Oct01
Filed under: Usability
So Google added yet another facet to their SERPs this week. The new feature allows you to jump to the information you want right from the search snippets. At first glance it seems they’re acknowledging the proper use of the named anchor tag. Further investigation turns up clues of nimble ID attribute seeding.
Page Division Benefits for Visitors to Your Web Site
This is great news for both sides of the SEO table. The search engine user can click directly to the desired information instead of wandering around the page once they’re directed to a site by the SERP. The old way was sort of like getting directions to a house party that left you at the entrance of a neighborhood. This new way leads you to the right driveway.
Aug12
Filed under: Usability, Web Design, Web Tech, WordPress
It seems the search engine market is becoming competitive again. In response to the recent release of Microsoft’s ‘decision engine’ Bing, Google is stepping up their game.
Competition breeds innovation, proof that capitalism works.
This week, Google released their new sandbox search engine, nicknamed ‘Caffeine’. In my initial tests, it seems Caffeine results are focused more on articles and web pages, not video or news results. Youtube and news items are typically still on the first page, but they are further down instead of always sticking to the top.
It seems you can’t saturate your Youtube video description with keywords anymore. Content is king.
Mar20
Filed under: Usability
David Hamill has written an excellent article about the psychology of a good ‘call to action’ implementation on your site. He walks you through actual and alternative designs of Twitter, Amazon, Firefox, and why specific things work.
Usability is key. You can have the best information and product, but if there’s a problem with catching your visitors’ attention on how they can benefit, then you need to rethink your design. David describes how your wording, the positioning of your call to action links, and even the size, will help you convert your visitors into users.