It does indeed "depend" on the circumstances; but more often than not
brevity (perhaps not as strict as 500 characters) is better. I am
working on a public service portal project right now. Citizens come to
the portal to be served in some way. This is an instance where brevity
is a must.
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Regards,
Rudy Duke
rudy...@gmail.com
I'd say that this guideline oversimplifies. What we know from the usabilty field is that people "skim, skip, and scan" until they get to their destination page, and then they zre willing to read quite a long page. There are a few basic types of pages. One is wayfinding. The other is substantive. Think of a consumer buying a laptop. They might end up on a page about computers, and they scan for laptops. They click on the first link they see that will take them to a laptop sectio. They find a link to the tpe of laptop they want and click, and so on. Once they get to the page about, say, specifications, then they will stay on the page to read about the features they want.
So the first pages are minimal, just enough to get people to where they want to go - in some recent testing, 250 words was "too much reading" - and the destination page has the substance, which could easily be 500 wrds.
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As usual I find myself in complete agreement with Rahel and the rest of the opinions. However, I would caution us to remember that the original research in question here was specifically for “mobile sites” and we seem to have expanded a bit. While I think the “oversimplification” idea does still play (I often “curl up” with my *mobile* iPad and read long form content) – my sense is here that the author of the piece was trying to relay the importance of brevity on websites optimized for smartphones (an admitted assumption on my part).
Actually my favorite piece of that article is actually where they prescribe: “eye catching images” and “strong headlines and well-crafted copy” in order to get the attention of the user. Such sage advice <eye roll>. It’s not unlike the Director imploring his actors: “Just act better!”
The original article is really just too short (probably purposely to support the linkbait-ish) headline to explore all the “it depends” scenarios. That irony is also pretty tasty on a Monday morning.
Cheers all…
~rr
Robert Rose
Chief Troublemaker
From: content...@googlegroups.com [mailto:content...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Rahel Anne Bailie
Sent: Monday, March 26, 2012 7:31 AM
To: content...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Is there any research to back up what this story says about content length?
I'd say that this guideline oversimplifies. What we know from the usabilty field is that people "skim, skip, and scan" until they get to their destination page, and then they zre willing to read quite a long page. There are a few basic types of pages. One is wayfinding. The other is substantive. Think of a consumer buying a laptop. They might end up on a page about computers, and they scan for laptops. They click on the first link they see that will take them to a laptop sectio. They find a link to the tpe of laptop they want and click, and so on. Once they get to the page about, say, specifications, then they will stay on the page to read about the features they want.
Rahel Anne
Bailie (@rahelab)
Content Strategist / Content Management / Information Architecture
Intentional Design Inc. www.intentionaldesign.ca
Content strategies for business impact
http://about.me/rahel.bailie
"Letowt-Vorbek says many South African Web sites are remembered for
the wrong reasons and she has noted five common flaws, gathered from
research carried out in conjunction with UXalliance, a global user
research and user experience organisation."
So, at least to start with, I'd put the question to UXAlliance, or at
least look for findings with their name attached.
--
Milan Davidović
http://twitter.com/altmilan
http://altmilan.blogspot.com
http://ca.linkedin.com/in/milandavidovic
I think "popular" content/blog posts can run long but they are usually destinations, not entry points ( unless referred).
I'm struggling with content right now on a very technical content site.
Sent from my iPhone