Archive for February 24th, 2012

A Fun Approach To Creating More Successful Websites


  

As Web designers and developers, each project we work with has a unique set of goals and requirements. But one goal we have for all of our projects is that we want them to make an impression on people — we want the websites that we create to be memorable.

A fun experience is often an enjoyable one and an enjoyable experience is usually a memorable one. Therefore, it stands to reason that one of the ways to create a memorable experience is to make it a fun experience. In this article, we’ll take a look at how adding a bit of “fun” into the mix can help us produce more engaging, and hopefully more successful, websites.

The Fun Theory

Some time ago, I was sent a link to a Volkswagen sponsored project called The Fun Theory. This website featured a contest where users could redesign or rethink something they encounter in everyday life — adding some “fun’” into it. The purpose was to see if they could get more people to use it simply because it was enjoyable to do so.

While there are a number of great videos on the site, the one that I love the most is called Piano Staircase. In this video, an experiment takes place with a flight of stairs in a subway station. Beside the stairs is an escalator. As I am sure you can guess, far more people would use the escalator, rather than the stairs, during their daily commute.

The Fun Theory
Volkswagen’s “The Fun Theory” website challenges people to redesign something they encounter in everyday life by adding “fun” into it, and to see if more people will then use it.

One evening, while the station was closed, the steps were turned into giant piano keys that would make a sound when they were stepped on. As commuters exited the station the next day, they were greeted with this giant piano staircase and many of them opted to try it instead of using the escalator. In fact, 66% more people than normal used the stairs while the installation was in place — an amazing increase by anyone’s standards.

Adding Fun To Our Websites

When I saw this video, the first thing I thought about was how applicable the lesson of adding fun is to the work we do as Web professionals.

By using fun to create an enjoyable user experience, we can offer people a delightful experience that they will not only remember, but one that they may tell others about as well.

Let’s Define “Fun”

Perhaps I should back up a bit and explain what I mean by fun. I am not suggesting you turn your client’s website into a circus production (unless, of course, your client is a circus). I am simply suggesting that changes and additions that add a bit of fun into the interactions or elements of a design can go a long way in helping the websites you develop become more enjoyable to use, and more memorable overall.

“Fun” is not the same as “silly”. You can add a layer of delight and enjoyment to the user experience without making your client seem childish or unprofessional. The trick is knowing how much fun to add, where best to add it, and when to recognize that you’ve gone too far.

Let’s look at some examples of websites that do a great job of using fun to create both enjoyable and memorable experiences for their users.

Improving On The Ordinary

There are many pages common to almost all websites. By taking a typical website page or experience (such as the “about us” page, or contact form), and making it fun and memorable, you can set that website apart by improving on the ordinary.

Take that aforementioned “about us” page, a fixture on pretty much any website. Mutant Labs, a UK based design and development firm, do a great job of adding a sense of fun and personality to what too often becomes nothing more than a boring company bio page.

Mutant Labs humorous about us page
Mutant Labs adds a fun sense of personality to the typical “about us” page. Scroll over the team members to see even more fun!

The website for Get Satisfaction does a wonderful job of turning the typical “case studies” page into an interactive experience with their “Wheel of Satisfaction.”

Get Satisfaction's Wheel of Satisfaction
The “Wheel of Satisfaction” is a fun twist on the typical case studies page.

How about the “contact us’” page? When was the last time you built a site that didn’t have one of those? English Workshop, “an organisation which provides English language learning opportunities”, styles their simple contact form to look like a machine’s control panel, tying it in nicely to the website’s “workshop” theme.

English Workshop's contact form
English Workshop’s “contact us” form works great alongside the rest of the design elements from the website’s workshop theme.

Smashing Magazine’s own contact page is also an example of a fun approach. The page is fun from top to bottom, with a lighthearted, informal tone for the page’s greeting (“Hello. Let’s talk.”) as well as questions, and cartoon representations of Smashing’s management team.

By taking the common pages of a website, and finding ways to add fun to what would otherwise be a typical experience, you can instead create a unique and memorable impression upon your sites’ visitors.

Frustration = Fun?

Another page typical to most websites is the “404 error” page. By adding something new to this page and showing some personality, you can help diffuse an otherwise frustrating situation. You can see some great examples of humorous and effective 404 error pages in a previous Smashing Magazine article.

In addition to a humorous, frustration-diffusing message, a good 404 error page can also include links to key pages of the website that users are most likely looking for. Done correctly, you can make your user smile, and help them find their way back to the content they will find valuable.

Pumpkin-KIng.com's humorous 404 page
Practicing what I preach with a fun 404 error page on my personal website.

Searching For Fun

While Google may be best known for their search results, the fun that they often have in delivering those results is an important part of the Google experience.

First, you have the whimsical Google “doodles” that appear in place of the company logo on specific days. These doodles range from simple graphics to fully interactive experiences, such as a playable Pac Man game, or the tribute to guitar legend Les Paul. There are also a host of hidden gems that can be found on Google by searching for specific phrases or terms. Search for the word “askew” in a browser that supports the feature (Chrome, Safari, Firefox) and the screen will literally skew itself for you. Using Google Maps, you can search for walking directions from “The Shire” to “Mordor” to get a funny little warning that “one simply does not walk into Mordor.” There are dozens of hidden gems like this baked right into Google.

The reason Google is so effective in the fun they add is because they make that fun unobtrusive to the rest of the experience. Google puts the fun out there for you if you want it, but access to the service itself is never compromised. This is a critical key to successfully adding fun to a project — make sure it does not interfere with the normal features or purpose of the site itself.

An Over-The-Top Approach To Using Fun

One of the challenges with adding fun to websites is knowing when to stop. The right amount of fun can create a memorable experience, but too much can have the opposite effect, driving users away due to an over-the-top approach. Still, there are times when “too much” is the right amount, and when an over-the-top approach really works for both the brand and the website.

CaptainDash.com uses fun illustrations and interactions throughout their website, including a comic book-like layout for their “What We Solve” section. The experience is enjoyable and unique, and the website screams personality. But even after exploring their website for a few minutes, I found it hard to explain exactly what the company does with any kind of certainty. This is one of the potential pitfalls of going all out with a fun experience — your website still needs to quickly answer the fundamental user question of “what does this company do?”.

Captain Dash's superhero themed homepage
Captain Dash” features a fun experience, but the purpose of the company is tough to uncover with all that personality.

Meomi.com is another site that goes all out in adding fun to their website experience. The website’s entire design is filled with fun characters that move and respond as you scroll over them. The overall experience is one filled with discovery and delight as you explore. I am especially fond of the website’s footer and what lurks behind those trees (go and see for yourself). I also love the fact that as busy as the site is, I quickly knew what it was about due to the tagline placed towards the top of the page — “A little design studio dedicated to play, delight, and goodliness.” Mission accomplished!

Meomi's delightful, discovery-filled website
The experience on Meomi.com is filled with delightful surprises for you to uncover as you explore the interface.

Another great example of a website that is from top-to-bottom fun (while still making it easy to discover what the website is all about) is Two Giraffes. On the website’s home page, a sign hangs upon a wall that reads: “We design fresh interfaces backed by serious code”, clearly stating the company’s offerings while staying true to the fun environment they have created for the entire website.

Two Giraffes' illustration rich homepage design
Two Giraffes” does a great job of clearly stating what the company does while staying true to the fun environment that spans the entire website.

Using an over-the-top approach on a website can have it’s risks, but if done correctly, it can also have its rewards — creating an experience that is enjoyable and memorable from start to finish.

Making Your Message Memorable

The design of a great website will support that website’s overall message or purpose. Therefore, we can strive to use a fun approach to create not only a memorable experience, but a memorable message.

The website for the Converge conference boasts that it will “peel back the layers and examine the intersection between design, development and marketing.” The website’s design is immediately striking with its use of a cyborg Tyrannosaurus Rex, but the fun really begins when you scroll down the page; the dinosaur remains, but building on the website’s “peel back” theme, you begin to get to the meat of the content — literally!

The Converge conference's cyborg T-rex styled homepage
Scroll down the page for the Converge conference’s website to get to the meat of the content — literally!

Seamco’s website states that they build “efficient bottling and packaging lines for liquid products.” The website reinforces this message by integrating a wonderful animation of bottling line efficiency. From the top of the website’s design (where the bottling begins) all the way to the bottom (where a delivery truck makes frequent trips to deliver cases of the product being added to it), the entire website is both fun and memorable in service of the website’s main message.

Seamco's bottling line efficiency animation
Seamco’s website reinforces their main message through a fun animation that spans the entire design.

Storytelling And Fun

Another way to get a website’s message across is through storytelling — and a fun approach can help ensure that the story you tell is a memorable one.

The website for the Combine conference uses the location of “America’s heartland” in Indiana to tell a fun story that transpires as you start to scroll from the top of the website… a farm machine works in a field as a giant ear of corn is being pumped full of radioactivity, into the middle of the page — where the radioactive corn begins a rampage of destruction, to the… well, I don’t want to ruin the fun. Visit the website and see the story for yourself!

The Combine conference's storytelling website
The website for the Combine conference uses storytelling to tell the tale of a rampaging, radioactive ear of corn.

Another great website that uses storytelling is one that details the Bright Future of Car Sharing. Presented with vertical navigation, you can use your keyboards’ arrow keys to “drive” through the website’s scenery and learn more about car sharing. Along the way, there are dozens of elements that you can scroll over or click on to learn more about, accessing extra content, while the website’s message is told in an engaging and interactive way.

The Bright Future of Car Sharing's interactive experience
The Bright Future of Car Sharing” as told through a fun, interactive website experience.

Some Websites Cannot Be Fun… Or Can They?

When I talk to fellow Web designers about the benefits of adding fun to the websites they are creating, the argument I most often get against this practice is that the projects they are working on have no place for fun.

Yes, it’s true that there are projects where adding “fun” is a tough sell, but sometimes even websites that don’t instantly lend themselves to a fun approach can be made more effective by using the same principals covered in this articles’ previous examples.

SlaveryFootprint.org is a website that “allows consumers to visualize how their consumption habits are linked to modern day slavery”. It definitely doesn’t sound like a place where “fun” would work, but if you visit the website and select the red “what?” arrow, the experience begins. Scroll down the page and illustrations of colorful, cartoonish hands add pieces of content to the page one block at a time as the website’s message is told. That message ends with a prompt to “take the survey”, and the same methods used for that initial message — cartoonish illustrations, a sense of anticipation, and fun interactivity — turn what would’ve been a simple Web form into a memorable and powerful experience.

SlaveryFootprint.org's powerful, and fun, survey form
Slavery Footprint” uses illustrations and fun interactions to make a point about a very serious topic.

Another good example of a serious topic presented online is the Dangers of Fracking. It uses many of these same techniques and principals, including the “storytelling” approach, that was previously highlighted. The website uses illustrations and storytelling to detail the process and effect of hydraulic fracturing — essentially creating an interactive infographic in the process. The result is an experience that delivers this message in a much more effective way than any simple paragraphs or static graphics could ever do.

The Dangers of Fracking interactive infographic website
By creating an interactive infographic, the “Dangers of Fracking” uses illustration and storytelling to get their message out in a memorable way.

There are certainly websites whose sensitive subject matter will make it difficult to add fun into the mix. But as these next two examples show, you can use many of the same solutions that other “fun” websites use to create a memorable experience without jeopardizing the seriousness or importance of your message.

Designing For Emotion

In his excellent book Designing for Emotion, Aarron Walter illustrates the benefits (and potential pitfalls) of emotional design. The book covers designing for a range of emotions; including trust, hope, surprise, delight — even love. And many of the examples offered use a bit of fun to elicit these emotions.

Design for Emotion by Aarron Walter
Many of the examples in Aarron Walter’s “Designing for Emotion” use a bit of fun to elicit the appropriate emotional response.

A selection from early on in the book provides an excellent call to action for using emotional design in the Web experiences we create:

“We’ve been designing usable interfaces, which is like a chef cooking edible food. Certainly we all want to eat edible foods with nutritional value, but we also crave flavor. Why do we settle for usable when we can make interfaces both usable and pleasurable?”

Designing The Memorable

A Web experience that is simply “usable” is no more memorable than a meal that is merely edible. Just like a master chef strives to create a menu that is truly exceptional, so should we, as Web professionals — endeavor to design and develop experiences and interfaces that are unforgettable. Hopefully this article has shown that one of the ways this can be achieved is by adding a bit of fun to the projects we are designing.

Whether you are firing up Photoshop to work on that new design, or building website templates with HTML and CSS, I encourage you to consider the examples and lessons shown in this article. You want to create amazing and memorable experiences? Try following a simple piece of advice:

Have some fun.

(jvb)


© Jeremy Girard for Smashing Magazine, 2012.


Friday Focus 02/24/12: Canine Design

This week’s Friday Focus has gone to the dogs! We’ve featured other animals before, but check out these designs that feature man’s best friend, sure to put a smile on everyone’s faces this weekend.

Designs of the Week

Ready to go out and design your next website? Try building with the Catalyst Framework.

Dogstudio website

Dogstudio

Great geometric treatment here, from the origami-style shapes of the dogs to slants, cuts, and patterns everywhere—lots of triangles!

Waggingtails website

Waggingtails

I like the whimsical treatment to the illustrations, not just the doggies. The typesetting could be improved but what I wish most would be for the client login to look more similar to the look of the main site.

Atticus Pet Design Studio website

Atticus Pet Design Studio

The first thing that’ll probably catch your attention would be the spectacle-wearing dog on a twirling sunburst background. Except it doesn’t look ridiculous because it’s designed well. It’s on each page, like the contact form at the footer, but the inner ones scroll to the content area so you don’t have to.

Social Media Weekly

Build on DIYThemes’ Thesis Framework for rock solid SEO and great layout customization options.

CSSThe many ways to work with CSS preprocessors
“There’s a fair amount of confusion surrounding css preprocessors like Sass and less, and I think some of it has to do with the fact that there are so many different ways you can use them. I thought I’d outline the different approaches, and some of the pros/cons to them.”

JavaScriptLearning JavaScript Design Patterns
“One of the most important aspects of writing maintainable code is being able to notice the recurring themes in that code and optimize them. This is an area where knowledge of design patterns can prove invaluable.”

CSSOptions for Styling Text Links and Hover States
“I’ve seen so many variations on the link style/color and hover style/color combination, that I thought it would be interesting to list as many of them here as possible. Some of these will be quite common and humdrum, while others may be ugly and impractical”

Front-End DevelopmentFront-end Job Interview Questions
“To note, I think that it’s only necessary to choose a handfull of questions from this list to get a good sense of a candidates capabilities and fit.”


Community Roundup: Carnival Challenge Results & Art Features

In this weeks Community Roundup we will be posting the results of the Carnival Challenge, put together by Sunmeadow. Also featured is the Shamrock Challenge, as it continues and some great groups about song lyrics, Spoonflower and even a group feature from another community, deviantart.

 

I've also pulled together a small collection of flower shapes to feature. If you have been trying to figure out pattern template design or want to better your skills, I think taking a study of different shapes in their simple form is a great start to figure out how COLOURlovers are layering and assembling their patterns.

Winners: Carnival Template Challenge

The challenge had 17 participants and 27 templates submitted. If you missed it, please join the Carnival Template Challenge group for next years challenge! They are all so well done and very intricate, which is your favorite?

#1 rubyvillasenor - MARDY GRAS MASCARADE
MARDY_GRAS_MASCARADECarnival

#2 jeremycole - mirabilis jalapa
mirabilis_jalapaFleur

#3 o2bqueen - Venetian Mask
o2b_Venetian_MaskMardi_Bone

#4 jjolmie - viva el carnaval!
viva_el_carnaval!Had_Fun_@_Mardi_Gras

#5 A tie between:

alffaroba - Folia
FoliaCARNIVAL_NIGHTLIFE

and incal - carnival mask
carnival_maskFancy!

Since we I started the featuring of these holiday themed challenges, I've noticed we need to work out a couple kinks in the blog scheduling. I apologize to the Carnival Template winners for the feature of your works going up today instead of on Feb. 21st. as we did not do a Carnival-based post that day. 

Member Hosted Challenges Going on Now

Pattern templates are designed by members using Seamless Studio(Mac/PC desktop) or Seamless Lite (free / web version). If you have questions about Seamless you can contact me or your fellow COLOURlovers.

Shamrock Template Challenge hosted by o2bqueen & rubyvillasenor :: NOW until March 16th 2012

St. Patricks Day is fast approaching! The challenge is to design a template that includes a shamrock shape. This challenge has already started and ends March 16th 2012. The top five designs will be featured on COLOURlovers blog and Facebook page.

Reference Tag: STC12

Learn About Tags & Tagging Here

Great Groups

Colorful Song Lyrics & Remembrance 

Louis Armstrong by Wordofmouse | Amy Winehouse by LilyPrap | Whitney Houston by ninko | Etta James by WordofMouse (all but Whitney Houston came from the same thread)

This is a double feature as the groups at one point intertwine with the remembrance theme. The Colorful Song Lyrics Group has different focal points with songs and artists, but one discussion thread is themed for rememberence.

Remembrance Group: You are invited to share your respectful tributes to honor those who have recently passed away...Most discussions will be organized by month. Occasionally, badges will be posted to announce the passing of a well-known person." 

COLOURlovers on Spoonflower

Simply put, this group is for any COLOURlovers who also have a Spoonflower account... or if you're simply interested in surface and textile design in general.

Post your profile info so we can connect on Spoonflower
• Share your creations
• Share tips and discoveries
• Explore surface design with the CL community

This group will be working on both digital and physical projects. If you remember the recent post, Collaborative COLOURlovers Project: Spoonflower Quilt for a Queen, this was one such project. Join in the fun to get involved for the next big thing.

COLOURlovers on Deviant Art

This is a feature to a newer, fresher group on deviantart.com. It currently boasts 58 members, so if you're also a member over there and want to join up an active group here you are.

In looking through the group, I found this inspirational art piece, I loved how COLOURlovers palettes inspired it.

Antivenom by Kuromu on deviantart

Found myself on COLOURlovers the other day, and decided I wanted to paint Venom. I searched 'Venom' and the first palette to come up was one called S & M, and then I wanted to add Matthew into the mix, so I searched 'Antidote' and I found another palette which you can find here!

Matthew was much harder to paint because of the palette, than Venom was because of hers. Her palette just made her palette just made her look like she was under green lighting. Matthew's was impossible to do anything like that with, but it sort of works. - A note from the artist

S_Ma_n_t_i_d_o_t_e

 

Notable Site Updates

You can now add your deviantart profile to your COLOURlovers profile. In your Account Settings, scroll all the way down to the bottom and you'll see this area called, Identities:

 

If you would like more information on working with your identities, refer to this past post on it.

Creation Corner

Do you recall back in September we announced that you can create, save and view shapes in Seamless Lite? Each week we feature a theme of shapes in your Huesday Newsletter, this weeks theme was, "flowers."

left to right:

1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 

6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 

11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15

I am constantly amazed how COLOURlovers test the limitations of Seamless Lite. And you recall the Creative Market Announcement, a tool that will make it easier for all the fantastic creators at COLOURlovers to sell their creative content. So keep up the great work!

To search for a theme of shapes:

In the top right of the site, simply enter the item you want to search and it will pull up anything tagged "flower" for instance. So make sure you tag your shapes and work!


I'm going to wrap it up for now. More awesomeness to feature next week!


Take Free 50GB Cloud Storage from Box for Android

Box, a cloud storage service provider founded in 2005 is now gearing up to a head on competition with other players like Amazon’s Cloud Drive and Dropbox.

Launching an all-new version of the app – Box for Android, the company is bringing in  support for a number of European languages as a response to the increasing population of Android users specifically those who belong to the working class. Taking into account the same premise Box is introducing fresh collaboration features in their service.

Promising a boost to mobile productivity, Box is giving out free 50GB online storage upgrade to all its users including those with free accounts for the next 30 days.  Existing users as well as new users will be able to enjoy the free upgrade when they update the Box for Android app or download the latest version.

Box’s current version, 1.6 has been re-designed to adopt to Android 4.0 (Ice Cream Sandwich) UI. Unlike other cloud storage services, Box allows third party apps and services to be utilized by its users. This in a way addresses the drawback of its lack of provision for desktop syncing for free accounts. You can sign up for $15 a month to get a paid account with desktop app.

To add up some excitement, Box collaborated with Samsung and is now giving each user a chance to win 20 Samsung Galaxy Tabs and another 20 seats of Box Enterprise. Aaron Levie, co-founder and CEO of Box, happily announced the launch, “Legacy enterprise solutions simply can’t extend content and collaboration to the diverse set of devices that knowledge workers are bringing into today’s organizations. At Box, we’re all about empowering mobile workers to be productive from anywhere, on any device, and today’s release sets a new bar for content sharing and collaboration on the Android platform.”

At present, Box has over 8 million users worldwide and 40% of which are outside the US. According to box, their app is widely used by business enterprises such that 82% of companies belonging to Fortune 500 use Box for online and mobile collaboration. In order to bolster its presence in the European region, Box is now supporting French, Italian, German and Spanish languages.

Box App for Android can be downloaded from the Android Market and will soon be available in other Android App stores (Amazon App Store, LG World, Verizon Store and NOOK Store). The 50GB cloud storage offer is up until March 23, 2012.



Capgemini launches SaaS smart water meter deployment service

Capgemini logo IT services company Capgemini has launched an off-the-shelf software-as-a-service (SaaS) solution that will allow utilities to deploy radio water meters and the associated networking equipment. The Smart Water Services Platform is based on the company’s Smart Energy Services (SES) platform, which leverages Capgemini’s 10 years of smart metering experience.

The company maintains that the Smart Water Services Platform is the only one that can demonstrate an end-to-end, integrated workflow for radio water metering. It includes program planning, meter rollout and operations through to maintenance and analysis of water consumption. Being an SaaS solution, pricing is based on usage and utilities will have low initial costs and quick implementation.

image

 

Capgemini is another company putting a lot of effort into trying to win smart meter implementation business, although most of the activity to date is aimed at electricity meters. The company says that its Smart Energy Services solutions have helped over 43 million utilities customers worldwide with 30 smart meter and smart grid programs, and it has more than 8,000 people involved in delivering these services. On the other hand it also faces a lot of competition around the world – Capgemini’s experience to date is mostly in Scandinavia.

What struck me is that, for this water meter service, delivery is through a Software-as-a-Service delivery model, an aspect of what is also known as utility computing. Seems quite apt.


  • Sponsored Links

  • February 2012
    M T W T F S S
    « Jan   Mar »
     12345
    6789101112
    13141516171819
    20212223242526
    272829  
  • .

    Copyright © 1996-2010 Answer My Query. All rights reserved.
    iDream theme by Templates Next | Powered by WordPress