Hi Liz
At the beginning of the 90s, it was fashionable to evaluate systems against
some "Heuristics of Usability". Here is the version I used to advocate back
then, as a starting point for the questions you might ask:
· Simple natural dialogue
· Minimal jargon
· Minimal call on user's memory
· Consistency
· Feedback
where am I?
what can I do next?
· Ease of exit
· Shortcuts
· Prevention of errors
· Clear non-threatening error messages
Good luck!
Bruce
********************************************************
Professor Bruce Royan, Trustee,
CILIP
(Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals)
41 Greenhill Gardens, Edinburgh, EH10 4BL, UK (44) 131 447 3151
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-----Original Message-----
From: A general Library and Information Science list for news and
discussion. [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Liz Johnson
Sent: 20 June 2009 10:44
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Evaluating online catalogue
Dear all
I work with a group of volunteers and one of them has spent a lot of time
setting up the online library catalogue as we couldn't afford to buy
anything. While the thing offends my professional sensibilities (!!) I
thought it would be ok if it suited the people who are most likely to use
it. He has now gone a bit over the top with tags and so on which would be
fine but is now confusing those who use it. It needs simplifying, however I
don't want to barge in with my views and upset him, he's already threatened
to withdraw his services because someone else started meddling with it.
We've asked for general feedback but not much was forthcoming and many
customers blame themselves for not being web-savvy so don't criticise the
actual catalogue. So I would like to put together a simple checklist for
users to feed back with some more direct questions.
Some questions are obvious - ('did you find what you were looking for?' for
example) - but I wonder if anyone else has done this or knows of any
existing very simple checklist to get customer feedback.
Many thanks
Liz Johnson
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