search patterns
In case people might look in different ways for a product this navigational structure is suitable. It basically means that for example products in a gift store are searchable by price, by category and by gender.

navigation_search_pattern.jpg

Sometimes combinations of the above are the best approach. However, always make sure to label the categories precisely with a short verb and noun and avoid jargon and long labels.

First global Usability drive - Usability Challenge 1. August 2008

June 17th, 2008

From:

http://usabilitychallenge.webnode.com/

Join the Usability Challenge 2008 and participate in the world’s first global usability drive!

On 1 August 2008, we are asking anyone with a passion for usability to solve a usability problem…any usability problem at all…and help make the world a better/safer/less annoying place.

p.s. I was very busy lately - I will do my very best to be more active and write about usability and UX, UI etc. on a regular basis - expect a post every other day (at least twice a week).

Usability and e-commerce Part 6: Shopping basket

May 2nd, 2008

Access to the shopping basket
The shopping basket link or summary should show at least the current sum of products bought. Ideally the customer can see the number of items, product name, price, additional costs such as VAT or shipping/handling fees. Some companies even show the delivery time.

Shopping Basket linkusability_shopping_basket_3.jpg

The shopping basket page
Ideally a thumbnail picture of the product is displayed and a short product description, which are both linked back to the product page. (This is helpful, in case the customer comes back at a later point in time and wants to easily review his order). The page needs to summarize:

  • The cost per product
  • The VAT per product
  • The shipping/handling fee
  • The total payable fee

The user also needs to be informed of shipping time and links to warranty and exchange policy need to be available.
usability, shopping basket
The customer also needs to be able to delete a product or change the number of products.

Also make sure that the customer has both options: to continue shopping and to check out. This is missing in the Tchibo examle.

This was the last part of our 6 part Usability and e-commerce series.