Posts Tagged ‘google’

6 Important Points in Designing a Website

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009
I think design covers so much more than the aesthetic. Design is fundamentally more. Design is usability. It is Information Architecture. It is Accessibility. This is all design.
- Mark Boulton


1. Speed, speed, speed

gmailIn the recent interview with google's own Matt Cutts, he says "A lot of people within Google think that the web should be fast, it should be a good experience; and so it’s sort of fair to say if you’re a fast site, maybe you should get a little bit of a bonus. Or maybe if you have a really awfully slow site, users don’t want that as much." And the controversy goes on and on...

In my opinion, a website does not need to be fast but it needs to be responsive. This does not translate to websites with flash components, repetitive loading screen and animation over pages will become annoying.

2. It's all about experience

Conventions are your friends
- Steve Krug, author of Don't Make Me Think

Breaking conventions for the sake of breaking the conventions are not innovation. And if you can't innovate, there's nothing wrong with following the current. Walking on familiar grounds makes your user feels safer.

3. Minimize learning curve

google.com

If one is presented a page like this, wonder what should one do?

4. KISS (Keep It Simple, Stupid)

Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away.
- Antoine de Saint-Exupery

5. Don't rely on graphics

Not all pictures says a thousand words, in fact most stock pictures says nothing at all. Here are the top 3 photo search result of 'web design' from iStockPhoto. Is it saying a thousand words?

istockphoto_4619850-internet-connection istockphoto_6697647-internet-browser-windows istockphoto_7459744-unique-website

What about full flash site? Well aside from SEO problem, flash sites doesn't have a good user experience, users can't jumped directly into a certain page. And doesn't allow them to share links, pictures, or articles with friends. I know that these can be done in flash, but the harsh reality is most flash designers don't (or don't know how to) do it.

6. Graceful downgrade

Since the early days of websites, we have seen a warning text in the footer of sites, 'best viewed in 1024 x 768 screen resolution,' it doesn't mean that screen with resolution 800 x 600 is SOL. These days, in my opinion, it's okay not to support IE6 if your site requires the alpha transparency from PNG pictures, or html5. You should have a fair warning for IE6 users.

Adapted from 6 Things Video Games Can Teach Us About Web Usability

Google is Rolling Out Caffeine

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

As informed by the google caffeine sandbox site, google is rolling out the new search architecture codenamed caffeine through out their data center slowly and will push across all data center after this holiday season. Watch the video below for Matt Cutts' explanation on google caffeine.


As described by this quote from Black Hat Forum, we are heading to the right direction,

Google caffeine is up for fighting with real time searches on twitter & faceboook

Add / update content frequently or you may loose on some more rankings

I searched for seo in google caffeine. it showed me facebook page from japan, which was recently updated. And had some content releated to seo, but not search engine optimization, It was meant for some other abbvr.

Caffeine would more probably rely on fresh content

It seems to be giving an increased weighting on domain authority & some authoritative tag type pages ranking (like Technorati tag pages, wordpress tag pages, propeller tags, etc)

You have got to make your domain more authorative in terms of traffic, content and links.

They are also putting slightly more weight on exact match domain names. In a way, we should focus on spamming these high authority sites to get the search traffic....

We need to look at ways how we can get our links on those social media pages...

Google to Launch Commerce Search

Friday, November 6th, 2009

The holiday season is right around the corner, so online retailers are gearing up for spikes in traffic. When people go to shop online, search is big part of finding the right product, whether they're looking for a gift or just something for themselves. Today we're aiming to make e-commerce searching as easy as using Google.com with a new enterprise product, Google Commerce Search.

Search quality is a big factor in changing visitors to buyers online, and in making customers happy too. Visitors spend an average of just eight seconds before deciding whether or not to remain on a website, so having a good search tool is important for turning visitors into buyers. Google Commerce Search is hosted by and uses Google search technology to make online retail searching both fast and customizable — visitors to your online store can sort by category, price, brand or any other attribute. E-store administrators can highlight special products or connect related ones so searching is easier for their customers. Google Commerce Search includes a built-in spellchecker and synonyms so if visitors can't remember exactly how to spell the particular toy or perfume or anything else they're hunting for, Google Commerce Search will make some suggestions. Choosing the right one is up to them, though.

Google Commerce Search is hosted in the cloud, meaning it lives online, so e-commerce sites can get up and running quickly. Using a cloud search tool will also help site owners meet the rise in demand from the holiday rush without having to devote extra time or resources to worrying about their capacity or infrastructure. Online retailers are free to focus on their business, while Google focuses on search, and shoppers can find what they need faster.

For more information check out google.com/commercesearch.