Spangler's Log.

  • mrmattspangler
    Not that surprising-big bulkly promotional flash boxes are a mostly useless relic of the past…especially ones like this site that never change. People expect new and relevant content presented to them each time they return to a site, and its becoming true for sites that are more transactional and e-commerce based as well.
What I find more interesting here is the nearly complete lack of attention people are paying to the navigation in both of these studies. Users pay attention to the “home” button, because as they look at content on the site they will eventually want to come back home to jump back off to new content…but with all the attention paid in UX designs to making sure there is a deep, exhaustive drop down navigation, the truth is that  today’s web site surfers don’t use it.
Thats why you’ve seen sites, like Gawker, have nearly no navigation elements, but instead use content callouts at the top that are fresh and constantly changing to push people around their sites. 

via mareen: via sebastianwaters:
The test participant in the top gaze plot fixated a few times within the big empty color block before the content downloaded, then spent the remaining time looking at the rest of the page. This user never looked at the big promotional space after it had rendered. The second user (bottom gaze plot) happened to be looking away from the screen during the 8 seconds when the promotional content downloaded. Thus, the first time he looked at the page he saw it as intended, complete with the entire promo. – Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox: Website Response Time(via slantback)
Interesting. Bookmark for everyone in our business.

    Not that surprising-big bulkly promotional flash boxes are a mostly useless relic of the past…especially ones like this site that never change. People expect new and relevant content presented to them each time they return to a site, and its becoming true for sites that are more transactional and e-commerce based as well.

    What I find more interesting here is the nearly complete lack of attention people are paying to the navigation in both of these studies. Users pay attention to the “home” button, because as they look at content on the site they will eventually want to come back home to jump back off to new content…but with all the attention paid in UX designs to making sure there is a deep, exhaustive drop down navigation, the truth is that  today’s web site surfers don’t use it.

    Thats why you’ve seen sites, like Gawker, have nearly no navigation elements, but instead use content callouts at the top that are fresh and constantly changing to push people around their sites. 

    via mareen: via sebastianwaters:

    The test participant in the top gaze plot fixated a few times within the big empty color block before the content downloaded, then spent the remaining time looking at the rest of the page. This user never looked at the big promotional space after it had rendered. The second user (bottom gaze plot) happened to be looking away from the screen during the 8 seconds when the promotional content downloaded. Thus, the first time he looked at the page he saw it as intended, complete with the entire promo. – Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox: Website Response Time(via slantback)

    Interesting. Bookmark for everyone in our business.

  • mrmattspangler
    The internet can be a magical and scary place. Every so often you experience a site that is just stunning.  I stumbled upon this one today (don’t ask).
Of course you can’t shut off the sound without leaving the page. Behold the glory of Better Beginnings.

    The internet can be a magical and scary place. Every so often you experience a site that is just stunning.  I stumbled upon this one today (don’t ask).

    Of course you can’t shut off the sound without leaving the page. Behold the glory of Better Beginnings.

  • mrmattspangler
    Is it just me, or are good IA’s trying to tell me something? A couple of the more well known blogs on the internet launched redesigns last week, Eater and Boing Boing both within a week or so of one another.
If you’re comparing the design…there isn’t much comparison.  Eater just absolutely crushes Boing Boing, who seriously seems like they lost their mind by getting rid of their previous well-known (and loved) logo and typeface to replace it with something that reminds me of the Radisson re-brand. The rest of it color, typefaces, everything… is just baffling and awful. Eater on the other hand, polished up their look nicely, evolved the logo with a perfect inspiration from Florent, made it cleaner and easier to read and built a communication system that eases the information intake. Classic work from Kevin and his team at Hard Candy Shell who I’ve always felt were some of the best online publishing UI peeps out there.
But what I found curious was the similarities between the two from a layout perspective.  They both move to the two column format (from the previous 3 column still seen at curbed.com and racked.com), they both widen the blog format to nearly the same pixel length, approximately 450-500 pixels w/o gutter. They both added similar retweet buttons and minimize the social sharing buttons…and they both created subject category highlight zones at the top of the page in square sized buckets with a classic table of contents type interface included for quick browsing as navigation.
These are the leaders, so I would guess that their research and insight has determined these are optimal choices…so I’m paying attention (at when it comes to daily updating, publishing driven “blog” style sites).
As a sidenote, not really getting the ‘new posts’ ticker on Eater. There is a part of me that likes knowing the new activity, but I have no concept of when that refreshes and it seems to be the same for me every time I return to the site so its not providing much value.
Will post an update with more thoughts when I have a chance to speak with Kevin. What are you thoughts?

    Is it just me, or are good IA’s trying to tell me something? A couple of the more well known blogs on the internet launched redesigns last week, Eater and Boing Boing both within a week or so of one another.

    If you’re comparing the design…there isn’t much comparison.  Eater just absolutely crushes Boing Boing, who seriously seems like they lost their mind by getting rid of their previous well-known (and loved) logo and typeface to replace it with something that reminds me of the Radisson re-brand. The rest of it color, typefaces, everything… is just baffling and awful. Eater on the other hand, polished up their look nicely, evolved the logo with a perfect inspiration from Florent, made it cleaner and easier to read and built a communication system that eases the information intake. Classic work from Kevin and his team at Hard Candy Shell who I’ve always felt were some of the best online publishing UI peeps out there.

    But what I found curious was the similarities between the two from a layout perspective.  They both move to the two column format (from the previous 3 column still seen at curbed.com and racked.com), they both widen the blog format to nearly the same pixel length, approximately 450-500 pixels w/o gutter. They both added similar retweet buttons and minimize the social sharing buttons…and they both created subject category highlight zones at the top of the page in square sized buckets with a classic table of contents type interface included for quick browsing as navigation.

    These are the leaders, so I would guess that their research and insight has determined these are optimal choices…so I’m paying attention (at when it comes to daily updating, publishing driven “blog” style sites).

    As a sidenote, not really getting the ‘new posts’ ticker on Eater. There is a part of me that likes knowing the new activity, but I have no concept of when that refreshes and it seems to be the same for me every time I return to the site so its not providing much value.

    Will post an update with more thoughts when I have a chance to speak with Kevin. What are you thoughts?

  • mrmattspangler

    TMPL

    Things Marketing People Love

    Funny site.  It just launched (1st post was July 8, 2009).   Its kinda so spot-on in a “stuff white people like” kind of way.  I laughed out loud reading a couple when I first saw it.  I love people who can see themselves for who they are and have a sense of humor about it.

    From the site creator - “I thought the idea of being a futurist was cool, so I ended up working in marketing in new york city as a planner. While eating a burger today, I started to laugh at the idea of urban scavenger hunts. I mean, really? For what? Then I was like, you know what, marketing people LOVEEE that shit!”

  • mrmattspangler
    Isaac Pinnock (Made by Many)
  • mrmattspangler

    10 Things a Web Designer Would Never Tell You