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Posts tagged Web 2.0

Goodbye Web 2.0?

The big-text-shiny-rounded-gradient “Web 2.0 designs” will start to fade in 2009 and seem a little dated. Here’s my predictions for blog design trends in 2009.

Back to the middle

Blogs have been sidelined a little with social networking sites like MySpace, Facebook and communication tools like Twitter. Many bloggers spend more time on other sites than on their own blog but as their online identities are spread out further and further, bloggers will re-center their online identity around their blog where they have complete freedom over the site structure, design, features and content. Blogs will be used to pull in social networking data like never before. Blog themes will powerfully integrate these in a meaningful and useful way – and as a permanent record all bundled together in one place.

Tweet, tweet!

With Twitter starting to really hit the mainstream, Twitter will be much more tightly integrated with blogs. See my post on Mashable with 10 ways this will impact blog design in 2009 – including Tweetbacks, Tweet Comments and more.

It’s black, it’s white

Simple, classy, black and white blogs with lots of white space are the new trend. Who needs color and clutter getting in the way when you have lots of large gorgeous photos on your blog to steal the limelight?

Made by me

The handmade and crafted look took off in 2008 and will continue to be popular this year. Look for more blog designs with handwriting, collages, paint strokes, doodles, sketches, paperclips, stitches and material.

Organic, local, sustainable and green

Even blogs will be going green and not just in color. See textures such as wood, dirt, hessian, earthy browns rise even more in popularity. Notice more fresh fruit and vegetables, insects and flowers. Designs will feature more original, ethnic and local elements rather than trying to appear completely global and vague in origin.

Stretching out

Bloggers will continue to redesign for wider screens to enable displaying larger photos and large widescreen videos. Bloggers will crop their images to be widescreen format, rather than the standard photo sizes – appreciating the wide screen look more. New default templates that come with blogging tools will also finally be wider.

Is that you, really?

Wordpress, Expression Engine, Drupal and other blogging/community tools will be used in ever increasing creative ways – to the extent that a casual visitor will be surprised to learn what the site is being run by and impressed at the ease of updating such seemingly complex sites.

More and more tools are being released which help you communicate with the wider world and my question always seems to be organizing which of the organizers I should be using and the best way of using them together (if there is such a thing!). What follows is a jumble of thoughts of these issues.

Some personal examples are:

My blog(s)
Flickr
Facebook
Twitter
Tumblr
Google Reader
del.icio.us
YouTube
Feedfriend
Amazon wishlist
Last.fm

Questions I ponder which span all these examples above:

Is there such a line as the personal/work divide anymore?
Is pooling everything all together into one place the solution?
Is using all these examples separately the solution?
Who is the solution for? Me, my friends, my readers? Actually, does it matter who the solution is for anymore?
Do other people really need (or want) to know my Amazon wishlist (etc) or do I just want quick access to it?
Can x do something that y can’t do already? Or does it just make it faster and quicker but with a bit of work, I could just use x and keep two things together in one place?

Wavering between one tool to rule them all and then back to individuality reigns

I’ve set up accounts on so many sites and then come back to tools which promise the best of everything all in one place – such as Netvibes or Google Reader – but I find myself using them for a while and then moving back to the individual sites.

A good example of this is our local news sites. It’s too much information overload to subscribe via Google Reader so I just load up their homepages and take a quick glance to see what’s their big and latest headlines every so often. Is there a quick tool which shows “what’s on the homepage” of a site right now?

Another example is twitter and Facebook status. Having twhirl or some other twitter client open all the time, there’s a constant flood of messages. My eyes glaze over and when I log out and turn it on again, there’s a ridiculous number of status updates that have flown by. Information overload. Is there a quick way to see one most latest status update for each of my contacts, in one place – a little like the most recent Facebook status list that you can see? Something I can take a quick glance at? I prefer Twitter because it’s exportable, it’s RSS and I can use it how I like but does it help me or just distract me?

Every so often, I give Netvibes or Google Desktop Sidebar a go. I find myself being given a limited number of tools and the gimicks/widgets wear off quickly. I don’t really need today’s weather, today’s quote, a photo slideshow, or how many unread emails I have. I end up scrapping these and going back to having multiple tabs open, and a bookmarks toolbar for quick access to everything.

I’ve tried Remember the Milk and other to-do lists but end up back with my paper diary that I can enjoy the feeling of crossing things off from and some important reminders on my phone.

Do you have any suggestions, similar ponderings or behaviours as me?

Read part 1 first »

We recently moved a forum options sidebar from the left to the right of the screen in an online community I help run.

The change generated a lot of discussion and in this post I’ll document how people reacted to the change and some of the ways I’ve managed the feedback.

Reactions to changing a layout

Initial reactions seemed to fall along three lines (in order of magnitude):

  • Users who felt uncomfortable with the movement. Things weren’t where they expected them to be, and it took them back.
  • Users who didn’t care about the change, they were more interested in doing what they always did on the site.
  • Users who liked the change immediately, for no particular reason.

After some time, reactions changed to (in order of magnitude):

  • Users who got used to the change, and carried on as usual.
  • Users who preferred things how they once were and had a reason for their opinion.

A change in layout does require a change in behaviour. It’s going to be strange at first – hence the reason I like to give things a month to see how they pan out.

Managing feedback from changing a layout

When we introduced the layout switch, we gave limited reasons as to why we made the change. One of these was:

We read from left to right, and the content is the focus of the forum, not the options first.

I feel very strongly about this reason and had researched how people were actually using the forum’s sidebar options over the previous six months to back up this decision.

On so many sites, the real content is crowded between sidebars and focus is taken off of the main purpose of the site. I’m not talking primarily about sidebars used for navigation here, but sidebars with related options and information to the center stage.

In a forum, I want readers to first focus on reading the forum topics and forum threads. That’s what the forum is there for. Not options and information such as “mark all read”, “bookmarked discussions”, “edit profile” or even “who’s online”.

However, one site member strongly disagreed with the change. Comments included:

“It goes against all the site usability rules.

We have millions of websites worldwide as irrefutable proof that the left hand side is the correct location for this panel. Surely they can’t all be wrong?

I would NEVER recommend to a client that they have their side bar on the right. People expect to see this stuff on the left because that is where it has always been. Nothing puts people off using a website faster, than not finding things where they expect them to be. For that reason alone, I am amazed that the change was made.”

The other day I came across this quote:

“Any architect who tells you that the bathroom always needs to be in a certain place in every house is obviously insane or a control freak. Why do we think any different from “usability gurus”? (Dan Saffer – UX Week 2007)”

I responded by saying:

“If the sidebar was primarily used for navigation, then I would have left it on the left hand side. It is not primarily a navigational aid. It has a login, forum statistics, options, filters and preferences along with two banners.

As a person who makes a living from designing websites, research-based decisions are important to me. I am not advocating that right hand sidebars are right for every site, but with our sidebar content, I believe it is the right decision.

Based on thorough research of the last six months of 2007 of how users of this site are behaving, very few people are using the sidebar to navigate the forum.

Putting the options and preferences to the right hand side means that the focus goes back on the content – the forum topics and the forum comments, which are the most important things in a forum. We also subliminally reinforce the message that people should read topics first, before clicking the “add discussion” button.

To navigate through the forum, one does not need the information in the sidebar – and in fact, the only link people are using in any real quantity is the link to the off topic forum, one which is not an essential aspect of the site.

When people come to the forum page and click on another link within the site, here is what they are doing:

44% Reloading the forum page (i.e. checking to see if something has changed since last load)
42% Clicking through to one of the latest forum topics
6% Clicking through to an item in the top menu
3% Logging in / changing things in their account page
3% Clicking through to the Off Topic forum category
1% Adding a new forum topic
1% Searching the forum
1% Other (< 0.5% each)

Within forum topics, the click rate on the sidebar ranges from a mere 0.1% - 2%. The bulk of people click on the forum link at the top, a pagination link, the bottom/top of page links or something else in the main menu."

(Note: slightly edited for brevity.)

While I strongly believed my decision was the right one, I was still open to changing things back after a month – when initial reactions had died down, and people were used to the new furniture positions.

Aside from the one member who felt strongly about the issue, it hasn’t been mentioned as an issue by others since that time.

So, we’re about to reach the end of the month and I look forward to the responses from people. Again we’ll survey logged in members over a two week period.

The sky hasn’t fallen, and traffic is up. My prediction is that the vast majority will say they are happy with how things are, or don’t care what happens.

Dealing with people who disagree with change isn’t easy and you’re not going to please everyone.

I’ve been thinking about and observing how people react to change and how best to manage it in an online community – whether it’s a blog, a forum or a ‘portal’.

This week Jeff Croft – one of the designers whose blog I read – made a sudden and dramatic change to his blog design. He’s been busy responding to feedback and queries about the design and posted more details about the design and colors in a blog post response. How he has dealt with response to the redesign has been the most fascinating part of the whole thing for me.

Meanwhile, in an online community I help run, we made a number of changes about a month ago after much thought and research.

One was adding a new feature to vote up or down others’ comments in a forum.
Another was moving the forum options sidebar from the left to the right of the screen.

Both these changes generated a lot of discussion on the site and in this post I’ll document how people reacted to the changes and some of the ways I’ve managed the feedback.

We all know that many people don’t like change. Why?

Reactions to adding a new feature

Initial reactions to a new feature seemed to fall along three lines (in order of magnitude):

  • Users who love a new toy and get straight to work at giving it a go, experimenting with it.
  • Users who are happy to carry on doing what they normally do and aren’t interested in something new or don’t feel like they have a need for it.
  • Users who love a new toy but quickly get frustrated as they can’t seem to figure out how to work it.

After some time, reactions changed to (in order of magnitude):

  • Users who found the new feature a useful part of their regular life on the site.
  • Users who ignored the new feature and carried on as usual.
  • Users who wished the new feature would just disappear and things went back to how they once were. How other people were using the new feature bothered them.

Managing feedback from adding a new feature

When we introduced the new feature, we gave clear examples of how a person might use the new feature.

We opened a forum topic for discussion about how people were using the new feature, what they liked and disliked – so that people with opinions had a place to express them.

We made some minor tweaks in response but deliberately didn’t add on new features to the new feature.

We said the new feature was a trial for a month. After a month, we are now running a deliberately short private survey of online members for two weeks. A month seems about the right time to evaluate a website change. Initial reactions have calmed (whether positive or negative) and patterns of usage have formed.

Instead of emailing all members asking for them to complete the survey, we wanted to focus on the regular site members (defined as logging into the site over a two week period) cared about the issue enough to respond to a short survey.

The questions were (generalised here):

  • Have you used the new feature in the past week?
  • Do you think the new feature should stay, go or you don’t mind either way? Why?
  • Any other comments about the new feature?

Members have been grateful for the opportunity to have a say in the direction of where the website goes via the survey. We haven’t promised that the “majority rules” in the survey, but are noticing that the final decision will please almost everyone. We’ll then look at adding new features suggested by members and manage that change process separately from the initial implementation.

A question I have been pondering in light of the way people initially react to change:

Are people are not as resistant to change itself as they are to being changed?

Read Part two: managing reactions to changing a site’s design

“Any architect who tells you that the bathroom always needs to be in a certain place in every house is obviously insane or a control freak. Why do we think any different from “usability gurus”? (Dan Saffer – UX Week 2007)”

I Twitter

January 22 2008
by Rachel

Thanks for all your emails and messages saying you’re happy I’m back blogging. Last year was a tough one, so I’m starting this one out with new perspective and a freshness to blogging again here. It’s great!

I joined up to Twitter a long time ago but stopped using it quickly in favour of updating my status on Facebook. Loved doing that, but realised that the history feature is only so long (might be fun to look back on?), friends outside Facebook couldn’t follow along and there was no RSS feed. And while I am probably behind the rest of you, here’s what I have used, in case it is of help to others:

The Facebook Twitter application which updates my Facebook status (no point in having to keep up two of the things). Only downside is it adds “is twittering:” to the start of the status. Others are complaining about this, so perhaps this will change.

Twessenger which updates my MSN Messenger status.

twhirl saving me refreshing a page, or pushing all the updates into Google Reader, I have downloaded this and it sits there like an instant messenger window.

Twitter Feed automatically pulls in blog updates to my Twitter account.

If you’d like to get in touch via Twitter, visit my profile page.

Have you used Pownce? I’d consider switching to it if the file transfers were faster than MSN messenger. Anyone know if they are?

Thanks for your kind wishes, cards, flowers, prayers and thoughts over the last month. Tomorrow it’ll be 5 weeks since the operation. I’ve gone through so many feelings, emotions and heartache but have pretty much completely come through the other side now and looking forward again to what the future holds.

I have found some new sites (for me) which have been a great source of help over the last little while. The internet is amazing – the connections you can make, the people who can share their stories and can be supportive along the journey with you. It reminds me of how powerful online communities can be for people at different points in their lives. It encourages me once again how blogging, forums and the like are helping people communicate with each other all around the world and designing them is a worthwhile thing to be doing.

Aside from topic-specific sites that I’ve found useful, I’ve recently discovered Facebook. It is still practically unheard of here in New Zealand as Bebo is the most popular social networking hub, followed by MySpace.

The little designer-snob in me finds MySpace and Bebo so frustrating. The errors I get on MySpace are endless, let alone the number of clicks I have to do in order to achieve anything, the difficulty in organising my “friends” or remembering who on earth they are, the hard-to-read pages, the spam comments… need I go on? Oh, and privacy seems to be minimal by default on MySpace. I tried so hard to get into the MySpace world which others talked about endlessly, but I failed. I decided just to go there to listen to music, to search for a long-lost friend and see what they were up to if I was bored.. and that’s about it.

Bebo is similar. All the kids I know are on there and their pages are usually just as hard to read. It’s less buggy than MySpace, and seems a bit more user-friendly.. but I’m just not hooked on it. It’s scary reading messages kids are sending each other. I could find out a lot of info about people, without doing anything but read their Bebo comments.

Facebook, however, has such a clean and simple design. It’s easy to use, easy to organize your friends, great for tagging of photos (one of the only times I’ve gotten really into tagging), and privacy seems to be more important. So I’ve gotten a little hooked recently on Facebook. I’ve caught up with long-lost friends and enjoyed the connections via Facebook.

But is the design that important? Or is it the people? Or is it both? With people constantly saying “MySpace is so 2006″ when talking about Bebo here, I realised that it’s firstly about the people. Social networking sites fail without lots of your friends being on there too. But it’s also about being the cool place to hang out, a place that works, a place that is easy to use.

Facebook, the first social networking site I may just be getting hooked on using :)

Baa Camp

February 2 2007
by Rachel

I’m currently away at Baa Camp, the New Zealand Foo Camp and really enjoying the conversations, discussions and networking here. It’s great to be around other talented and inspiring Kiwis working in the online space, along with people like Lars Rasmussen (Google Maps) and Ben Goodger (Google/Firefox).

The event kicked off last night with a great discussion about the broadband problems (and, more importantly, possible solutions) led by Minister of Communications/Minister for Information Technology David Cunliffe (possibly a distant relative). I came away really impressed by the way he listened to the concerns and ideas the group had and how he has now put the issue of peering on his agenda.

Rod Drury is the only one I’ve discovered so far who is blogging about the event, but I’m sure there will be others here doing the same.

Elsewhere: Skype MSN Messenger Twitter Facebook