Best Practices for Search Engine Marketing
People Ignore Certain Ads on the Internet
If you
were specifically looking for the population of the United States, you'd
notice the big red numbers in the upper right corner of the US Census
Bureau homepage right? Not so fast. An eye-tracking study suggests
you've been trained to ignore things like that.
Usability
expert Jakob Nielsen, who's been studying how people interact with web
pages since there were web pages to interact with, follows up on
previous explorations to show once again that people not only ignore
content that looks like advertising, but need things plainly spelled out
for them.
The task was simple enough: find the country's current population.
Nielsen even gave them the website to use. But 86 percent of users
failed to find the answer even though it was displayed in large red
letters in plain sight.
"Users tend to ignore heavily formatted areas because they look like
advertisements. Thus, about 1/3 of users never even saw the Population
Clock. However, most people did fixate on this area because it's not as
overly formatted as most promotional features. So, most users saw the
Population Clock; they just didn't use it, even though it contained the
exact information they were looking for."
Okay, so
a third doesn't exactly make up 86 percent. Why did the others fail
when the information was right in front of them? There are many
reasons, but a large chunk of it, says Nielsen, lies in the language.
Most users scanned the big red number U.S. 302, 781, 150, as of today,
but only made it to 302 before skipping off to the search box labeled
"Population Finder" or some other area. (Or in one case, frustrated
with poor site search, one of the testers went to Google.)
The big
red number was labeled "Population Clocks," which isn't exactly an
intuitive label. It sounds more related to time than it does to number
of people. It's a classic case of leveraging core competencies
rather than using your strengths. As users didn't automatically
grasp what a population clock was, they skipped it.
The suggestion here then is that a simpler label of "Current US
Population" would have worked much better, giving the user what the user
expects, which is the end goal.
Andy Beal, editor and Internet marketing consultant for
MarketingPilgrim.com has another take on it, which makes sense. Users
may have taught themselves not just the look and feel of advertising,
but also the location of advertising.
"The study demonstrates that it's not just paid ads users are filtering
from web sites, but areas that might contain ads. Web users are
conditioned to focus on the main area of a web site, when looking for
meaningful information.
"They've been taught that the areas to the left or right are typically
reserved for navigation or advertisements. As Nielsen suggests, it's
important to make sure important information is located in the area of
the web page users expect to find it."
KEY POINTS:
-
If it looks
like an ad, users will ignore it
-
Follow
Google's example -- Simple and Clean
-
Use Clear
Language
-
Keep fonts
consistent and sans serif
-
Emphasize
high priority tasks and other tools
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Give visitors
what they expect