Avoiding Useful Content with Slick Javascript

Jared Spool

October 16th, 2007

The user, a frequent traveler, wanted to find ways to impress his new girlfriend. WhiteTie, a luxury concierge and VIP service, seems to be just the ticket.

To ensure this is what he wanted, he visited the WhiteTie web site and started to look at the What We Offer links in the center of the page, suggesting he learn more by clicking on links with labels like Northwest Airlines, Restaurants, and Hotels.

Like most folks using the web these days, our user had the expectation clicking on the links would bring up a page with more content. However, clicking on the Northwest Airlines link didn’t seem to do anything. He clicked on it multiple times before giving up.

The Northwest Airlines content on WhiteTie.com
The Northwest Airlines content on WhiteTie.com

The second link, Restaurants, also didn’t behave as he expected. He told us he thought it would display a page describing the restaurants involved and the services WhiteTie offered. Alas, clicking on it just changed the image next to the link and swapped in 4 bullets with surprisingly little real value. (Just what are “other special amenities”, anyways?)

The restaurant content
The restaurant content

Clicking on Hotels was the same.

The hotel content
The hotel content

WhiteTie charges a premium for their service. And they’ve spent a bit of it on some fancy javascript to swap out each content. Yet, we can’t help but wonder if their money would’ve been better spent on a set of plain-old HTML pages with some meaty descriptions of their service and its benefits.

6 Responses to “Avoiding Useful Content with Slick Javascript”

  1. Livia Labate Says:

    But Jared, what about the “brand mystique”? If you tell people exactly what you offer where is the excitement of the discovery? :P

  2. Kyle Says:

    Well, there’s at least a few ways they could have handled this better, excluding just the full page transition:

    1) Use the benefit of javascript to add a transition effect to the content, that way, at least the user notices the changes.

    2) Give those links a different treatment than others, maybe give a subtle clue, blue links with a dashed underline to indicate that the links are going to behaving differently than standard blue links.

    3) Visually connect the selected link with the content that’s being swapped out, perhaps by moving the photo to the other side of the module, and adding a border or background around the link and the content that’s been updated.

    I’m sure there’s more, but those 3 stick out right away.

  3. Michael Zuschlag Says:

    Other than the inane content, the problem is that a link is simply the wrong control. This is a clear case where it should be a tab control (or tab imagery, as Kyle implies in 3).

  4. Brad Says:

    “…the excitement of the discovery?”

    LOL

  5. sylvanx Says:

    Unfortunately, much of the subtlety we designers adore so much is lost on real people ;-)

  6. Zusch Login » Blog Archive » Of Magic and Machines Says:

    [...] Combo boxes may or may not require clicking a Go button. With AJAX, controls react in any old way. A link may act like a tab control or vice versa, to point to common example. The rule is Click Anywhere, Maybe It Does [...]

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