Inside AdSense: 5 Principles of User Experience, Part 2: This is the second of a three-part series highlighting five user experience principles to keep in mind when designing your site. Using these principles will help provide a great experience for users on your site. After the next post we’ll host a live Google+ Hangout on October 9th at 10:30am PT with an AdSense publisher. We will be applying these principles to help improve their site! Visit theAdSense Google+ page on the 9th to see it live!
In our last post about user experience, we provided two tips to help you identify some goals for your site and your users.
In this post we’ll share another two tips; you’ll learn how to steer users around your site and how different use cases (desktop or mobile) require different setups.
3. Ensure that users know what action to take on your site
Users should always know what action to take next on your site. When a user lands on your page it should be very clear what they should pay attention to first, second, and so on. There should also be a clear next action for them to take whether it's clicking “buy” to make a purchase or reading a related article.
Tips:
Consider these points when creating meaningful calls to action:
In our last post about user experience, we provided two tips to help you identify some goals for your site and your users.
In this post we’ll share another two tips; you’ll learn how to steer users around your site and how different use cases (desktop or mobile) require different setups.
3. Ensure that users know what action to take on your site
Users should always know what action to take next on your site. When a user lands on your page it should be very clear what they should pay attention to first, second, and so on. There should also be a clear next action for them to take whether it's clicking “buy” to make a purchase or reading a related article.
Tips:
Consider these points when creating meaningful calls to action:
- Emphasis: Give emphasis to the call to action by its size, color, contrast and/or use of white space.
- Simple: Don’t clutter your page with too many different actions. Really think about what you want your users to do and prioritize those actions in your design.
- Incentive: Give an incentive to take action. This can be seen in discounts, gifts, raffle entry or access to more content
- Proximity: Make sure your call to action is in a logical placement on the page. For example, if the page features an article, you may want to put the call to action below the article.
- Consistency: Have your call to action show throughout the site and keep its appearance
- More from source
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