An interesting week. Several new sites have been launched, some we can talk about and will write up later, but some we can't, including an Australian pop star's...
Deeson.co.uk has just been featured on Acquia's "Beautiful Drupal" design showcase, which is a compliment. I think Acquia are demonstrating the point with design.acquia.com that just because Drupal can be ugly in the wrong hands, it doesn't have to be.
Also spotted a tube poster for the Royal Society's Festival of Science + Arts at the Southbank Centre whilst out and about spreading the good Drupal word(!) Good to see the offline marketing engine is firing on all cylinders as we did the website.


Bygone Kent is the only local history magazine for the county. Produced by Deeson Create, Publish and Words, we have just got in on the game and put together a brand new website for it! Features include back-issue ordering, subscriptions, local news and online articles. In fact, we used quite an interesting jQuery plugin called Columnizer for the articles pages.
Welcome to the final installment of our three-part blog on conducting a usability study. To recap (aka copy and paste) in the first part, we explained what this is all about, our intentions, process and what we hope to achieve. In the second part, we conducted the usability test, observing the users on the website while they perform the tasks that we have set them in our scenario.
In this part we assess the results, look for trends and see what practical, actionable conclusions we can draw from the test.
One of the things I did with each user after they completed the tasks was to ask them to write down the top three usability issues that they encountered. Sharing this is probably a good starting point, as it does a bit of the work for me!
So quite a range of results, even from just three users.
While assessing the responses above in conjunction with their videos, I noticed a couple of things that were consistent across all three, even the happiest. I have produced a list of amendments from these to implement on the site, which will be done shortly:
Of course this doesn't mean you should try and cater for absolutely everyone and implement every change suggested. There are times when it is appropriate to stick to your guns and way of doing things, but consistent trends should be taken seriously and dealt with. Ultimately, your users will be happier, and your website more successful for it.
Illustrating the complexity of usability testing, for various reasons the client has decided to not implement the recommendations put forward.