How Improving Your
Site's "Usability" Can Increase Your
Buyers by 40% and Boost Each Order By 10%!
With all of the factors involved in designing and
building a web site, one of the most influential questions is
often overlooked:
Is your site easy to use?
Usability isn't the same as design. Just because
you've hired a talented designer to craft your site and make
it look great doesn't mean it's easy to use. Looking good is
a completely different matter from working well! After all,
plenty of beautiful sites have won design awards while losing
customers by the thousands.
How many times have you gotten lost on a good-looking
site or abandoned a purchase in frustration after you couldn't
find the information you were looking for? If you walk into
a brick-and-mortar store and can't find your favorite brand
of gherkin pickles, you can simply ask an employee where they
are. But on the Web, it's much easier for a customer to go to
a competitor's site than to go through the trouble of sending
an e-mail inquiry.
Whatever
your business is about, your web site will have specific goals,
such as convincing people to...
- Subscribe
to your newsletter
- Fill
out a survey
- Purchase
your product
- Inquire
about a service you offer
Usability
is simply a gauge of how easy it is for your visitors to
do these things.
For an e-commerce
site, usability is especially crucial. If people can't follow
your navigation scheme, they won't be able to find your products.
And if they can't find them, how can they buy them?
Obviously,
a key measure of the success of your site is its efficiency
in converting visitors to buyers. Yet did you know that, according
to market research from the Gartner Group, more than 50% of Web sales are lost because visitors
can't find the content they're looking for? And another
study by usability consultants Creative Good estimated that
improving the customer experience increases the number of
buyers by 40% and increases the overall order size by 10%!
With results
like these, why doesn't everyone test their sites for usability?
Some people mistakenly assume that usability testing is too
expensive, too time-consuming, or too complicated to bother
with, especially for smaller companies.
Fortunately,
usability doesn't need to be any of these things.
While there
are high-priced consultants who can do it for you, a do-it-yourself
test can be very effective.
Setting Up a Basic Usability Test
While usability
testing is most efficiently done as part of the process of creating
a web site, it can be done at any time to improve your site's
effectiveness. If you are planning a design update or adding
new elements to a site, it's crucial you begin the testing
before you invest time and money in making changes.
To do a
basic usability test, you just need to find a "sample group"
of potential customers and ask them to perform simple tasks
at your web site -- like purchasing a product, subscribing to
a newsletter, or locating specific information like your guarantee
-- while you watch them.
1. When
to test:
You can
test usability any time. In fact, even if you don't have a site
yet, you can still test your initial design using rough sketches
on paper that show the layout of key information and navigation
links. If you're testing potential changes to an existing site,
you can work from quick HTML mock-ups, or use your designer's
print-outs.
Obviously,
the more detailed the testing prototype, the better the results,
but you'll be surprised by how much information you can gather
with even the roughest layouts.
If your
site is up and running already, you can test your current design
to flag any potential problems and increase its efficiency.
Usability testing should be an ongoing process to fine-tune
your site and make sure you aren't losing customers -- and profits
-- unnecessarily.
2. Set
your goals:
Start by
setting your testing priorities. Which of the actions your visitors
perform are most important to your business? Focus on a few
key things you want all visitors to be able to do, such as...
- Subscribe
to your newsletter
- Become
a member
- Add a
product to their shopping cart
- Find
answers to common questions
These basic
tasks are the "script" for the test. The more complicated the
site, the more detailed the script. An e-commerce site selling
plumbing supplies might use a script that looks something like
this:
- Click the link for the page on which you think bathroom
faucets are located.
- Find the American Standard "Ceratop" faucet.
- Are there any less expensive faucets?
- Add it to a list of items to buy.
- How much will it cost to ship the faucet to where you live?
- How long is the warranty?
- Complete the purchase.
As your
testers work through each task, you'll be able to see how they
use your site. Do they browse categories or look for a search
function? Do they encounter any difficulties along the way?
This is an incredible opportunity to get inside your customers'
heads and watch what happens when they use your site.
You can
also analyze your site's metrics to see what's not working. If
an analysis of your web logs reveals that tons of people are
exiting your site from one or two particular pages, for instance,
usability testing can be a good way to find out what's behind
the high exit rate. This is especially crucial if these
pages are part of your check-out process.
Note:
If you can, get a test credit card number from your merchant
account or gateway provider so your testers can complete test
purchases. If this isn't possible, have the testers take the
check-out process as far as possible, and then ask them what
they'd expect to happen next.
3. Choose
the right people:
The people
you choose for the test are important, as they should mimic
the range of users you have (or want to have) using your site.
Sit down and gather any customer demographic information you
have to create a series of user profiles.
What is
their level of computer experience? How old are they? What special
knowledge do they have (if your site serves a specific demographic
or industry). A site targeting real estate professionals will
have very different user profiles than a site selling skateboard
wheels, so make sure your testers mirror your actual users.
Strive for
a mix of computer experience that matches the mix you'd expect
of your audience. Are most of your customers already comfortable
with computers? Are there some newbies in the mix? You can recruit
existing customers if you're testing changes to the site, but
for an existing site, look for people who haven't used your
site before.
Finally,
don't worry about getting a large pool of testers: You only
need five or six people to identify 80% of the main problems
that may be affecting your sales.
Note:
It's common practice to pay testers for their time and effort.
And while using Uncle Henry or Bob from accounting may save
you $40, they're likely to skew the results if they don't reflect
your target audience and are already familiar with your site.
4. What
you'll need:
Set aside
a clean, quiet place where there will be no distractions, and
provide a comfortable chair for the tester. Place a chair for
yourself slightly behind the tester so you can see where they're
clicking as they complete each task.
Have your
tasks and questions -- your script -- written down, and be ready
to take notes. If you have a video camera, you can also tape
the test (with the camera looking over the tester's shoulder
towards the screen). Before you start the actual test, run through
the script yourself to make sure all the links are working,
that the tasks make sense, and that the video equipment captures
the detail you'll need to see.
5. Running
the test:
Before you
start the test, explain to your testers that it's the site you're
testing, not them. Let them know that they can't do anything
"wrong," and tell them to surf the same way they normally
would. The more relaxed and natural they are during the test,
the better your results.
Then, ask
them a few questions about their level of experience, how often
they use the Web, and what they know about your company and
products, so you can better understand their reactions.
Start at
your homepage, and ask them what they think your site is about.
This can be a good way of judging how successfully you're welcoming
new visitors.
Throughout
the test, encourage your testers to think aloud while
they work through the tasks you've set out for them, so you
can get a sense of their expectations.
Next, work
through your prepared script. Ask the tester to attempt various
tasks and answer the questions you've prepared, while checking
their expectations with questions such as: "What do you think
you'll be able to do here?" and "Before you press that button,
tell me what you expect to see next." While you should take
notes and follow the script, be flexible enough that you can
pursue any responses that may take you by surprise.
During the
test, be sure not to guide the subject. Watch that you
don't provide any hints, suggestions, or even answers that will
influence their actions. If they can't complete a task, simply
ask them what they expected to have happen and how they'd fix
the problem, then move on to the next task.
If testers
have a problem or become confused, don't assume you know why.
Ask what the problem is, and then paraphrase their answer back
to them to make sure you aren't bringing your own bias into
the test.
6. What
to watch for:
- Hesitation: If their mouse cursor hovers
over a link, ask them what they're thinking. Hesitation often
means they're trying to figure something out, and usually
indicates a problem. In a perfect design, the user doesn't
have to think -- everything makes sense and the next step
is always clear.
- Backing
up: When users back out of a page (using either their
browser's "back" button or the site's navigation) it's often
a hint that their expectations weren't met. Perhaps they thought
the link would take them somewhere else, or they've lost track
of where they are in the site.
- Unexpected routes: Did your tester take
a different route through the site to accomplish a task than
you expected? People tend to have different ways of navigating
web sites. Did they use their browser's back button three
times to retrace their steps rather than clicking once on
your navigation links? It may be a sign they've lost their way or haven't
noticed the links.
- Extended
reading: Unless your page is a long salesletter or has
a newsletter, users shouldn't have to read too many instructions
to make their way through the site. Usability isn't just about
buttons and navigation; it's also an important test of your
copy. Can your visitors find the information they're looking
for, and do they understand it?
Making Changes and Testing Results
Once you've
thanked your guinea pigs for their time and the tests are finished,
go over your notes. You're looking for general patterns and
behaviors, not details or specific statistics. Did most
users get stuck at the same place? Did more than one person
hesitate over the same button?
The biggest
sticking points should reveal themselves pretty quickly. Once
you've identified the main roadblocks, use your testers' suggestions
about how they'd fix them or what they'd expect to find as a
basis for a solution, and then test the solution -- before
you implement it!
As with
any testing, make sure you change only one thing at a time so
you always know exactly what's responsible for any improvement.
And throughout
the testing process -- from coming up with the script to implementing
the changes -- try to keep an open mind and trust your users.
Their feedback is not a criticism of you or a reflection of
how much time you've spent on your site. In fact, the more time
you've spent working on it, the less objective you may be about
how it works.
Note:
If you rely on third-party solutions like shopping carts or
payment systems, you can't always change the way they work to
improve usability. If testing reveals serious problems, it may
be worth investigating -- and testing -- other solutions, even
if they're more expensive. After all, a poorly designed shopping
cart system that's causing half of your customers to abandon
their purchases is no bargain!
Usability Tips
A big part
of usability testing involves looking at your site from the
customer's point of view. Sure, your programmer or Web designer
may have a bunch of perfectly valid technical reasons for setting
up things the way they are, but your goal shouldn't be to make
things easier for your programmer or designer at the expense
of your customers' experience.
As you surf
the Web over the next couple of weeks, keep an eye out for usability
issues you come across on other sites -- basically anything
that makes you back up, curse, stop to figure out the next step,
or stare blankly at your screen! Make a note and bookmark these
sites for future reference.
And make
sure your site isn't guilty of common usability blunders
like these:
- If a
potential customer forgets to fill in their zip code when
they submit an order form, will they lose all the information
they already entered and have to start over again? If
so, you'll likely lose a number of potential customers at
this point.
- Your
site's navigation scheme must be clear and intuitive. If your
users have to guess at the meaning of vague icons or have
to squint to read an obscure typeface, you're making them
work too hard.
- Usability
also takes into account other issues, such as load time. Research
shows that if the time between a viewer's click and the appearance
of a new page is more than six seconds, they get distracted
and are likely to move on -- probably to your competition!
Final Thoughts:
These days,
there are certain expectations regarding how a web site should
look and how it should work. For instance, research shows that
most people expect to see a "home" link in the top left corner
of a page, and that they look for internal links down the left
as well.
Now, you
could argue that internal links look better or make more sense
along the right side, but in the end, usability isn't about
what "makes sense" or looks good to you, it's about what
works for your average visitor. And if 90% of your users
expect to find your navigation along the left side of the page,
then the left side is what works!
Sometimes
the simplest solution is the best. Links that look like buttons
get clicked on more often -- simply because they look like something
that can be clicked on. The first thing anyone who surfs the
Web learns is that blue, underlined text is a link. If you start
making your links look different for the sake of prettying up
your site, you risk losing functionality.
Finally,
don't reinvent the wheel just for the sake of being trendy.
Your web site is a business tool first and foremost. Study sites
that have a similar function to yours and look for common
approaches. Amazon.com, for instance, has helped set standards
and expectations for how an e-commerce site should be organized.
While you
don't want to simply copy successful sites, it makes sense to
adopt some of the same navigation techniques. After all, with
millions and millions of customers using a site like Amazon.com,
chances are your visitors will be familiar with their approach.
Take advantage of this familiarity and apply the usability strategies
other successful sites have found to be effective to your
site -- then focus on testing to fine-tune the way your own
site works.
Still not
convinced you should test your site's usability?
Make no
mistake: If you don't test your site, your visitors and
customers will "test" it every day! The problem is, if
they're having trouble using your site, they won't take the
time to send you a note offering helpful suggestions -- they'll
just check out your competition! |