Posted on December 9, 2009 by ssmith
Google says a faster web will make a better world, that customers prefer websites that are faster, and that we’ve only just begun. We agree. But Google cannot do this on its own. So Google is asking people to work together. We believe this requires a rigorous focus on user tasks. In this article we offer some ways to make web tasks faster.
Google has evidence that people prefer websites that are faster, and that even small changes to save a couple seconds add up. So Google PageSpeed promotes efforts to speed up page-load times. Google introduced PageSpeed Insights for the Chrome browser. They promote optimization tools such as a Firebug extension, and webpagetest.org.
But efforts at optimizing page-load times will only tackle a fraction of the overall user experience time. A user can take much longer to accomplish a web task than it takes for the web pages to load. Thus our big challenge is in solving usability problems after the page loads. This requires us to make user tasks faster. If you test your web tasks, you know the value of saving the user’s valuable time. If you manage a large website you know you can’t make all pages faster – you prioritize your scarce resources on key pages. That’s why more and more people are focusing on top tasks – to focus scarce resources on web pages that matter to users.
User experience professionals greatly help make the web faster. To do so we need to:
a) Focus efforts on the really top tasks
b) Iteratively test and optimize design to reduce the time it takes users to do top tasks
How can you help? If you know your users’ top tasks, here are seven ways:
Read more on landing page design [1]
2. Make links and menus faster to scan
Read more guidelines for good links [2]
3. Make task journeys faster
Read more about choices along a task path [3]
4. Make form-filling faster
Read more about form design [4]
5. Preserve the task-context
6. Help users recover from errors faster
7. Make web applications faster
Making web tasks faster helps make the world better. Read our brief history of time on task [5] for background on the importance. Ready to track how well you’re doing? We can help measure your progress with tools like the Task Performance Indicator [6].
Back to Top [7]
Related articles and references
Back to Top [7]
“The world can be seen as only connections… A piece of information is defined by what it is related to, and how it is related. The structure is everything”
Sir Tim Berners-Lee – Weaving the Web
URLs in this post:
[1] landing page design: http://www.neoinsight.com/newsletter/0905.html#landing_page
[2] guidelines for good links: http://www.neoinsight.com/newsletter/0902.html#Link_Guidelines
[3] choices along a task path: http://www.neoinsight.com/newsletter/0906.htm
[4] form design: http://www.neoinsight.com/newsletter/0905.html#form_design
[5] brief history of time on task: http://www.neoinsight.com/newsletter/0909.html#time_on_task
[6] Task Performance Indicator: http://www.customercarewords.com/task-performance-indicator.html
[7] Back to Top: #top
[8] Your user is in “get there” mode: http://www.neoinsight.com/newsletter/0903.html#0903get-there-mode
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