Does Good Design Matter?

At the Politics Online conference yesterday, I participated in a panel entitled “Does Good Design Matter” (previous post here). In my opening discussion, I talked briefly about some common mistakes I see people make when building their websites. Here is a quick summary of what I said.

First, I think website design really consists of two things:

  1. What the site looks like (the brand)
  2. How well the site works (usability)

The instinct of most folks when building a website is to invest a great deal of energy into the overall look and very little into how usable the site is. In my opinion, this gets things backwards. I’m not advocating that people build ugly sites or not pay attentions to looks. Not at all. But, it is important to remember that, on the web, usability has just as much to do with your site’s brand as the overall look does.

Think about it. When you visit a site for the first time you definitely have an immediate reaction that is based entirely on how the site looks. The colors. The fonts. The pictures. Etc. Your brain processes this information quickly and then you go about the business of actually using the site. If the site doesn’t deliver in a usability sense (things are hard to find, forms don’t work, error messages aren’t in place, etc.), all the good will built up by that good first impression will be thrown out the window and the user will be left with a bad impression of your organization.

So my first piece of advice to folks building websites is to invest as much energy in usability as you do in agonizing over colors and font choices.

Second, always remember that content is the driving force behind any website. Design is there to serve the content. A blog that isn’t updated is going to fail no matter how pretty it is. The slickest tool for writing letters to the editor isn’t going to get used if you don’t provide a compelling reason for people to act.

Too many people think design is a panacea that can cover up content problems. “If we make our site really cool with lots of Flash animation and stuff, maybe people won’t notice that we only have two pages of content.” It doesn’t work. People know.

We actually struggled with this ourselves in developing our site, www.bivings.com. We got stuck trying to build something really design heavy and slick a few years back, because we weren’t focused enough on the conent. Below is what I wrote about our own struggles a few years back:

We’ve been contemplating a redesign of the main Bivings site for a couple of years, but the path forward only became clear the last few months. When thinking about a redesign previously we fell victim to our own ambition. We had grand plans and wanted to create something that was perfect. This sort of led to paralysis. We didn’t follow our own advice, which is to focus on usability and design that serves the content.

We finally started making progress when we shifted the focus to our blog. We decided to keep www.bivings.com really simple and not to overwhelm folks with lots of brochure content they don’t want to read anyway. We brought our blog content front and center. Our goal with the new site is to tell the story of our company a little bit every day by writing about the projects we are working on and the things we are passionate about. We think this will be much more effective than producing some sort of slick, heartless brochure site.

So my second piece of advice would be to figure out your content strategy in advance of even contemplating a redesign.

Without compelling content, your website is not going to work that well no matter how slick the design.

  • http://www.writing-journey.com Bob Younce

    Todd, this article is simply brilliant.

    As a writer, I’ve often fallen into the trap of “is it well-written?” rather than considering things like site usability and appearance.

    The thing about it is this: I’m a good writer. I wouldn’t be making a living at it if I weren’t. I’m not the best; not by a long shot. But my content is the one area I rarely need to struggle with, yet it is the one area I consistently do struggle with.

    Thank you so much for this. I’m off to contemplate some site design right now!

  • Carol Youngblood

    As a communication professional who manages websites reluctantly, this was really useful to me. Thank you.

  • http://www.bivings.com Todd Zeigler

    Thank you both for the kind words.

  • http://www.blogdesignblog.com Vinh Le

    It is certainly true with every website that the design helps communicate the right message, because it can evoke emotions. But design alone cannot save content. Good point to spread. I try to spread the same message to others so they don’t get lost in either focusing too much on either side and give a more balance approach to their blogs.

  • http://www.pragmites.com SEO Pune

    Design is not about how your site looks , it about how your site functions.Design combines textual content and graphic content to create a website.An SEO optimizes this design to suit the need of the users and SEs.

  • http://www.epolitics.com/2008/03/06/quick-hits-march-6-2008/ e.politics: online advocacy tools & tactics » Quick Hits — March 6, 2008

    [...] Does Good Design Matter? Todd Zeigler’s excellent follow-on to our Politics Online panel. C.f. lots of POLC coverage at Capitol Valley and Tech Daily Dose. [...]

  • http://samlevenback.com/?p=516 Sam Levenback » POLC 2008 Media Roundup

    [...] data strategy panel. Steve Petersen wrote up the cell phone advocacy panel on Bivings Report, while Todd Zeigler blogged about Colin Delaney’s “Does Good Design Matter?” panel. Delaney himself [...]

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Notice

We are pleased to announce the launch of the Brick Factory, a Washington, DC-based digital agency founded by former employees of The Bivings Group. You can read the details of the transition here.

As a result of the change, The Bivings Report will no longer be updated, although we intend to keep it up for archival purposes. You can read the Brick Factory's new blog here.

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