I'm glad I wasn't the only person affected by this. I couldn't finish the article. At first I thought it must be some sort of commentary related to the article (i.e. web 2.0 and social clutter) but no.
You can minimize the "no spam" widget but apparently are held hostage by the other box until (I assume) you click one of the social +1's.
Assuming the rest of the article's content is well thought out, perhaps they should forward it to their own designer.
Seriously. I had to click an X in the top right corner and use Firebug to set "display: none;" for three boxes just to get the distractions out of the way. It's a site called "KISSmetrics" which cannot "keep it simple stupid" and is telling me about how images can distract people from your articles?
One cute statement about their final image example: whenever I have to pay a new web service, there are just an absolutely tremendous number of options for me to be dealing with. In order to narrow down the field to companies who actually care about my time, I have some peculiar general rules:
(1) Name must not be concatenated CamelCase words. This still eliminates about 50% of my options, while GitHub is among the only known exceptions where it might be worth paying them for something.
(2) No autoplaying flash. This no longer eliminates so many services as it once did, but it should still be standard.
(3) SSL is a must. You would seriously be surprised.
(4) May not contain clip art of a white woman wearing a headset. It can be an Asian woman, or a white man, or she can be holding a phone, or it could not be clip art (here is our cofounder Olivia...), whatever. This actually seems to further limit the field by over 50%. Web service hosts apparently have really odd stereotypes, or else they expect me to.
I give that list here, again, because their last example of ineffective image use is, naturally, clip art of a white woman wearing a headset.
Medial capitals have always been around in English, but the use has exploded of late, and a lot of people think it looks silly, as though a word is missing a space or a letter is randomly miscased. It looks alright in personal names because we’re used to it—no one complains about MacDonald, DeLuca, LeBlanc, or O’Shaughnessy. But the phenomenon of medial capitals in company names is really only about 40 years old. There are many well-known examples—YouTube, PayPal, RadioShack, PlayStation, &c., but I think they succeed by sheer volume and dot-com kitsch.
The only time it really bothers me is when budding authors are trying to come up with fantasy names. They use (what I lovingly call) Dread Intercapitals alongside Dread Apostrophes and Dread Accents to make names that look like Harâk’Thür—presumably in imitation of Tolkien, who actually knew what he was doing, and had internally consistent language models.
Because there's supposed to be a space there. You can be forgiven perhaps if the things you're concatenating are not words, like ServInt does where Serv Int would look weird, but when you just take words and mash them together, that's not suddenly a brand: that's a typo.
I guess the problem is that it just gets dreary. Just to confine myself to web hosts: DreamHost. HostGator. HostMonster. HostOrca. KnownHost. StartLogic. TotalChoice.
Go on, try to say NearlyFreeHosting in one breath, no pauses. That's the name of that company. Someone actually named their company "neerlafrihostin."
You don't have to go as far as A Small Orange does, where you choose a branding that makes me think of a webcomic. You could just be like Liquid Web and Media Temple -- give me your name with those spaces intact. CamelCase is for programming languages and the occasional wiki -- and it's still ugly in those places too; I just don't see great alternatives there.
What is wrong with a white woman wearing a headset? I believe this says more about you than it says about a company that just grabs a random image of a woman with a headset.
What's wrong with it, when it's clip art, is that it's contrived and overly specific in an oddly sexist way. Even worse, it's not explicit in its sexism, but it appears as a statistical pattern -- that is, the gender distribution is not 50/50 but more like 10/90; and the headset-versus-phone distribution is similarly out-of-touch with reality, at least at those offices without a dedicated customer support team; and minorities and Asians are almost completely absent because you might think of that bad word "Outsourcing".
The problem is not with whiteness, womanness, headsetness, or clipartness, but the intersection's ubiquity in the face of its unlikelihood. It appears everywhere and the problem is precisely "I just saw that on ten other sites, and I'm willing to bet that this is nothing like the person I'd actually be talking to if I called them up." If you just gave me real people working at your company, rather than clip art, that would already be a great start.
But, as I said, I agree. Yes, it says a lot about me that I see such a pattern, interpret it as "someone's trying to manipulate my subconscious" -- even if that wasn't their intent, it somehow hits me that way -- and then refuse to do business with people who I interpret as manipulative bastards. It also says a lot about me that I can't escape that feeling even after I have cogitated it.
But I still feel justified, because the companies who grab random images because they haphazardly think "this is what my customer wants to see" are not the sorts that I want to subsidize. I would rather have a company that's so lazy that they don't look for clipart at all, than a company that sets out to find clipart and then gets lazy somewhere midway along and, as you say, "just grabs a random image of a woman with a headset." Laziness is good, but if you're not going to be lazy, be special.
seriously. who uses that crap? i'm supposed to spam all my facebook contacts with 20 second reads i went through? and even if i did want to share it, i could figure it out w/out having a a big expanded dialog. this is useful probably to 1% of readers and annoys the other 99%.
I feel like the bombard-the-reader-with-images approach could be an artifact of thinking from the time when HTML images were still a novelty, simply because no one else had done it before. (I have absolutely no data to back this up though).
The shocking truth about conversions is that businesses, including startups, spend crazy amounts of time tricking people into "converting", instead of building products that, you know, actually improve people's lives.
I think you're conflating "tricking" with "doing a better job of communicating". For most businesses (including startups), there's a clear value proposition. Their product/service actually fills a need/want. Iterating design/marketing copy is an attempt to find the best (or at least a better) way to communicate that value proposition. In the vast majority of cases, the goal isn't to trick someone into converting, it's to properly communicate the benefits of converting.
There's an argument to be made (not necessarily by me) that if you have to spend a lot of time communicating your value proposition to your market, there may be something wrong with your product. The value proposition of your product should be self-evident.
Generally there are alternatives, so the challenge is in communicating why your product/service is a better fit for solving that problem than any of the other possible alternatives. There's also a greater than 0% possibility that your marketing copy is so bad that it confuses people and gets in the way of a solid and "fool-proof" value proposition. Even the best product/service can shoot itself in the foot with poor copywriting or unprofessional design. Making sure you pay attention to doing well with that isn't the same as "tricking" people into buying your product/service. It's about attention to detail and making sure everything you do is demonstrating the quality of your company.
> Ogilvy found that, on average, headlines placed below an image are read by 10% more people than headlines above. Since reading the headline is a prerequisite of reading the body copy, you’re losing a potential 10% of your audience if you’re distracting them with an image in the wrong place.
Actually, you'd be losing at most about 9% of your audience. I know that's a bit of a nitpick, but it bugs me when people equate "not X% more" with "X% less".
Also, to actually lose 9% of your readers to your headline position, you have to make the very optimistic assumption that you're not losing readers to any other factor.
These Ogilvy's stats are about printed documents. I am sure it is false on the Web because we are so used with images. All major websites put the title above the image. See the Huff or Ars for example. And they know their business. For the rest, it may be true or partially true.
Most of it applies to photosharing websites as well - especially the bit about keeping the title/headline below the image. I'm irritated every time the title is at the top and I need to scroll up to see the title (The initial response for me is to inspect the photo - exactly as mentioned in the article).
Building one myself, I instinctively felt this should be below the image, but my designer disagreed and that's the way it is right now. We will definitely push this down - evidence always wins :)
Not sure who kiss metrics is and I'm on my iPhone so not gonna check before posting, but this looks like a shitty Jason calacanis, mahalo style content farm article. There probably is something to the thesis "graphic design doesn't necessarily equal higher revenue" (I mean duh, see digg) but this post didn't support the thesis in a meaningful way.
This being an article by KISSmetrics, I was disappointed there were no actual numbers or research done for the article. Unless I missed something, not a single statement was backed up with actual data. The only study mentioned in the entire article was in the context of ad copy and was done over 30 years ago (I'm assuming they're referring to a study from Ogilvy on Advertising [1] but I could be wrong).
For example:
If the images you’re using are not clearly tied to your value proposition, or to the central theme of your page, then they will only confuse your readers. At best, they’ll be pointless distractions. At worst, they’ll give the wrong impression and lead readers to feel tricked or disappointed.
In my experience, the blog posts I've written gain much more traction when they have images, even pointless stock images (I have experimented with this). So while I agree, that ideally, images should provide actual value to the story, I've found that a couple pointless stock images are better than no images. This is why I would have really liked to see actual evidence to back up their claims.
EDIT: Also, while we're on the topic, I also hate including all those social sharing widgets, but viewership takes a dramatic hit when they're not there.
Blogs and landing pages should be treated separately. For a blog, a pointless stock image still serves the purpose of visually breaking up the article so it doesn't look like a big wall of text.
I agree with you though that I would have liked to see some numbers, but otherwise it was a good article that should at least give you some ideas on what to test next.
I completely agree, which is why I was also confused that the referenced study was on offline ad design and copy, their first screenshot was a landing page, their second screenshot was an online news article, and their third screenshot was a blog post.
The annoying popups on the bottom of the article actually get in the way of reading it, to a point where I just close the page. They are definitely not following their own advice.
I thought the reason annoying generic stock images of salespeople smiling and wearing headsets were so common is that they did increase conversions, a lot.
That is the reason, you are correct. What I've learned in the past two years is that the web is chock full of blogs that repeat tired old "tips" that are either outdated or just plain wrong and that other blogs that give fresh insights and new tips but wrongly give readers the impression that those tips are gospel (ie set in stone).
The trick is to do your own homework, don't take any advice as absolute, fit everything to your unique circumstances, and always remember that your mileage will vary. I've spent enough time reading a lot of crap and had to learn to be extra judicious the hard way. I take most articles like this as very loose guidelines. It was definitely a great article with good advice but I know better than to just run out and apply it just because the experts said it. Experts contradict each other all the time.
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