Alertbox readers' top 5 complaints:
1. Poor legibility
2. Bad links
3. Flash misuse
4. Ineffective content
5. Weak search
Frustrations with font sizes, text-versus-background contrast, and general text readability were by far the biggest pet peeves among users.
Too many sites don't offer easy-to-find links. They don't underline clickable text, distinguish it with a separate color, or provide adequate information on what a user should expect to find after clicking on a link.
This isn't a problem with Macromedia Flash itself, but rather how it's used. When it's applied to lend interactivity to a static page, it works. When it's used to power multimedia content that's either pertinent to the site experience or offered only as a user-controlled option, it's helping. But when it's the basis of an unsolicited introduction to a site, or presents content that's irrelevant to the user's task, it gets in the way of a good experience.
Users want their online content short, scannable, and to the point. They want it to be conversational and to answer their basic questions. If content leaves them unclear of what to do, or if there's too much of it, or it's full of jargon, they'll move on.
This is the one area that, while fundamental to any site's success, isn't so easy to fix. Bad search is usually the result of poor--or poorly deployed--software, ill-defined taxonomies, or bad content-tagging practices.
Extreme Makeover
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