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Page 1: Usability & Accessibility - Mindset Then Methodology V1.0

www.gapingvoid.com

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mindsetthen

methodology

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What I want you to do

Site VisitorsGive feedback.Poor service is not to be put up with.

Site Owners/Designers/BuildersGet out of your head and into the world of your customer. Then do your thing.

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Throughout history, the winners have been the businesses thatunderstand who their customers are,communicate with them, andmake their wants and needs an integral part of their business.

Michael Wilson, CEO - there.com

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Simple, clear purpose and principles give rise tocomplex and intelligent behaviour.

Complex rules and regulations give rise tosimple and stupid behaviour.

Dee Hock

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Customer-centric

• From the customer’s perspective– their needs & concerns

• Task focussed– they come to your site to do something

• Could be to get information

• Conversational– a flow of implicit and explicit questions

and responses

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Other-centric

• Organisation• Products & Services• Technology• Design• The Brand• Content

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We throw up some content. You go fetch it.

The “go fetch” model

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Where are these sites centred?

the customer

products & services

the organisation

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How many customer-centric?

Org/Product Customer

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13,200 pixels

1,680 pixels

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Accessible UsableWebSite

Accessible does not mean equally unusable for everyone.There is some overlap between usability and accessibility.If it’s not usable, it won’t be accessible (to anyone).

Usability & Accessibility

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Plan/Design/Build:

Accessible is boring/LCD. Usability tested.Result:

People with impairments frustrated.

Plan/Design/Build:

Both integral through the complete process. Fully tested.Result:

Maximum reach.

Plan/Design/Build:

No planning. Not tested.Result:

May look pretty, may satisfy a niche audience. Generally useless.

Plan/Design Build:

Accessibility bolted on after.Result:

Compliant, theoretically OK

Accessible

Usable

Usability vs. Accessibility

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Accessibility Myths

• Accessibility only benefits blind or vision-impaired users.

• Accessibility means sites are dull and boring

• Building an accessible site is expensive• People should view a web site the way the

designer intended• Keep to text-only

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Speed of task completion

Deaf Blind Low

vision Mobility Reading 4 million careful owners

Beehive Bioethics Council Community Net Companies Office Department of Labour Embassies Employment Relations Service Ministry for the Environment GCSB Good Practice Funding Government Jobs

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0

0.5

1

1.5

2

2.5

3

3.5

4

4.5

0 2 4 6 8 10

Task Completion Time

Sar

tisf

acti

on

Speed of Completion = Satisfaction

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Accessing a site with impairments

• Getting into their world. We can’t really know – but these ideas may help in understanding.

• Deaf – your site is in a foreign language with some recognisable words

• Blind – your site pages are accessed in a linear fashion from top to bottom– There are some facilities to skip forward/backward

• Low vision – your screen is 320x240 resolution with perhaps poor colour and fuzzy

• Mobility impaired – you must “tab” to the link or form field you want

• Reading impaired – some recognisable and unrecognisable words – hard to follow and process

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Some principles

1. Listen – understand – then put yourself in their place

2. Not everyone is the same– Determine the audiences– Understand the important differences

3. Tame your magpie – and your graphics designers4. It’s all about do’s

– Speed of task completion = satisfaction

5. Customers don’t care about you or your site– They care about themselves

6. You are a service provider7. Don’t overestimate the knowledge/skill of your

customers

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The common “branding” myth

• An organisation’s brand is:– Its logo– Its visual identity– Its branding statement, definition, …

• The brand is really:– The perception in the mind of the

customer.• The visual identity helps shape that perception.• The site usability is shapes it even more.

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Some actions

• Deal with the politics early– stakeholders tend to be stakeholder-centric

• Establish a (documented) site charter– this lays down the objectives and can be

referenced against for design decisions

• Branding – slave or master?– it has its place – keep it there

• Don’t be a bore – create a conversation

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Customers don’t care aboutyour websiteor your organisation.

They care aboutthemselves.

Show them you care about themand then they’ll start to care about you.

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Let’s build a site

• Who are the audiences?

• What are their needs?• What do they want to do?

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Thank you.

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Contact MikeMike OsborneWeb SuccessP. 04 934 2821M. 021 675 010E. [email protected] W. www.websuccess.co.nz

Blog: www.NoWombats.com

Mike OsborneAccEase LtdP. 04 934 2821M. 021 675 010E.

[email protected]

W. www.AccEase.com

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