Book Reviews: Neuro Web Design What Makes Them Click.

I read a lot of books and in this field it’s good to both refresh and improve your skills. The latest book I finished (just this morning) is Neuro Web Design: What Makes Them Click? by Susan M. Weinschenk.

The book takes a look at web design from a psychological point of view . Inside Susan covers topics ranging from how the brain functions, to what primary instincts are triggered by certain events we experience in our life.

If you have ever taken college psychology a lot of the material about brain composition, comprehension and the like will seem very familiar. What is great about this book is how Susan manages to apply these basic human survival functions to the usage of web sites.

Inside you will find a lot of research and case studies, each concept building upon the last and ultimately bringing home the abstract ideas to concrete web activities. neurowebdesign

One particularly interesting scenario revolves around product reviews and how we can structure these to appeal to a web users:

“Imagine you’re at a chain store looking for a HD flat screen television, a random bystander comes by and you ask him what he thinks of the TV.”

Perhaps you do this with thirty other people in the store, asking each of them what they think of the TV. It sounds kind of foolish, but how many of us repeat this scenario multiple times a day online?  We are easily swayed and influenced by the ratings and reviews of strangers online.  We just don’t know who or what the experience level is of people rating a product online. Yet, when we see the 130 people gave this 4 stars. It directly influences our purchasing decisions. Now that is power!

The book continues to take a look at this method and refines the concept because of the ever changing skeptical nature of web users. Now we may find the review rating backed up by technological, or subject matter expertise.

Overall this book  is a great read and should cause some re-reading if you really want to get the most out of it. The first 1-7 chapters really tap into your “old brain” and you may want to stop reading a bit and just sit and think about how you can apply them to your web site. I know  I did this.   Chapters 8- to the end really rein-force a lot of the concepts. What I found however is that my brain was so busy thinking of ideas, and ways to change content, etc I had already come up with a lot of the material that was covered in these subsequent chapters.

Bottom Line: Get the book, read it, and practice what you learn.

Related articles:

  1. SXSW Interactive 2008 – Day 1 March 7, 2008
  2. SXSW 2008 – Day 2 Summary -
  3. Book Reviews: “Web Form Design Filling in the Blanks”
  4. UI Design Dissection: Google Reader What Makes an Application Great?
  5. The Haves, Have Nots & Feature Bloated User Experience.

2 Responses to “Book Reviews: Neuro Web Design What Makes Them Click.”

  1. uidesigner says:

    This is a test comment.

  2. praful says:

    very good article. thx

Leave a Reply

comments-bottom

More UI Design Guide Articles

thumbnail
Blog Response: What’s Your Design Sign? This morning I came across a great article on Overdesign for IPHONE applications.  While the article focuses primarily on new IPHONE design the same holds true for all aspects of UI Design. Consistency is your key to a usable application. When you examine say Norton,or Adobe products, the... Jul 22nd, 2009 | no responses
SXSW Interactive 2009 – Pre-attendance Plans – and Survival Tips In about 2 weeks I will be heading off to SXSW Interactive. I look forward to meeting and talking to lots of exciting people in the industry.  I am also going to try and pull together a UI designer meetup group. Last year only a few people were able to get together. I hope this year we can get a... Feb 16th, 2009 | one response
User Experience Design in an Agile Development Cycle The title pretty much says it all. After working for a while now in an agile development model. I’ve discovered several disturbing things that really cause a loss of sanity. The agile development cycle is quite fast. Depending on your team it has different lengths. Most iterations seem to be... Mar 30th, 2007 | no responses

Twitter is a great way to share new and exciting resources with all our viewers. Each day I provide links and commentary on all things UI. You can find UI resources, UI design examples, new techniques, and a lot more by Following @UIDESIGNGUIDE on Twitter.

The idea for this design blog first came about two years ago at SXSW Interactive.

Currently UI Design guide is in its fourth redesign. This site takes quite a bit of time to maintain as well as write the content. Just like UI Design this site is a passion that keeps evolving.

Inside, I cover articles on many topics icluding: lessons, prototyping methods, agile UX methods, design reviews, design challenges, application features, and of course design experiences, just to name a few.

With all the blogs out there you may be asking yourself who are you to give advice? That's a fair question. If you have a moment feel free to read about my design history.