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Beschreibung
If offered a choice, most people would avoid using forms. For most of us that choice isn't available. We use forms countless times daily - both at work and at home. The hassles and frustration involved with errors messages, unnecessary required fields, and reentering information can make or break a users perception of a company (both from the support and supply side). Usable forms are more important than ever, with the unprecedented number of online transactions, online and form based business to business and business to customer tracking and communication. Creating Forms that works focuses on nothing but forms and how to design them effectively and efficiently. From gathering for the right information, to making questions easy to answer, to layout, to usability testing -- this book covers all the fundamentals of form design. And in the process aids in making all of our lives a little easier.
If offered a choice, most people would avoid using forms. For most of us that choice isn't available. We use forms countless times daily - both at work and at home. The hassles and frustration involved with errors messages, unnecessary required fields, and reentering information can make or break a users perception of a company (both from the support and supply side). Usable forms are more important than ever, with the unprecedented number of online transactions, online and form based business to business and business to customer tracking and communication. Creating Forms that works focuses on nothing but forms and how to design them effectively and efficiently. From gathering for the right information, to making questions easy to answer, to layout, to usability testing -- this book covers all the fundamentals of form design. And in the process aids in making all of our lives a little easier.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction: What is a form?
What is a form?
1. Persuading people to answer
Pick the right moment to ask a question
Think about relationship question by question
Follow three rules that that influence response rates
Think about who will answer your questions
Summary
Interlude: Registration forms: rules and suggestions
2. Gathering the right information
Find out why you need the information
Check if your organization already holds the information
Find out what others ask for
Summary: only ask for information that you need
Case study: conference registration form
3. Making questions easy to answer
How questions work
Make it easy to understand the question
Make it easy to find the answer
Judging the answer: avoiding privacy errors
Placing the answer: avoiding category errors
Summary: writing questions
Case study: avoiding choice points
4. Writing instructions
Writing instructions
Rewriting instructions in plain language
Cut the instructions that aren't needed
Move the instructions to where they are needed
A before- and after- example
Summary: Writing instructions
Interlude: help for forms
5. Choosing between drop-downs and other controls
Picking controls for your forms
How users expect controls to work
Use these six questions to choose the right control
Specialist controls may help
Think about the form as a whole
Summary: Providing the answer
Interlude: names and addresses
6. Making the form flow easily
Make the form flow easily
Use progress indicators
Avoid surprising users with sudden changes
Be gentle with errors
Say 'thanks' to close the conversation
Conversational flow - summary
Interlude: why we hate pop-ups
7. Taking care of the details
Taking care of the details
Where to put the labels compared to the fields
Colons at the end of labels?
Sentence or title case for labels?
How to indicate required fields
Choosing legible text: fonts and words
Summary
Interlude: serif or sans-serif
8. Making the form look easy
What makes a form look good
Make sure users know who you are: logos and branding
Make your form look tidy with grids
Make it look organized with grouping
Avoid two-column forms
Summary
Case study: an appearance makeover
9. Testing (the best bit)
We're passionate about usability testing
How to do really good usability testing of forms
Final message from this book
Appendices
Suggestions for further reading
References
Acknowledgements
What is a form?
1. Persuading people to answer
Pick the right moment to ask a question
Think about relationship question by question
Follow three rules that that influence response rates
Think about who will answer your questions
Summary
Interlude: Registration forms: rules and suggestions
2. Gathering the right information
Find out why you need the information
Check if your organization already holds the information
Find out what others ask for
Summary: only ask for information that you need
Case study: conference registration form
3. Making questions easy to answer
How questions work
Make it easy to understand the question
Make it easy to find the answer
Judging the answer: avoiding privacy errors
Placing the answer: avoiding category errors
Summary: writing questions
Case study: avoiding choice points
4. Writing instructions
Writing instructions
Rewriting instructions in plain language
Cut the instructions that aren't needed
Move the instructions to where they are needed
A before- and after- example
Summary: Writing instructions
Interlude: help for forms
5. Choosing between drop-downs and other controls
Picking controls for your forms
How users expect controls to work
Use these six questions to choose the right control
Specialist controls may help
Think about the form as a whole
Summary: Providing the answer
Interlude: names and addresses
6. Making the form flow easily
Make the form flow easily
Use progress indicators
Avoid surprising users with sudden changes
Be gentle with errors
Say 'thanks' to close the conversation
Conversational flow - summary
Interlude: why we hate pop-ups
7. Taking care of the details
Taking care of the details
Where to put the labels compared to the fields
Colons at the end of labels?
Sentence or title case for labels?
How to indicate required fields
Choosing legible text: fonts and words
Summary
Interlude: serif or sans-serif
8. Making the form look easy
What makes a form look good
Make sure users know who you are: logos and branding
Make your form look tidy with grids
Make it look organized with grouping
Avoid two-column forms
Summary
Case study: an appearance makeover
9. Testing (the best bit)
We're passionate about usability testing
How to do really good usability testing of forms
Final message from this book
Appendices
Suggestions for further reading
References
Acknowledgements
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: | 2008 |
---|---|
Fachbereich: | Datenkommunikation, Netze & Mailboxen |
Genre: | Informatik |
Rubrik: | Naturwissenschaften & Technik |
Medium: | Taschenbuch |
Inhalt: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
ISBN-13: | 9781558607101 |
ISBN-10: | 1558607102 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Einband: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
Autor: |
Jarrett, Caroline
Gaffney, Gerry |
Hersteller: | Elsevier Science |
Maße: | 238 x 197 x 17 mm |
Von/Mit: | Caroline Jarrett (u. a.) |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 01.10.2008 |
Gewicht: | 0,495 kg |
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction: What is a form?
What is a form?
1. Persuading people to answer
Pick the right moment to ask a question
Think about relationship question by question
Follow three rules that that influence response rates
Think about who will answer your questions
Summary
Interlude: Registration forms: rules and suggestions
2. Gathering the right information
Find out why you need the information
Check if your organization already holds the information
Find out what others ask for
Summary: only ask for information that you need
Case study: conference registration form
3. Making questions easy to answer
How questions work
Make it easy to understand the question
Make it easy to find the answer
Judging the answer: avoiding privacy errors
Placing the answer: avoiding category errors
Summary: writing questions
Case study: avoiding choice points
4. Writing instructions
Writing instructions
Rewriting instructions in plain language
Cut the instructions that aren't needed
Move the instructions to where they are needed
A before- and after- example
Summary: Writing instructions
Interlude: help for forms
5. Choosing between drop-downs and other controls
Picking controls for your forms
How users expect controls to work
Use these six questions to choose the right control
Specialist controls may help
Think about the form as a whole
Summary: Providing the answer
Interlude: names and addresses
6. Making the form flow easily
Make the form flow easily
Use progress indicators
Avoid surprising users with sudden changes
Be gentle with errors
Say 'thanks' to close the conversation
Conversational flow - summary
Interlude: why we hate pop-ups
7. Taking care of the details
Taking care of the details
Where to put the labels compared to the fields
Colons at the end of labels?
Sentence or title case for labels?
How to indicate required fields
Choosing legible text: fonts and words
Summary
Interlude: serif or sans-serif
8. Making the form look easy
What makes a form look good
Make sure users know who you are: logos and branding
Make your form look tidy with grids
Make it look organized with grouping
Avoid two-column forms
Summary
Case study: an appearance makeover
9. Testing (the best bit)
We're passionate about usability testing
How to do really good usability testing of forms
Final message from this book
Appendices
Suggestions for further reading
References
Acknowledgements
What is a form?
1. Persuading people to answer
Pick the right moment to ask a question
Think about relationship question by question
Follow three rules that that influence response rates
Think about who will answer your questions
Summary
Interlude: Registration forms: rules and suggestions
2. Gathering the right information
Find out why you need the information
Check if your organization already holds the information
Find out what others ask for
Summary: only ask for information that you need
Case study: conference registration form
3. Making questions easy to answer
How questions work
Make it easy to understand the question
Make it easy to find the answer
Judging the answer: avoiding privacy errors
Placing the answer: avoiding category errors
Summary: writing questions
Case study: avoiding choice points
4. Writing instructions
Writing instructions
Rewriting instructions in plain language
Cut the instructions that aren't needed
Move the instructions to where they are needed
A before- and after- example
Summary: Writing instructions
Interlude: help for forms
5. Choosing between drop-downs and other controls
Picking controls for your forms
How users expect controls to work
Use these six questions to choose the right control
Specialist controls may help
Think about the form as a whole
Summary: Providing the answer
Interlude: names and addresses
6. Making the form flow easily
Make the form flow easily
Use progress indicators
Avoid surprising users with sudden changes
Be gentle with errors
Say 'thanks' to close the conversation
Conversational flow - summary
Interlude: why we hate pop-ups
7. Taking care of the details
Taking care of the details
Where to put the labels compared to the fields
Colons at the end of labels?
Sentence or title case for labels?
How to indicate required fields
Choosing legible text: fonts and words
Summary
Interlude: serif or sans-serif
8. Making the form look easy
What makes a form look good
Make sure users know who you are: logos and branding
Make your form look tidy with grids
Make it look organized with grouping
Avoid two-column forms
Summary
Case study: an appearance makeover
9. Testing (the best bit)
We're passionate about usability testing
How to do really good usability testing of forms
Final message from this book
Appendices
Suggestions for further reading
References
Acknowledgements
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: | 2008 |
---|---|
Fachbereich: | Datenkommunikation, Netze & Mailboxen |
Genre: | Informatik |
Rubrik: | Naturwissenschaften & Technik |
Medium: | Taschenbuch |
Inhalt: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
ISBN-13: | 9781558607101 |
ISBN-10: | 1558607102 |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Einband: | Kartoniert / Broschiert |
Autor: |
Jarrett, Caroline
Gaffney, Gerry |
Hersteller: | Elsevier Science |
Maße: | 238 x 197 x 17 mm |
Von/Mit: | Caroline Jarrett (u. a.) |
Erscheinungsdatum: | 01.10.2008 |
Gewicht: | 0,495 kg |
Warnhinweis