Posts Tagged ‘usability’

When “No thanks” means “Okay”

Tuesday, December 6th, 2011

Today someone tweeted a link to their friend’s Etsy shop. I clicked on the link, landed at the Etsy shop, and noticed an overlay in the footer that said:

Hi! We'd like to set these regional settings for you: English (US), $ United States Dollar USD, United States : (Okay) (No thanks)

I saw this and thought to myself: I prefer English (UK) when I have a choice, I prefer $ Australian Dollar AUD, and I’m in Australia. I tried to click on the text but it wouldn’t let me change any of the options so I clicked “No thanks” and expected it to go away. Instead the overlay was replaced with another letting me know that my preferences had been saved. What?! I’d said “No thanks”!

Your preferences have been saved. You can always update these regional settings later at the bottom of any page.

There are a couple of flaws here:

  • Etsy gave me the impression that I had options.
  • Etsy gave me options that did not match my needs.
  • Etsy offered me a choice to decline the options and then ignored my choice.

What Etsy could have done:

  • Not shown me an overlay and defaulted the site to English (US), $ United States Dollar USD, and United States. If I had reached the point where I was interested in buying I may have noticed the options to switch over to $AUD, or I could have been given a specific option when I was about to make a purchase. This isn’t ideal because I could be put off browsing products if I don’t have a good sense of the exchange rate.
  • Shown me the overlay without a “No thanks” button – it would have forced me to click “Okay” but at least I wouldn’t have felt like I had any other option.
  • Shown me the overlay and allowed me to adjust the settings in-line with the message.
  • Shown me the overlay but matched my IP address or browser settings to have a better guess at which settings I might like to have. This can be a problem as there are many reasons why an IP address/browser will not match a person’s preferences but at least it has a chance of being a little more accurate than defaulting everyone to be American. In combination with the suggestion above to provide in-line settings, I could have adjusted the options if they were wrong.
  • Shown me a different message when I clicked “No thanks” such as “We have left your settings at our default options of English (US), $ United States Dollar USD, United States. You can always update these regional settings later at the bottom of any page.”

From what I can see of the language, currency and region options that are available when you click on the link at the bottom of any Etsy page, Etsy appears to be in the process of rolling out new options for different countries and languages. It takes effort to provide that level of service on a site, however not providing clear instructions in the overlay they currently show is missing the mark and is failing to promote the options that are available.

All in all this is a minor gripe as taking a bit of care with small interactions like this isn’t going to save the world, however attention to detail can impact brand perception and the roll-out of grand plans.

Viewing an Excel file should not be so hard

Friday, December 10th, 2010

I needed to open a .xls Excel file on my PC and OpenOffice wouldn’t open it so I tried the Microsoft Office Excel Viewer program but it said no:

I thought perhaps the viewer was out of date so I found the “Check for updates” link which opened up a tab in my Chrome browser helpfully suggesting I should be running Internet Explorer 5 or later.

It had been a long time since I installed the Excel Viewer so I went through the checking for updates process, did some installations, but still the file wouldn’t play ball.

I switched over to Internet Explorer, set myself up with a Windows Live account and decided I’d try and open it with Microsoft Office Live, but Internet Explorer suggested that it wasn’t safe:

I ignored the advice but even then the file refused to open:

Having wasted a lot of time and failed miserably, I waited until I had access to another PC with Microsoft Office installed on it and Excel opened my troublesome file happily.

The three most frustrating things about this experience:

  • all that effort that got me nowhere
  • lack of appropriate guidance from the applications
  • the behavioural difference between an installed copy of Office and Office Live

Recent reads – accessibility

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

Web accessibility myths (Ian Pouncey)

“…open content that is inaccessible to 50% of people is better than content that is never published. Ideally it is published with a license that allows others to take it and convert it to different forms which may be accessible, but this isn’t possible if it only exists in a file on someone’s desktop.”

Testing for Accessibility (The Pennsylvania State University)

Suggested protocols and tools for testing web sites for accessibility.

[Draft] Contacting Organizations about Inaccessible Websites (W3C)

Advice from the W3C Web Accessibility Initiative on how to approach companies with inaccessible web sites and the type of information those companies may need in order to help them make their web sites more accessible.