LarryRoth.net

Just my thoughts

Make sure it's important to your users

Perhaps one of the most crucial parts of UI design is the feedback you provide to users. Like all the information you display, you need to prioritize and provide the proper context for your users. Or said another way: it's important that you make sure what you think is important is also important to your users. Why the emphasis on important? Well, I found a great example in Web Position Pro (version 3) that helps to prove my point. First off, Web Position is a fantastic software application that helps you to track your search engine ranking. This post, by no means, is meant to slam this product. However, I did find one Important Notification in the product challenging to the user. Upon startup—and after a fresh, fully-licensed install I might add—I was greeted with the following error message. [caption id="attachment_107" align="alignnone" width="395" caption="Error message from Web Position Gold 3"]Error message from Web Position Gold 3[/caption] What's the issue? Well, first of all, the user is presented with a modal window and is being told that a service they never signed up for has expired 4.24 YEARS ago. More pressing, is the use of the word Important. To whom is this message important. Certainly not someone that has let their service expire over 4 years ago! Perhaps it is important to the sales department at WebTrends, but not to the user of the software. It would have been better to present the message in the proper context. One suggestion might be an on-screen prompt, not a modal window, and language that is more honest: "We can help you: sign-up for page critic today!" Lesson to learn: Save UI conventions such as modal windows and strong language such as important for messages that are important to the user, not just you.
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