Should we ask for name on card even though it’s not required for credit card payments?
The name on card is not used when processing credit card payments. Paypal does not ask the user to enter the name on card when saving a card to the “wallet”, while Amazon.com does.
The benefit of asking for it is that the us…
Should we ask for name on card even though it’s not required for credit card payments?
The name on card is not used when processing credit card payments. Paypal does not ask the user to enter the name on card when saving a card to the “wallet”, while Amazon.com does.
The benefit of asking for it is that the us…
How could Kindle User Experience be improved?
I got a Kindle today and I would like it a lot better if I could read math papers on it without the equations coming out all funny. Some of my PDFs look perfectly fine on a computer but symbols go missing when I transfer them to a Kindle. This makes them nearly unreadable because it changes the meaning of the equations.
I understand that this is a difficult problem and it’s probably low on your priority list, but seriously, if you fixed this my Kindle experience would be infinitely better. Thanks.
Why is Google’s "I’m Feeling Lucky" button still next to the search bar?
I’m sure that Google must put a lot of thought into the display of its homepage. With such a minimalistic design, every element matters.
So what’s up with the “I’m feeling lucky” button? Why is it right next to the searc…
What are some of the great user experience “success stories”?
I don’t know if this is the type of UX success story you’re looking for, but there was a highly publicized case study of “The $300 Million Button” at Amazon.com (it’s also included in Web Form Design: Filling in the Blanks).
Basically, there was an unknown conversion bottleneck in the Amazon shopping process:
- User picks out the stuff they want to buy and adds them to their shopping cart
- User clicks “checkout” to presumably pay for the purchases
- A form pops up, as it does on many e-commerce sites, that asks the user to Log In or Register.
This simple form caused $300M worth of shopping cart abandonment as many users resented having to register to make a purchase (Amazon originally predicted they would be happy about saving time on future visits with Amazon’s patented “one-click-checkout”), and others couldn’t remember if this was their first visit to Amazon and became frustrated with each failed login/password attempt. The point: no one wanted to click “Register”.
This, despite the fact that the registration form didn’t ask for any additional information that wouldn’t already be needed to checkout with. Additionally, even users who had registered in the past stumbled on the form when they forgot their email address or password.
The fix they came up with was to replace the “Register” button with “Continue” and a message that read:
“You do not need to create an account to make purchases on our site. Simply click Continue to proceed to checkout. To make your future purchases even faster, you can create an account during checkout.”
This little change resulted in a 45% increase in completed purchases, and for the first year, the site saw an additional $300M in revenue.
This is one of those classic marketing parables that reminds you to test everything and test often. Don’t just go with “common sense” or your gut feeling. You might not think that having the shopping cart on the right or left would make a big difference, but it can and does. And it can even have different results on different sites.
In terms of UX and UI, what are the pros and cons of Airbnb Neighborhoods?
I do believe that AirBNB’s “Neighborhoods” signals a significant change in the UX of the site and the service as a whole.
On the surface, you could say that AirBNB is competing with hotels, motels, and hostels in the “places to stay when I am traveling” business. This may be true, and it is certainly how AirBNB started out from a UI/UX perspective.
Hotels and the like are designed to serve the needs of a particular type of person: someone who is traveling for a specific reason, in most cases for a short period of time. Perhaps they are in town for an event of some sort, or maybe they have come to the new place on a business trip. In these instances, the person did not actively choose the place they were going, just ended up there due to proximity or because outside forces sent them there. For the most part, these people don’t know much about the city they’re staying in, and don’t care to. They probably want a clean, warm hotel room that is as close to the thing they have to do as possible, with easy access to the airport. If they’re feeling adventurous, they’ll ask the concierge to point them to a good local spot for dinner. Hotels, and therefore hotel booking websites, serve this population well. If you pay attention to the design and layout of these sites, you’ll see it reflected in their hierarchy and in what bits of information they choose to highlight.
I would guess, with no real evidence, that AirBNB has discovered that many people who are using their service are not this kind of traveler. I believe their new interface is designed to more closely align the tone of their service with the tone of their customers.
The “Neighborhoods” feature measures the places one might stay more qualitatively and less quantitatively. AirBNB chooses to highlight large photographs and descriptive tags about each neighborhood, as opposed to miles from the airport. This sort of approach is much better suited to casual travelers, vacationers, and a new breed of hipster nomad. These people ARE actively choosing the places that they want to go, so their decision is not as simple as the aforementioned business travelers. Additionally, they may be traveling for long spans of time. Very few people would be able to stay in a hotel for a month without losing their minds, but that is not the case with an AirBNB listing. If you’re scouting out a place to live for the summer, you certainly want more information than a simple hotel booking site provides. The pictures of community members, quotes from locals, and rich storytelling on each neighborhood page is a plea to travel in a meaningful way, not simply stay in hotels and hit the tourist traps.
Overall, I’m glad to see AirBNB taking this approach, and I think it will serve them well.
Simulate Eye-tracking by Photoshop filters? [on hold]
I’ve read some articles about visual perception and that it mostly differs in High-frequency, Mid-frequency and Low-frequency recognition. Whereas Low-freq is fastest and seems to be responsible for overall orientation. Mid-f…
designing for 45+ years old users
What are the things I need to consider when I design for the users that are 45-70 old?
I know a little about vision, hearing and dexterity problems, but what are other problems that some of you faced?
The scenario is: a tra…
Why do Microwave oven UIs fail?
I’m not a professional chef, but I do know my way around the kitchen and its machines. The dishwasher, the fridge, the freezer, the stove and the oven all works as expected in many homes. Could you start the dishwasher, my friends might say, but they never say – heat this in the microwave oven. Probably it’s because they are programmable these days, and have plenty of buttons with arbitrary non-standard, non-conventional icons and no explanatory text to help. Fortunately there is a trend among microwave oven manufacturers to add a panic-button at the lower left of the control panel. It’s the button that starts the microwave oven at max effect and runs for 30 seconds.
But I wonder why that is. All other kitchen machines could be operated fairly well if you give it a little time, but the microwave just doesn’t. There can’t be different designers, but maybe more options where microwave oven UI designers had to invent new symbols for new features and add a note in the manual?
Micah Wittman has even made an effort to start a “Microwave Oven UI Standard Project” to overcome this problem. I’d be happy to join if it is still running. So far this is his suggestion:
Still one wonders, why do Microwave UI fail?