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Ditch the 3-clicks rule

You might hear about the 3-clicks rule – letting visitors to access information “within 3 clicks” of their mouse or increasingly “3 taps”

An example from a univeristy homepage – tiny text links under the title are cluttering the Home Page fighting for visitors attention.

The reason I deducted could be well-intend. Putting up popular options to let visitors to access information “within 3 clicks”

Research* has long challenged the “3 clicks rule” – a very popular myth held by many people.

Here the secret – the number of necessary clicks affects neither user satisfaction, nor success rate.

What matters is the “scent of information” along the user path. Every click or interaction should bring user closer to their intend destination and give them the confidence that they are going down the right path. The whole idea is to create a flow.

For example, if I click the Students link, I expect to find out info about fees, admission, course programmes that are only for student etc. If I am in the fees section, I expect a link or information on Finanical Aid.

Another reason to ditch the 3-clicks rule – Choice Paralysis. Choice paralysis happens when the user is given too many options, they freeze and not sure what to do next.

Don’t you think this one without those walls of text links is less clutter on the eye and also serve the same function – direct visitors (whether students, alumni, faculty) to the information relevant to them?

* Jakob Nielsen’s usability tests found that “users’ ability to find products on an e-commerce site increased by 600 percent after the design was changed so that products were 4 clicks from the homepage instead of 3.” from the book Prioritizing Usability

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Making it easy for customer

We miss the meter reading today – where every 3 month, ESB, the electricity supply company will send someone  to read the meter at your residence.

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Pictures speak a thousand words

Sometimes despite your effort of writing clear, unambiguous content, your user might still struggle for a moment to understand what it is about so as to take the next necessary action.

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