How to Make Your Website Easier to
Use and Improve Conversion Rates
What's the most important thing you
should do if you want to make sure your Web site is easy to use? The answer is
simple. It's not "Speak the user's language," or even "Be consistent."
It's "Don't make me think!"
Don't Assume
This exposes a common problem. YOU,
the person that designed or contributed to or commissioned and approved the
site don't have to think when YOU use the site because YOU know what everything
means, how everything is supposed to work, where everything is located and
where every click is supposed to go. The problem is that your site users don't know any of those things when
they arrive on your site. Therefore, they are trying to
interpret things that you already know the interpretation for. It's easy to use
a map when you've already traveled all the roads and arrived at all the
destinations, right?
You might use a map that is as difficult to understand as the
one above if there is something REALLY valuable at the destination, and it's
the only map you have available to you to get there. If either of those is
missing, you're likely to find something else to do. On the web, there are
typically countless options for sites that your customers can go to for the
solution to their problem--and they're most
likely going to choose the easiest option with the best value (just like you'd choose the easiest
map to get you to where you wanted to go).
Make Life Easier for Users
With that in mind, you can see how
important it is that your site is ultra-easy to use. After all, you don't just
want traffic do you? You want a long-lasting, profit-generating relationship
don't you? In business, those only happen when you make life easier for your customers,
not harder. Plus, how easy your site is to use psychologically reflects on how
easy your company will be to deal with (huge!).
Now that I know you've just had a
deeper revelation of how important good usability is to a website, let me
present to you what Mr. Krug is talking about when he tells us not to make our
users think.
Get Inside Their Thoughts and Emotions
If you could get inside the heads of
your users, what would their thoughts and emotions be filled with as they make
the journey to completing the task they came for on your site? Would they have
any confusion over where to click on the page they landed on to get to the next
step? Would they have any trouble understanding the labels you've used for
their navigation options? Would they miss the correct path for their task
completion because they assumed another option was more appropriate? Do they
feel like your site is trying to get them to do what you want them to do
instead of do what they want to do? The answers to these types of questions and
many more contribute heavily to the fate of a business's bottom line.
Again, it's understandable that YOU
don't have any trouble with these questions. But of course, you're not the customer.
The truth is, every time your
visitors have trouble using your site, it contributes to their propensity to
leave the site and reject you as the vendor of choice to solve their problem.
Might a user still develop a long-term relationship with you if they
experienced difficulty and frustration on your site? Of course some will. I
suppose it depends on the person. But, you can be sure that site difficulty and conversion rate are inversely
proportional. The more difficult your site is to use, the lower
your conversion rate will be. The easier your site is to use, the higher your
conversion rate will be.
Make Everything Obvious
Every element of your site is on a
continuum somewhere between obvious and obscure. One of the most important
things you can do for your bottom line is to make
everything on your site as close to obvious as it can possibly get.
In the coming weeks, I'll be guiding
us through principles that will help us do this, making your website easier to
use--and improving conversion rates in the process.
Info presented by Rankwinz
Info presented by Rankwinz
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