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Design of Sites, The Douglas van Duyne

Design of Sites, The By Douglas van Duyne

Design of Sites, The by Douglas van Duyne


$11.69
Condition - Very Good
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Summary

This book is intended for everyone in a Web site business, from graphic designers, interaction designers, and software developers to businesspeople. Job titles of the book's readers could include Web Designer, Interaction Designer, Customer-Experience Manager, Usability Researcher, Web Programmer, Software Engineer, Web Business Manager.

Design of Sites, The Summary

Design of Sites, The: Patterns for Creating Winning Web Sites by Douglas van Duyne

<> Praise for the second edition of The Design of Sites In my worldwide IBM marketing role, I have the benefit of working with some of the finest international interactive agencies and internal Web teams. As I read The Design of Sites, [I see] the insight from years of professional advice has been put to paper. Nowhere have I seen such a practical, effective, and easy-to-use book to solve and avoid Internet design issues. I keep a copy of the book handy to remind me of the things I forgot and to gain fresh perspectives. It never fails to deliver. -John Cilio, marketing manager, IBM System x & z Storage Synergy The Design of Sites artfully brings forward the original intent of Christopher Alexander's pattern language into the user experience design arena. It is a valuable and comprehensive reference. -George Hackman, Jr., senior director of User Experience for User Interface Guidelines, Patterns and Standards, Oracle Corporation The Design of Sites is one of the best tools I have in my usability toolbox. [These] Web UI design patterns make it easy for me to show my clients how to get the most usability bang for their buck. -Claudia Alden Case, usability consultant and interaction designer, Alden Case Enterprises, Inc. If only biology class had been like this. Lucid text, bulletproof content, and a comprehensive taxonomy that's just as much a source of inspiration as it is a production tool. This is a really, really good book. If you build Web sites, read it. -Marc Campbell, author of Web Design Garage Praise for the first edition of The Design of Sites Stop reinventing the wheel every time you design a Web site! The Design of Sites helps you rethink your Web sites in terms of genres and patterns. Once you have identified the patterns and applied the best practices for those patterns as outlined in this book, you will reduce your design effort by 50 percent . . . at least! -Pawan R. Vora, vice president, Information Architecture, Seurat Company The content [in The Design of Sites] could make a novice into a seasoned professional over a weekend. Many companies pay a fortune for the information contained in the book's primary chapters. -John Cilio, marketing manager, IBM System x & z Storage Synergy This book has many handy checklists for what you should and should not do in creating a conventional Web site. Just following the authors' suggestions would put your site in the top few percent for readability and usability. -Jef Raskin, creator of the Macintosh computer and author of The Humane Interface Now that The Design of Sites has made its appearance, we won't have to put up with those poorly designed Web pages. These authors have captured patterns from successful Web designers, including their own experience in consulting and teaching, and have made this information accessible to all of us. The book is readable yet full of worthwhile information--a valuable addition to any Web designer's bookshelf. -Linda Rising, independent consultant and author of The Patterns Handbook, The Pattern Almanac 2000, and Design Patterns in Communications Software [The Design of Sites] bridges the gap from theory to practice and makes it possible for people in the Web-design space to use user-centered design principles in their work-without having to undertake extensive training. -Maya Venkatraman, human interface engineer, Sun Microsystems The coverage [in The Design of Sites] is excellent--issues go beyond the traditional 'design the best page' focus and do a good job of showing the context. I haven't seen any other book with the kind of breadth this has. -Terry Winograd, professor of computer science, Stanford University, and editor of Bringing Design to Software With this book as a reference, you can benefit from what companies like Yahoo! have learned and apply it to your site, even if you don't have a design and research team similarly sized and staffed. From the foreword by Irene Au, director of User Experience, Google; former vice president of User Experience and Design, Yahoo! The Design of Sites, Second Edition, is the definitive reference for the principles, patterns, methodologies, and best practices underlying exceptional Web design. If you are involved in the creation of dynamic Web sites, this book will give you all the necessary tools and techniques to create effortless end-user Web experiences, improve customer satisfaction, and achieve a balanced approach to Web design. After a comprehensive tutorial covering the foundations of good Web site design, you will move on to discover the thirteen major Web design pattern groups. These patterns solve recurring design problems and help design teams avoid reinventing the wheel. Patterns range from creating a solid navigation framework and the all-important home page, to instilling trust and building credibility with your customers and improving site performance through better design. The book features Coverage of AJAX, the Mobile Web, and online communities Seventeen new design patterns to add to the original ninety, including the new blog site type More than twenty significantly updated patterns 450 four-color screen shots and diagrams, including more than 150 new images Key site elements, including site maps, style sheets, dynamic elements, and customer profiles Clear, visual organization with color-coded sections for easy reference A balanced approach to Web design that takes both customer and business needs into account

About Douglas van Duyne

Douglas K. van Duyne, entrepreneur and software designer, is cofounder and a principal of Naviscent, a Web research and design firm. He has been an innovator in customer-centered design, online shopping, e-commerce, and multimedia development for numerous Global 2000 companies. James A. Landay is a professor of computer science at the University of Washington. Previously, he served as the director of Intel Research Seattle, which focuses on the emerging world of ubiquitous computing, and as an associate professor for computer science at the University of California, Berkeley. Jason I. Hong is a computer science professor in the Human-Computer Interaction Institute at Carnegie Mellon University.

Table of Contents

Foreword xxix Preface xxxiii Acknowledgments xli Part I: Foundations of Web Site Design 1 Chapter 1: Customer-Centered Web Design: More Than a Good Idea 3 1.1 The Evolution of Web Design 3 1.2 The Importance of Customer-Centered Design 6 1.3 Our First Steps toward Unifying Design, Usability, and Marketing 8 1.4 Why We Prefer Customer-Centered Design 9 1.5 Nine Myths of Customer-Centered Design 12 1.6 Applying Customer-Centered Design 15 1.7 Take-away Ideas 16 Chapter 2: Making the Most of Web Design Patterns 19 2.1 What Are Patterns? 19 2.2 A Sample Pattern 20 2.3 How to Read a Pattern 23 2.4 How Much Do Patterns Change Over Time? 25 2.5 How to Use the Patterns 30 2.6 An Example of Using Patterns 31 2.7 Take-away Ideas 37 Chapter 3: Knowing Your Customers: Principles and Techniques 39 3.1 Principles for Knowing Your Customers 40 3.2 Techniques for Knowing Your Customers 50 3.3 Take-away Ideas 67 Chapter 4: Involving Customers with Iterative Design 69 4.1 The Iterative Design Process 69 4.2 Reasons to Use Iterative Design 71 4.3 Designing with Goals and Principles in Mind 73 4.4 Rapid Prototyping 80 4.5 Evaluating Your Web Site 90 4.6 Take-away Ideas 95 Chapter 5: Processes for Developing Customer-Centered Sites 97 5.1 Development Process Overview 98 5.2 The Discovery Phase 100 5.3 The Exploration Phase 105 5.4 The Refinement Phase 106 5.5 The Production Phase 108 5.6 The Implementation Phase 110 5.7 The Launch Phase 113 5.8 The Maintenance Phase 113 5.9 Take-away Ideas 115 Part II: Patterns 117 Pattern Group A: Site Genres 119 A1: Personal E-Commerce 120 A2: News Mosaics 128 A3: Community Conference 136 A4: Self-Service Government 148 A5: Nonprofits as Networks of Help 154 A6: Grassroots Information Sites 161 A7: Valuable Company Sites 167 A8: Educational Forums 174 A9: Stimulating Arts and Entertainment 182 A10: Web Apps That Work 187 A11: Enabling Intranets 195 A12: blogs 201 Pattern Group B: Creating a Navigation Framework 215 B1: Multiple Ways to Navigate 216 B2: Browsable Content 221 B3: Hierarchical Organization 226 B4: Task-Based Organization 231 B5: Alphabetical Organization 235 B6: Chronological Organization 238 B7: Popularity-Based Organization 241 B8: Category Pages 247 B9: Site Accessibility 251 Pattern Group C: Creating a Powerful Homepage 267 C1: Homepage Portal 268 C2: Up-Front Value Proposition 277 Pattern Group D: Writing and Managing Content 283 D1: Page Templates 284 D2: Content Modules 291 D3: Headlines and Blurbs 297 D4: Personalized Content 303 D5: Message Boards 314 D6: Writing for Search Engines 324 D7: Inverted-Pyramid Writing Style 332 D8: Printable Pages 339 D9: Distinctive HTML Titles 343 D10: Internationalized and Localized Content 349 D11: Style Sheets 356 Pattern Group E: Building Trust and Credibility 365 E1: Site Branding 366 E2: E-Mail Subscriptions 372 E3: Fair Information Practices 378 E4: Privacy Policy 384 E5: About Us 391 E6: Secure Connections 398 E7: E-Mail Notifications 402 E8: Privacy Preferences 410 E9: Preventing Phishing Scams 418 Pattern Group F: Basic E-Commerce 431 F1: Quick-Flow Checkout 432 F2: Clean Product Details 439 F3: Shopping Cart 449 F4: Quick Address Selection 458 F5: Quick Shipping Method Selection 464 F6: Payment Method 469 F7: Order Summary 475 F8: Order Confirmation and Thank-You 480 F9: Easy Returns 485 Pattern Group G: Advanced E-Commerce 491 G1: Featured Products 492 G2: Cross-Selling and Up-Selling 500 G3: Personalized Recommendations 510 G4: Recommendation Community 518 G5: Multiple Destinations 526 G6: Gift Giving 531 G7: Order Tracking and History 537 Pattern Group H: Helping Customers Complete Tasks 545 H1: Process Funnel 546 H2: Sign-in/New Account 552 H3: Guest Account 559 H4: Account Management 564 H5: Persistent Customer Sessions 570 H6: Floating Windows 576 H7: Frequently Asked Questions 581 H8: Context-Sensitive Help 587 H9: Direct Manipulation 591 H10: Clear Forms 600 H11: Predictive Input 609 H12: Drill-down Options 615 H13: Progress Bar 622 Pattern Group I: Designing Effective Page Layouts 631 I1: Grid Layout 632 I2: Above the Fold 637 I3: Clear First Reads 641 I4: Expanding Screen Width 646 I5: Fixed Screen Width 652 I6: Consistent Sidebars of Related Content 657 Pattern Group J: Making Site Search Fast and Relevant 661 J1: Search Action Module 662 J2: Straightforward Search Forms 666 J3: Organized Search Results 669 Pattern Group K: Making Navigation Easy 677 K1: Unified Browsing Hierarchy 678 K2: Navigation Bar 682 K3: Tab Rows 686 K4: Action Buttons 691 K5: High-Visibility Action Buttons 695 K6: Location Bread Crumbs 698 K7: Embedded Links 701 K8: External Links 705 K9: Descriptive, Longer Link Names 709 K10: Obvious Links 714 K11: Familiar Language 719 K12: Preventing Errors 723 K13: Meaningful Error Messages 727 K14: Page Not Found 731 K15: Permalinks 734 K16: Jump Menus 744 K17: Site Map 752 Pattern Group L: Speeding Up Your Site 759 L1: Low Number of Files 760 L2: Fast-Loading Images 764 L3: Separate Tables 772 L4: HTML Power 775 L5: Reusable Images 779 L6: Fast-Loading Content 782 Pattern Group M: The Mobile Web 793 M1: Mobile Screen Sizing 794 M2: Mobile Input Controls 805 M3: Location-Based Services 813 Part III: Appendixes 823 Appendix A: Running Usability Evaluations 825 Appendix B: Sample Web Site Evaluation Plan 841 Appendix C: Sample Consent Form 845 Appendix D: Sample Observer Form 847 Appendix E: Online Research 849 Glossary 867 Resources 897 Credits 935 About the Authors 941 Index 943

Additional information

GOR002773855
9780131345553
0131345559
Design of Sites, The: Patterns for Creating Winning Web Sites by Douglas van Duyne
Used - Very Good
Paperback
Pearson Education (US)
20061222
1024
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
This is a used book - there is no escaping the fact it has been read by someone else and it will show signs of wear and previous use. Overall we expect it to be in very good condition, but if you are not entirely satisfied please get in touch with us

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