29/7/09

Stop wasting our time

Filed under:
Usability, Web-design

It’s common sense to put the publication date of the article somewhere at the top of the page and make it easy to spot straight off. Users want to see the relevant information immediately. The same principle applies for newspapers, for instance, and the web medium is not different in that aspect.

A clever little trick web authors sometimes use is to put the publication date at the very bottom of the article. This doesn’t make a lot of sense from the usability standpoint, does it? The reason for this is that people tend to stay longer on the page if they don’t see the date right away. It is often the case that users will dismiss the content if they see an old publication date. If that date is a page scroll away, they will not leave that soon, scan a bit or two more and maybe something will make them stay even longer.

Clever, but tricks like this are wasting our time. In a medium where everything should be made for the benefit of the user, I consider this bad practise. I do not want to scroll and search for the publication date, I want to be able see it instantly.

I’ll share some good practise as well, but Twitter related. Twitter is an awesome way of communicating, sharing and getting information. What I like about it is that the messages are short and sweet. Sometimes though, they are too short or provide low value.

Maratz usually tweets in English. To let his followers know his tweet is in Croatian, he uses the twitter tag [lang=hr] so the users not interested in those kind of tweets can skip them right away (example).

Ivan also offers a clever time saver. When he links to movie trailers in his tweets, he uses the tag [TRAILER] (example).

These examples are also clever, but a good sort of clever.

In the picture, you can see the clear difference between the information the two tweets provide. The left one, the original, provides additional information to the user and makes it easier to scan. The right one, the one I tampered with, does not do as good a job.

As far as I know, these kind of tags are not standard in Twitter, but seem a very good idea. Maybe Twitter users will make this into a trend, a then help make it a standard, like they did with hashtags. Twitter users would benefit from tags like [Photos], [iTunes], [Pics], [Music] and so on.

The point I am making is: let’s make our online life easier and save us valuable time.

Comments: 10 responses to this post

  1. 1

    “To let his followers know his tweet is not in Croatian, he uses the twitter tag [lang=hr]”

    Should be: is in Croatian.

    :-)

    Ilija Brajkovic on July 29, 2009

  2. 2

    Ooops, you’re right, Ilija. Fixed! :)

    Bojan on July 29, 2009

  3. 3

    I was just thinking about the date thing the other day. I was on a blog that actually didn’t have any date, frustrated the absolute hell out of me. As I usually check the date before reading, I left without even reading anything.

    Cole on July 30, 2009

  4. 4

    Cole: yes, that’s frustrating. I wrote a bit about that in Don’t publish undated content.

    I’ve also noticed some (popular) blogs use the format Jul 29th. This also does not provide enough information. I am assuming the date applies to the current year, but I can’t really know that.

    Bojan on July 30, 2009

  5. 5

    Yes, I see that a lot.

    I like the way you think!

    Cole on August 7, 2009

  6. 6

    Nice tips, lost a count how many times I have clicked on tweet link which led to App Store page, and tweeter didn’t mention that, frustrating!

    Ivan Nikolic on August 9, 2009

  7. 7

    Yup, same here, Ivan.

    I’m also noticing a lot of app store and mailto links in websites that give you no real of clue where you’re gonna end up.

    Bojan on August 9, 2009

  8. 8

    I, for example, leave date information in my blog post URLs; if someone looks for /blog/2009/07/blog_post_name, he could easily extract useful information about the creation date of that particular post (also, only date parameters in the URL provide an archive).

    For tweets, I add hashtags to some of them, like #quote or #thought or #blog when referring to quotes and thoughts, as well as my blog posts. Also, #listening is for music, #reading is for books, #watching is for movies or online videos etc.

    Nikola on August 11, 2009

  9. 9

    That is a good URL, Nikola. While it provides information, I think it is not enough for the average users because they do not notice it. They seek for post info on the web page itself.

    Hashtags are great but I also think the square bracket tags add great value to the tweets.

    Bojan on August 16, 2009

  10. 10

    Thanks for this useful information & Nice post to sharing with me.

    clippingimages on October 10, 2009

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