My blog has moved!

You should be automatically redirected in 6 seconds. If not, visit
http://ingenioustries.com/blog/
and update your bookmarks.

My name's Joel Kelly and I live in Halifax, NS.

I'm a 20something guy doing digital and social media strategy for a Halifax-based marketing agency.

I'm a vegan nerd and marketing asshole.

You should follow me on Twitter.

Contact me about whatever (like, say, your marketing questions) at joelkellyATgmail.com
Showing posts with label design. Show all posts
Showing posts with label design. Show all posts

Sunday, December 21, 2008

Halifax Web Development

Check out my friend's blog tentatively titled Halifax Web Development. Don't let the, um, very straight-forward name fool you: He's got some great ideas over there, and some cool advice.

Wednesday, June 25, 2008

It's just about goals

Carman’s post about planning campaigns or creative based on what you or your peers or your friends will believe to be “cool” got me thinking about something we all have to ask ourselves and our clients all the time.

What’s the point?

I left a comment on his post saying that I was critiquing a client’s website (as it’s incredibly hard to use) and was told that it won awards (or was recognized in some way) at Cannes.

That’s a fabulous honour but it matters not at all. Nobody who actually tries to engage with the site, only to be confronted with a loading page and then a non-existent nav structure in a fully-Flash page (no direct linking, no image/text copying) cares at all that the site won some awards. They might be intrigued with the look of the site, briefly. But they’ll never come back. Best case, best case, they pass the link along to a friend because the site looks cool. Worst case, they never enter the contest, their friend never enters the contest, no one sends a direct link to the contest.

And that worst case is just about the current case, it turns out.

If your campaign has a goal, which should almost never be to drive traffic to a micro-site, build around that goal. If the goal is to get information on your customers through a contest, make getting to the contest, sending the link to the contest, and entering the contest the easiest friggin thing in the world.

That simple.

Sunday, April 27, 2008

Ajax Expectations

If a user clicks on an image on your website, what does she expect to happen? You should know this, or at least give it some serious thought.

Because, likely, she doesn't expect her screen to be grayed out and have an ajax-loaded larger image slowly appear over top of the page. She doesn't expect to have to sit through a similar animation every time she selects a new picture.

Your site needs to manage your users' expectations. When your user clicks on an image in a gallery he expects to have it load promptly, in a manner that lets him quickly navigate away from it when he realizes it wasn't what he thought it was, and quickly select the image he was actually looking for.

Unless your website is your portfolio, it's not a presentation. So people expect an experience that they'll define, not one that includes a flashy use of javascript for its own sake.

If an animation or graphical element doesn't improve the experience for the user it necessarily detracts from it. Because they don't care about that it looks neat or that you couldn't do it without Flash before. Only you do.

Tuesday, April 22, 2008

Get rid of your splash page

It's just a speed bump. It's an obstruction.

It's bad for the user.

It's a sign that says, "Turn back, because this is how the rest of your experience will be."

Just get rid of it, okay?

Oh, and if you have a splash page that says, "Loading," what are you doing? You're saying, "Thanks for taking the time out of your busy day to come to my website. You didn't have to, you probably didn't even need to. You just wanted to. Now wait, dammit."

And if you need a more tangible business-related reason to get rid of it: It's bad for SEO, all right?

Sunday, April 20, 2008

Lessons My Facebook Taught Me

It's only been a few years since people en masse started using Facebook, and probably only about a year since everybody started using it.

For now, you can get away with your company website being Flash-only, being an entirely creator-defined experience. For now you can have splash pages and a navigation that doesn't allow for tabbing, and un-copyable images.

For now.

Eventually people who've had their internet experience defined by Facebook are going to expect this experience to come with them across the web. They'll expect interaction and control over their experience on your website, too.

People will expect websites to deliver what they want, what they're looking for, when they want it. They won't watch your intro, they won't send your link to their friends if they can only link to the first page. Don't expect them to.

Are you ready for that? Have you come to terms with that yet? Or are you still designing or commissioning websites with splash pages (speed bumps and warning signs that tell your users to turn back now), and single-page Flash-only sites that don't allow for direct linking to content?

How long do you think that can last?

Not long enough to justify still doing it.