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Jakob Nielsen has

July 24, 2000 by Michael Boyle

published a new Alertbox article, “End of Web Design.” He writes, “Users spend most of their time on other sites. This means that users prefer your site to work the same way as all the other sites they already know.”

No it doesn’t. It means that although each of the sites are different, users don’t mind your particular differences that much, really, and if you keep doing a good job of serving them, you’ll succeed. More – maybe it means that because the sites are different they are successful, because people like diversity, especially when reading or shopping, two things the web is used for extensively.

Tags: Design, Web, Web Design

Followup

July 17, 2000 by Michael Boyle

on the IAM.com/Razorfish saga: “Our Work’s Fine, Just Pay the Bills“

I may be naive, but I think it’s ridiculous for a dot-com company to farm out their web design work. I can understand a bricks-and-mortar company hiring a company to do pure design work that will be overlaid on a structure they build themselves, or that they have partnered with someone else to do. I can even relate to a strategic partnership with a web company with the latter providing the actual site. But to hire someone straight up like that? I think it invites failure. It’s like a recipe. The knowledge of designers or programmers has to be deeply accounted for by management of a dot-com – it’s an essential piece of the puzzle. Their familiarity with the business model, the history of the project, but from their own unique perspective, is critical. And – the key challenge of a dot-com is just that – to integrate the technical knowledge of designers and programmers and others with the “product” as defined by a deep knowledge of the market, the business proposition, the value to users and to investors/clients. That’s not a casual thing – it’s a mission. I have some understanding of that – it’s a grandiose way of describing a big part of my job.

Tags: Business, Design, GNE, History, Web, Web Design

A portent of things

July 14, 2000 by Michael Boyle

to come? Razorfish is being sued for what their client thinks was bad, unprofessional web design. “[…] The company delivered (late) a site that was ‘flawed by grave technical and navigational problems.'”

Tags: Design, Professional, Web, Web Design

A little weblog linking

July 4, 2000 by Michael Boyle

action today. Or, as the philosopher said, “inter-blog linky love”. My virtual neighbours seem to be rotating among a very limited group: this week it’s Prattle to the left of me, Utsler to my right. Which is great, both lovely sites for sure.

In other news, Swallowing Tacks again sports a new look, definitely making the argument that Elise is the most active re-designer of her personal site around. I always like what she does, though, so that’s not a complaint in the least.

Vanessa’s Eleven Seconds seems to be undergoing some radical re-branding.

Tags: Blogging, Design, GNE, Personal, Sports, Web

OK – this is really

June 16, 2000 by Michael Boyle

great. It’s a little presentation site about the principles of graphic design. [thanks to eatonweb for the link]

Tags: Design, Web

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