Design of Sites, The: Patterns, Principles, and Processes for Crafting a Customer-Centered Web Experience

by ; ;
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2003-01-01
Publisher(s): Addison-Wesley Professional
List Price: $59.99

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Summary

Creating a Web site is easy. Creating a well-crafted Web site that provides a winning experience for your audience and enhances your profitability is another matter. It takes research, skill, experience, and careful thought to build a site that maximizes retention and repeat visits.

Author Biography

Douglas K. van Duyne is cofounder, president, and CEO of NetRaker Corporation, a maker of mission-critical Web site design and usability testing tools.

Table of Contents

Foreword xxvii
Preface xxxi
Acknowledgments xxxvii
PART I Foundations of Web Site Design 1(106)
Customer-Centered Web Design
3(16)
Making the Most of Web Design Patterns
19(12)
Knowing Your Customers: Principles and Techniques
31(30)
Involving Customers with Iterative Design
61(26)
Processes for Developing Customer-Centered Sites
87(20)
PART II Patterns 107(518)
Pattern Group A Site Genres
108(75)
Personal E-Commerce
110(8)
News Mosaics
118(7)
Community Conference
125(10)
Self-Service Government
135(5)
Nonprofits as Networks of Help
140(6)
Grassroots Information Sites
146(6)
Valuable Company Sites
152(7)
Educational Forums
159(7)
Stimulating Arts and Entertainment
166(5)
Web Apps that Work
171(7)
Enabling Intranets
178(5)
Pattern Group B Creating a Navigation Framework
183(44)
Multiple Ways to Navigate
184(5)
Browsable Content
189(4)
Hierarchical Organization
193(5)
Task-Based Organization
198(5)
Alphabetical Organization
203(3)
Chronological Organization
206(3)
Popularity-Based Organization
209(5)
Category Pages
214(4)
Site Accessibility
218(9)
Pattern Group C Creating a Powerful Homepage
227(16)
Homepage Portal
228(9)
Up-Front Value Proposition
237(6)
Pattern Group D Writing and Managing Content
243(72)
Page Templates
244(7)
Content Modules
251(6)
Headlines and Blurbs
257(6)
Personalized Content
263(11)
Message Boards
274(9)
Writing for Search Engines
283(8)
Inverse-Pyramid Writing Style
291(7)
Printable Pages
298(4)
Distinctive HTML Titles
302(6)
Internationalized and Localized Content
308(7)
Pattern Group E Building Trust and Credibility
315(36)
Site Branding
316(6)
E-Mail Subscriptions
322(6)
Fair Information Practices
328(6)
Privacy Policy
334(6)
About Us
340(7)
Secure Connections
347(4)
Pattern Group F Basic E-Commerce
351(58)
Quick-Flow Checkout
352(7)
Clean Product Details
359(10)
Shopping Cart
369(8)
Quick Address Selection
377(7)
Quick Shipping Method Selection
384(5)
Payment Method
389(6)
Order Summary
395(5)
Order Confirmation and Thank-You
400(4)
Easy Returns
404(5)
Pattern Group G Advanced E-Commerce
409(52)
Featured Products
410(7)
Cross-Selling and Up-Selling
417(8)
Personalized Recommendations
425(8)
Recommendation Community
433(9)
Multiple Destinations
442(5)
Gift Giving
447(6)
Order Tracking and History
453(8)
Pattern Group H Helping Customers Complete Tasks
461(42)
Process Funnel
462(4)
Sign-In/New Account
466(6)
Guest Account
472(5)
Account Management
477(5)
Persistent Customer Sessions
482(6)
Pop-Up Windows
488(5)
Frequently Asked Questions
493(6)
Context-Sensitive Help
499(4)
Pattern Group I Designing Effective Page Layouts
503(26)
Grid Layout
504(4)
Above the Fold
508(4)
Clear First Reads
512(5)
Expanding-Width Screen Size
517(4)
Fixed-Width Screen Size
521(4)
Consistent Sidebars of Related Content
525(4)
Pattern Group J Making Site Search Fast and Relevant
529(16)
Search Action Module
530(4)
Straightforward Search Forms
534(3)
Organized Search Results
537(8)
Pattern Group K Making Navigation Easy
545(56)
Unified Browsing Hierarchy
546(4)
Navigation Bar
550(4)
Tab Rows
554(4)
Action Buttons
558(4)
High-Visibility Action Buttons
562(3)
Location Bread Crumbs
565(3)
Embedded Links
568(4)
External Links
572(4)
Descriptive, Longer Link Names
576(5)
Obvious Links
581(5)
Familiar Language
586(4)
Preventing Errors
590(4)
Meaningful Error Messages
594(4)
Page Not Found
598(3)
Pattern Group L Speeding Up Your Site
601(24)
Low Number of Files
602(4)
Fast-Downloading Images
606(8)
Separate Tables
614(3)
HTML Power
617(4)
Reusable Images
621(4)
PART III Appendixes 625(44)
Appendix A Running Usability Evaluations
627(16)
Appendix B Sample Web Site Evaluation Plan
643(4)
Appendix C Sample Consent Form
647(2)
Appendix D Sample Observer Form
649(2)
Appendix E Online Research
651(18)
Glossary 669(26)
Resources 695(32)
Credits 727(4)
About the Authors 731(2)
Index 733

Excerpts

You are probably wondering how this book is any different from the numerous other Web design books out there. This unique book is not about programming or any specific technology. Nor is it a quick fix for all of the problems you and your team will face in developing a Web site. No single book can do that. What this book does offer are principles, processes, and patterns to help you develop successful customer-centered Web sites. With this customer-centered focus, your Web site can be relevant, self-explanatory, and easy to use. Creating a Web site is easy. Creating a successful Web site that provides a winning experience for your target audience is another story, and that is what this book is about. And when you're finished reading it, it will be a valuable reference tool to keep on your desk. You can turn to it again and again as you design, redesign, and evaluate sites. Your target customers 1 will differ. Depending on your business, they might be members in a club, students of a university, concerned citizens, or paying shoppers. The goals of each of these audiences will also vary, but the challenge for you is the same: creating an interactive interface that provides tangible value to the people who go to your site. The patterns in this book provide you and your team with a common language to articulate an infinite variety of Web designs. We developed the language because we saw people solving the same design problems over and over at great time and expense. The patterns examine solutions to these problems. We present the best practices from our consulting experience, our research experience, and our Web development experience--gathered in one place. In The Design of Sites we give you the tools to understand your customers better, help you design sites that your customers will find effective and easy to use, shorten your development schedules, and reduce maintenance costs. If you do not have "customers," think of target audiences. One focus of the book is the design of e-commerce Web sites; however, you can successfully apply the majority of the content to make any Web site better. Who Should Read This Book? This book is written for anyone involved in the design and implementation of a Web site. Its focus is tilted more toward Web design professionals, such as interaction designers, usability engineers, information architects, and visual designers. But this book is also written to be a resource for anyone on a Web development team, from business executives to advertising managers to software developers to content editors. The best possible team will understand and buy into the customer-centered design philosophy because every person on the team influences how the Web site is shaped and formed. Web Design Professionals* Start with Chapters 1 and 2 to understand the motivation for customer-centered design and the patterns approach to Web design. If you already have a strong background in the principles (Chapters 3 and 4) and processes (Chapter 5) of customer-centered design, you can skim these chapters and move quickly to the patterns themselves (Part II of the book). If you have less experience, the three chapters on customer-centered design and development (3 through 5) should prove useful for whatever kind of Web site you're developing. Business Managers* Read Chapters 1 through 5 to understand the business consequences of ignoring customer-centered design, as well as to learn the principles and processes required to build a customer-centered site. E-commerce sites pose the greatest risk of project failure. These chapters show techniques you can use to reduce this risk, decrease feature creep, and minimize implementation and maintenance costs. Customer-centered design will also help you shorten development schedules and increase overall customer satisfaction--and consequently client satisfaction too. Business Clients* If you are the c

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