All web sites are built in response to many needs

Fundamentally, the web is an information medium. People publish stuff - in any medium - in response to a need for information. Success depends on fulfilling those needs.

Note that information can be 'hard', like flight times between London and Boston, or 'soft', such as an impression about the quality of a company, product or service.

Your site may have information that people want, you may have information that you want them to have that they don't necessarily want, or you may want to get information for them. Your site may be a way to pass information between different consumers. (Or all of these things at the same time!)

It's vitally important to appreciate that all kinds of web sites try to resolve multiple needs. The publisher must have a need which drives them to publish (to earn money, to gather information, to promote a brand). The site's visitors must have a need (to earn money, to succeed at their work, to be entertained).

Behind all these needs are goals that drive our desires and behaviour. It's our goals that drive us to use web sites, to buy products and use services.

Pursuit of goals drives all behaviour

People visit web sites because they want to achieve something, a certain state, usually having got something or having done something.

As a commercial web site publisher, your business goals (strategic or tactical objectives) drive everything you do.

It's your goals that influence whether you, as a web user, click on a particular link or take the time to look around a web page.

No-one goes on shopping sites for the fun of using the site's interface. We do it to find bargains or to buy specific products. Those finds help us to feel a certain way (smart, fashionable, relaxed, excited). The site is simply a means to an end.

Case study: booking train tickets

There are lots of web sites that let me order train tickets, but that's not the goal I seek to reach when I use those sites.

I usually order train tickets late at night for travel the following morning. My goal is to get to sleep as quickly as possible relaxed in the knowledge that my ticket will be ready for me when I get to the station the next day, and I'll achieve that goal by ordering my train tickets quickly and securely, and getting feedback that my order has gone through successfully.

Advertisers have long known that lifestyle choices drive most consumer spending decisions, from clothes to cars to bottled water. That's why advertising uses images of possible lifestyle states, goals that consumers may access through buying.

Goal-oriented design is the process of designing specifically and consciously to enable users to achieve their goals.

Contents

About goals
Why goals are important.
Your goals
Identifying your personal goals will help you to achieve them.
Your site's goals
Identify your web site's goals
Users' goals
The importance of understanding users' goals when designing web sites and applications, introducing personas as a design tool.
Win-win solutions
The best sites are consciously planned to deliver win-win solutions that deliver both users' goals and achieve the site's goals.
Personas
Why using personas in your design process helps avoid common mistakes and creates a better product.
The Site Persona & Dialogue Process
Two more powerful tools for modelling the interactions on your web site. Site personas represent the site's brand and goals. The Dialogue Process is a way of designing interactions as conversations between user personas and the site persona.

Further reading

About Face 2.0

About Face 2.0 - "The Essentials of Interaction Design"

By Alan Cooper, Robert M. Reimann

Level Introductory through Advanced

This is required reading for anyone who's interested in interaction design, goal-oriented design, and the design of user interfaces. It's written by Alan Cooper, a hero of mine and founder of the discipline of interaction design, and Rob Reimann, another expert communicator who worked with Alan at Cooper Interaction Design.

About Face 2.0 is the second major edition of the seminal text on how to create clear and usable software. Its principles and examples apply to web pages and applications as much as desktop apps.

This book will give you a thorough grounding in all aspects of interaction design, from the basic discipline of approaching the problem, through goal-oriented techniques and right up to designing the user interface. That's not to say it's a difficult book: it's extremely well written and easy to consume. I cannot recommend it enough.

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Articles + tutorials in Goal-Oriented Design

Goal-oriented design
Overview of the use of goal-oriented design in web design
About goals
Why goals are important.
How people use web pages
How people really use web pages is different from the way designers think they do
Your goals
Identifying your personal goals will help you to achieve them.
Users' goals
The importance of understanding users' goals when designing web sites and applications, introducing personas as a design tool.
Personas in web design
Why using personas in your design process helps avoid common mistakes and creates a better product.
Web Site Behaviour and Usability
A good, usable, well-behaved web site gives concise, timely, and polite help.
Your site's goals
If you don't identify your web site's goals, how do you know what you design is going to work?
The Site Persona & Dialogue Process
Two more powerful tools for modelling the interactions on your web site. Site personas represent the site's brand and goals. The Dialogue Process is a way of designing interactions as conversations between user personas and the site persona.
Benefits of Splitting the Web User Experience
It's often a good idea to split the experience - providing different views and options for new site visitors and for more experienced users.
Win-win solutions
The best sites are consciously planned to deliver win-win solutions that deliver both users' goals and achieve the site's goals.
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