Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Links: How clearly laid out need they be?

To what extent should links be declared and clearly visible to the end user? Certainly links need to be differentiated within text but do links have to be clearly laid out everywhere? Can we assume the user will suspect that links exist if things are not explicitly laid out?

Most sites today, even sites made for the general reader have numerous linking methods. Is this a sign that users have passed the Jakob Nielsen threshold? Many have but I’ve seen many users never click on links. They look at the page and never even think of passing their cursor over text to see if a graphic or text is a link.

We assume that EVERYONE knows that an undifferentiated column of text would be thought of as a series of links. Not so. Clearly younger users seem to have an “intuitive” grasp of the possibility of linkage. It’s not intuition it’s curiosity and they lack the older users’ fear of “doing something wrong.”

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Yelp - What are they Going to Do?

There's been a lot of disturbing news about Yelp recently. Yelp, if you're not familiar with it, is a website which allows people to review stores, restaurants and other companies. The problem is that some store owners post bogus positive reviews and, so some allege, post negative reviews on their competitors.

If you’re interested in game theory the Yelp example is bound to be fascinated to see how this scenario plays out. Adding to the problem is that Yelp is removing bad comments should a store advertise on Yelp – or so some say. As someone who is affiliated with stores on Yelp I have to say that I haven’t experienced that.

This posses an interesting IA problem: How should Yelp, and by extension other review oriented sites, deal with this problem? You can never stop people from creating multiple accounts but you can give added weight for community participation and then give added weight to accounts which give more and more evidence of legitimacy.

There are sites which I’ve reviewed that have dozens of reviews. Each of these glowing reviews are from accounts with only one review. This makes the reviews more than a little suspicious. One way to stop the abuse is for sites to have no more than a few reviews from single review accounts. The second way was alluded to earlier – give added weight to accounts which are considered more legitimate by counting the number of reviews, friending other users and through general community involvement (at its simplest this can be done by noting the times the account logs in, page views and time spent in the community.)