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Celebrating Website Mistakes

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I met a lovely reader today, who responded to seeing my blog post yesterday on accessbility. I wrote about the topic not as expert, but as a student. It's a role I'm more comfortable with. He showed me a project he's passionate about. It's a website built for UsabiltyEffect was ugly. He had every right to share his opinion. The old site design was horrendous, but it was pulling in business anyway. I attributed this not to design of the website, but to the integrity of my work and word of mouth. Sadly, he chose to pubically humiliate me in a place where my kids went to see their mom Aaron Wall's When Someone is a Jerk, and someone else who harrassed a friend of mine by stealing website copy after cozying up to her first, to gain her trust. A few minutes ago, someone kindly emailed me to tell me a link on the new UE site was broken. I quickly repaired it and thanked her. Part of me feels stupid for not catching it before a visitor did. But this is what owning a web design is all about. Or part of it anyway. We put up our babies and hope they work. As I said in the video interview, we look at our pages a million times and can't see the obvious in front of us. When I'm hired to conduct usability audits, I'm a hired new pair of eyes, trained in a specialty that's helpful in website development. I consider it my duty to be fair, helpful, positive and just as passionate about the success of a client's website as they are. There are things they may not have known to do. I'm not a judge or jury. I don't tell them something is "ugly". I consider that rude and completely unproductive. What I do offer are suggestions on how to improve something to avoid common usability issues. In most cases, a site design is attractive and tolerable. It isn't until I try to do something on the site that it "breaks". A break is not the end of the world. The sky isn't falling. This broken thing may have worked last year. But habits change. Preferences change. Visitor demands change. As people become familiar with websites that work really well, they expect ALL websites to. If your's doesn't, well. This is something that can be fixed. And hold your head high while you fix it. That Word, "Expert" Another thing that struck me in the video was my discomfort at the interviewer's introduction, where he referred to me as a "foremost authority". I didn't reply. I didn't agree. I really wanted to disappear underneath the table. So I did the shy giggle thing and prayed he'd ask me a question and change the subject. I don't have the ego to be an expert. It's a scary place I don't want to go to. Other people can have that role. Some of them have Comments Add to Del.icio.us | Digg | Reddit | Furl Bookmark Murdok: Uability Consultant, Kimberly Krause Berg, is the owner of Cre8pc.com, and

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