Wednesday, April 4, 2007

The unpredictable human factor

As internet professionals, we can easily become so immersed in our web world (with its XHTML, CSS, AJAX, UI, UX, U2 etc.) that we forget to stand back and consider the real world. I heard a story recently that, although a little sobering for web designers, helped to put things in a healthy perspective.

A company in Australia had a lousy website - it lacked clear information, and had poor navigation and visual design. Despite the poor website, the company was thriving at its core business. This company decided to engage the services of a professional web design and marketing firm to completely re-design their web presence. The web design firm did extensive research and duly produced a very slick, informative and well-designed website. The result: sales began to plummet.

It turned out that the company's original lousy website was key to its success. People who visited the site couldn't find the information they were looking for, so they ended up calling the company. The person who answered the phones was great at making sales, and was able to turn a high proportion of callers into buyers. In one case a $5,000 sale was made from somebody who just called for information. Because the new site answered all the potential customers' questions, the company received 80% fewer calls, so an enormous amount of potential business was lost.

The lesson for web designers/developers is that having a slick website may not always be in the best interests of the client. For web technology to be relevant, it needs to do so in the context of how a business operates. The human factor, unpredictable as it may be, is never irrelevant.


-Jeremy

Tuesday, April 3, 2007

Time to get my feet wet

"Let us make a special effort to stop communicating with each other, so we can have some conversation."
Judith Martin, (Miss Manners)


This might seem a strange quote to begin my first Ovurlunch blog entry, but it sounds good! The rise of the Internet, the world wide web, the proliferation of blogs, MySpace pages and so on means that everybody in the world now has a platform from which to hold forth. But let us not do so merely because technology allows us. Rather, let our words be meaningful and useful to others; let our criticism be constructive, our sentiments noble, our praise generous, so that the end of the day, when all is said and done, we will know that that is the moment when the talking has to stop.


Ok, my feet are in the water. This could be fun.

- Jeremy