Dear BBC, Please No (Updated)

Posted on December 17th, 2007
By Todd Zeigler in Design, Media, Usability, Web 2.0, Website review

Cyberjournalist has the scoop on the BBC launching a beta version of their redesigned homepage. You can view the beta site here and the current version here. Note that this redesign affects only the main BBC homepage and not the BBC News homepage, which is where I spend most of my time.

A quick perusal of the new homepage shows that the BBC is trying to turn its homepage into an Ajax style start page like Netvibes or Pageflakes. I’m not opposed to the idea, but the execution here is pretty poor. The whole thing is clunky, but what really jumps out is how poorly designed the customization options are.

Here is what it looks like out of the box:

bbc_sm

I’m not a fan of magenta, so I immediately clicked on the Display Option link at the top to try to make a magenta-free version. After clicking that you are given the options to select from eight preset color schemes or create your own. Sounds great. The problem is that all the preset options look absolutely terrible.

This is a screenshot of one called Comfort 1.

comfort1

Here is Comfort 4.

comfort4

This is what I get when I switch to High Viz 1.

bbc2

I played around with the Customize option as well and could not make it look any better.

I’m really not sure my screenshots do justice to how bad it looks. The design completely falls apart when you change Display Options to the point where it makes the BBC homepage look like a bad MySpace page or something you’d see on Geocities back in 1997. This needs a major overhaul before it is made live. This is an alpha release, not a beta.

Update: In the comments of this post, Richard Hodgson of the BBC writes: “To clarify, the ‘Display Options’ link is intended to provide visually impaired users with alternative viewing modes.” I do not think that is at all clear. I read every word of instructions and reached the conclusion that this was the area of the site where I could customize the look and feel of the site to suit my personal taste. I think this should be clarified.

On another front, BBC is clearly playing around with the colors of the site. The magenta is gone already, and has been replaced by a somewhat more pleasing tint of orange. Screengrab below.

bbc_orange_sm.jpg

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Comments

  1. Richard Hodgson

    To clarify, the ‘Display Options’ link is intended to provide visually impaired users with alternative viewing modes.

  2. Todd Zeigler

    Richard,

    I think that needs to be made much more clear. The label is called Display Options and besides referring to “visual needs” there was nothing in the text to indicate that. It is also right next to a section called Accessibility Needs, which is where I assumed you have information for the visually impaired. It is also common for sites to have these sorts of themes options.

    Regardless, I’ll update the post. Thanks for your comment.

    Todd

  3. Chet

    I agree. Viewing modes for the visually impaired should be under something like “Accessibility Needs” not “Display Options” - it needs something to tell users that it’s for the visual impaired. And yep, soooo blocky. The headings of each section are way too big, takes all the attention away from the content. (Same goes for the gray bar under the logo, does it really need to be that big?)

  4. Jp

    Now its blue.

about this blog

The Bivings Report (TBR) is a source of news, insight, research and analysis on the web-based communications industry. TBR content is posted, created and managed by internet strategists, media/communications analysts, web developers, designers and programmers, all of whom are employees of The Bivings Group.

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