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Some sites have amazing design but have very bad usability. You don’t know what to do. My mantra is to think Apple. Look at the iPod. How simpler can it get? Even my mom can use it. The design? Nothing really amazing about it…
Your interface seems to have that covered. There is one thing puzzling me in your heat map. On the home page the “Job seekers, click here.” link seems strangely popular for its location. In a way it may just be a good thing telling you candidates read through the presentation before deciding to click.
Do you think it's really better than Analytics' overlay view?
I'll give it a try.
Three easy/immediate changes to improve the design:
(1) Move the sign-up/tour box above features/benefits and below the headers
(2) Move the sign-up form to right below the features/benefits
(3) Center the menu links to stay consistent
The key to making design work is A/B testing lots of combinations over time. Heatmaps are pretty but if you want some real advice I'd need to see the actual quantitative information behind it all.
That's all you get for free, email me if you want some real advice (seriously).
I think Albert Lai's advice is critical for success. It reminds of of how Paul Graham says that a startup needs to not spend too much time coming up with the perfect idea and just launch. Then once the product is out, let the market decide what direction to take it in (or what your product/market is).
It also reminds me of how 37 Signals says that less time is good at launch, and that it forces you to become more useful/valuable quicker.
As for design tips, I used your thought and I thought the sign-up process was smooth. My suggestion would be to think about how a new user can easily explore and stumble upon a couple of jobs quickly. When I first used the site, I maybe clicked on two or three sites then left. I'm being super-picky here and only reporting on my individual experience.
i know you guys have launched, but there is one guerilla marketing tactic that is used often for starting web apps, which is making up a fake website, with a different url, with a different layout, and a different way to present the service, and then see if people actually signup. actually provides objective data on what works and what doesn't
Good post!
I can't agree with you more about testing. The complications of the consumer's website navigation can only be tamed through testing (typically A-B split).
I highlighted the following five points:
1. Perceived ease of use
2. Perceived usefulness
3. Perceived reputation (brand equity etc)
4. Personalization (home page, products etc)
5. Security (SSL etc)
This is my first time on your site and I'm sure to be back!
Thanks
Alex Barton
@Juan: The heatmap from crazyegg shows you all clicks. So if you have two "links" to the same place, those links will show up separately on the heatmap, so you can tell which one is more effective.
@Rebecca: We definitely want to provide candidates with a great experience, and it makes sense that they would be a higher percentage of our traffic (since there are more candidates than companies) but our business is based on acquiring companies as customers - which is why the focus is there. It doesn't mean we ignore candidates, but I don't think the changes we'll make are going to emphasize / focus more on them.
I'm glad you mentioned testing after launching a Web site and not just before while in test. I have made many more
changes/improvements to my site after launching last week than I did in the several weeks I tested before going live. Testing will continue to be important as the site continues to grow.
Does anyone have any good resources on the best way to gather unbiased feedback? In other words, people are using your site (not counting friends & family) and are forming opinions that will help you make your site better. How can you properly solicit this feedback from them?
Any ideas?
Great post. Thanks especially for the tips on HeatMaps and CrazyEgg.
We find with our technology clients (and I'd bet it's true for any B2B company) that there are two reasons why websites commonly fail to deliver the desired results:
1. They are developed without thorough consideration of the target customers, their business needs and their decision-making process.
2. They are designed by people who are not marketers and who do not understand persuasion, communication and selling, and are not given any guidelines to follow.
I'd be interested to hear what you and others think of this.
Best,
Susan
Thanks for the comment.