Writing for the Web
Posted by NYblog | Posted in Asides | Posted on 10-10-2009
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This is an interesting article about writing for the web by…
Jakob Nielsen, distinguished engineer
PJ Schemenaur, technical editor, and
Jonathan Fox, editor-in-chief, www.sun.com
You can double the usability of your web site by following these guidelines: for two sample sites studied in Sun's Science Office, we improved measured usability by 159% and 124% by rewriting the content according to the guidelines.
Writing for the Web is very different from writing for print:
- 79% of users scan the page instead of reading word-for-word
- Reading from computer screens is 25% slower than from paper
- Web content should have 50% of the word count of its paper equivalent
Table of Contents
- Difference Between Paper and Online Presentation: Limit scrolling; use simple sentence structure; avoid cute headlines; update facts frequently.
- Working With a Designer: Combine page templates with professional artwork.
- Scannability: Highlight keywords; use bulleted lists; start with the conclusion.
- Navigation: Move detailed info to secondary pages.
- Writing to Be Read: Headlines and subheads; lists, captions, and hyperlinks.
- Writing to Be Found: Half of the users will navigate through search engines.
- Terms to Avoid: Don't call attention to web artifacts.
- Editorial Review of Web Pages: Fresh eyes and skilled editing improve your work.
- Web Facts: Significant improvements in all metrics.
