7 usability guidelines for websites on mobile devices
by Abid Warsi
More and more mobile phones users are browsing and searching the
internet on their handsets. The UK, for example, has neared saturation for mobile phones and many handset browsers can now handle sites designed for viewing on computers. Indeed 20 of UK mobile
phone users now use the internet on their mobile devices.
If you design websites for PC viewing then you need to consider how your sites will look and work on mobiles. The bar for mobile specific sites has been raised by some good sites and others need to close their gap. As the mobile internet has developed savvy users have come to expect higher standards when browsing on their handsets.
These 7 guidelines are based on actual user research conducted with mobile phone users. Users were asked to carry out typical tasks on popular websites using a mobile phone browser. The issues they encountered were used to produce these guidelines.
- Meet users needs quickly
Mobile and PC users can have different reasons for visiting the same site. Mobile users are more likely to want information to help them at that location or time, such as finding directions or finding out whats going on nearby. Also, they might want quick entertainment to pass away a short period of time, like something to read on the bus or while waiting to meet a friend. For your site, predicts users needs and fulfil these as quickly as possible. Exceptions to this are items people download to keep on their phones e.g. buying ringtones.Yahoo! does this effectively with its new mobile oneSearchTM service. Searching for Cinema produces a list of cinemas near users location showing their address and phone numbers. Clicking the Call link next to a number opens a call dialogue box on the phone. A further enhancement would to be enable users to click through to a map of a venue.

- Dont repeat the navigation on every page
Usable websites designed for PCs usually repeat the navigation on every page. However, screen real estate is precious on a mobile screen and navigation can push content off screen. BAAs navigation, for example, takes up the whole screen so users have to scroll down far on every page to get to the main content.For your website on a mobile, only display the navigation on the homepage. On other pages only include links back to the homepage and back to the last important point along the path users have taken. Show these links at the top and bottom of the page so theyre never too far away. BBC Mobile does this effectively with a clickable breadcrumb trail at the top and a list of links at the bottom.

- Clearly distinguish selected items
Mobile phone users tend to have poor cursor control. This is because moving the pointing device down with the joystick or direction buttons simultaneously scrolls the page and highlights links, buttons and form fields. Due to this lack of control its important to clearly feedback to users what item is in focus. This can be done by changing the appearance of an item to make it stand out from everything else. For example, you can change the font and background colour of links and buttons.For example, O2s mobile portal doesnt highlight buttons well. It adds a blue border on a lighter blue background that isnt noticeable. Users have to move the joystick around to find the cursor. Worse still, Thomson Local only distinguishes form fields by making their border slighter thicker. In contrast, their highlighted links stood out because the font and background colour was changed and contrasted strongly against the pages overall white background.


- Make user input as simple as possible
Allow users to input information by making selections instead of entering free text or at least provide this as an alternative method. Entering text on a mobile phone can be painfully slow and error-prone on the typical 12 button mobile keypad. Mobile users are more likely to make mistakes due to misspelling or mistyping or take shortcuts. Sets of well thought out links on quick loading pages can be very usable.On Thomson Local, for example, it isnt possible to browse businesses or locations. Users tend to abbreviate search terms i.e. business type which leads to inappropriate search results. The Odeons mobile site allows users to find a cinema by searching or browsing. Users that search often make more mistakes than those that browse, the latter usually finding what theyre after by only selecting 2 links.


- Only show essential information
Mobile phone screens are of course tiny and have only a fraction of the area or pixels on most PC monitors. Be sure to identify page requests coming from mobiles and only send down the most essential of information. Otherwise, important content might be pushed down or difficult to find amongst everything else on the page.Also, most mobile phone users arent on flat rate data packages so the larger the page the more users have to pay. Users become frustrated if they have to pay to download page content they dont want.
Header links on the BAA and Thomson Local websites take up lots of screen space and make important information hard to find. About BAA, Help and Advertise with us arent priorities for mobile users.


- Place basic browsing controls on the page
To save screen space, mobile browsers often dont display basic controls such as Back or they display the web page in full screen mode. As such, always include a Back button on every page other than the homepage.Transport for Londons mobile journey planner places basic controls, such as Next page, Back to results and New journey, at the bottom of each page.

- Design mobile-friendly page layouts
On your website, make sure you design the page to present content in the right order and render well on mobile screens. Website layouts for large landscape PC screens usually dont work well on small portrait mobile phone screens. Furthermore, mobile browsers and page transcoders usually vertically stack pages suitable for portrait display.Its often best to have completely different page designs to meet mobile users needs. If mobile phone users are a big part of your business then you should consider creating a site just for mobiles. Sites that are designed for mobiles perform significantly better with users than those that arent.
For example, BAAs website renders very poorly on a mobile screen. Page sections dont appear where intended relative to each other and pages look poorly designed. Single word link text can be wrapped over 4 lines making it difficult to read. Conversely, Transport for Londons mobile homepage contains simple categorised lists of links. Users find this easy and quick to use.


In a nutshell
Dont neglect your current and/or potential users by not designing for mobile phones. Follow these guidelines but dont forget to usability test your website on mobile phones. Real usability testing will always capture things that cant be covered by general guidelines. About the author:
This article was written by Abid Warsi. Abids crazy about usability - so crazy that he works for Webcredible, an industry leading usability and
accessibility consultancy, as a user experience consultant. Hes very good at eye tracking and extremely
talented at writing for the web.
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