Building a learnable website is much tougher than it sounds. The goal should be a clear user experience that visitors can quickly pick up and understand.
Mobile app designers can solve this through onboarding which helps users learn the interface. But websites can’t always offer lengthy tutorials.
Let’s take a look at learnability and see how you can apply these techniques to your websites. Most visitors know how to browse the web so it’s not really about making interfaces that people learn, but rather just following conventions so they’re comfortable using your site.
https://designmodo.com/learnable-web-design/
About a year ago, I became digital director at Salesforce.org (the nonprofit arm of Salesforce). I suddenly found myself in a committed long-term relationship with the website — and it was a real fixer-upper.
As I learned from "Sex and the City," before making any major relationship decision, you have to discuss it with your friends over lunch. In this case, it was a friend who also works in marketing for a B2B tech company and also happened to have just finished a website redesign (I know, I need to branch out).
I listened selectively and ended up ignoring half of his advice.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/forbescommunicationscouncil/2018/01/24/five-pieces-of-advice-on-website-redesign-and-what-to-ignore/#4d46d3791e97/
Technology has produced huge breakthroughs in design. A product can be ideated, prototyped and finalized with little more than a keyboard and code. But the ingenuity of modern design often leads to product teams neglecting the basics.
https://techcrunch.com/2017/01/20/in-a-tech-saturated-world-customer-feedback-is-everything/