The best-designed reference Web sites allow readers to pop into the site, find what they want, and easily print or download what they find. There is typically no "story" to tell, so usage patterns are nonlinear. Nonessential graphics should be minimal and undistracting, and content and menu structure must be carefully organized to support fast search and retrieval, easy downloading of files, and convenient printing options. A well-designed search engine is a must for sites with more than thirty pages, or sites that store long text documents in single Web pages. You may wish to investigate more sophisticated multiparameter search software instead of relying on single keyword searches. Contact time is typically brief in reference sites: the shorter the better.
[画像:Screen shot: Bartleby Columbia Encyclopedia search page]SITE DESIGN
Organizing information
"Chunking"
Site structure
Basic information structures
Site diagrams
Design themes
Training
Teaching
Continuing education
Reference
Entertainment/magazines
News
E-commerce
Site elements
Home pages
Menus & subsites
Resource lists
Site guides
"What's new?"
Search
Contact & feedback
Bibliographies & appendixes
FAQ pages
Error pages
Internet versus intranet
Design standards
References
Copyright 2002 Lynch and Horton
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Last updated 5 March 2004