As smartphones swiftly take over the world, we’ve all
come to expect constant information access at our fingertips. Lead
Morgan Stanley analyst Mary Meeker famously predicted last year that
mobile internet access in the U.S. will exceed fixed internet access
sometime in the next couple of years. This change has shifted mobile
websites from a nice luxury that a business can offer to a necessity.
What
impact does this have on website design? Well, it takes us back a few
steps down the evolutionary ladder to working within a much smaller
window. In recent years, computer screens have grown, giving designers a
lot of real estate to work with. Mobile development reverses that
trend, meaning that intelligent choices have to be made regarding
formatting and content to maximize benefit to the end consumer while
maintaining good design.
Fortunately, mobile access can be
detected and users can be redirected from your company’s primary site to
a mobile-specific site, so all sites aren’t limited to the lowest
common denominator of mobile design. The most effective mobile sites
only contain about 25% of the content of a company’s primary website
because visitors are usually looking for quick and easy for information.
Think phone numbers and not in-depth company histories, prices and not
lengthy product descriptions.
When developing your mobile website, ask yourself the following
interrelated questions:
- What is the purpose of the
mobile website? Honing the central purpose you’re seeking to accomplish
is even more important with mobile sites than primary sites. Do you want
the site to simply serve as a basic signpost letting consumers know
where your store is and how they can visit? Do you want to sell products
directly through the site? Do you want to provide access to information
and commentary that users might find useful? Do you want to allow
consumers to interact with each other and with the company? Decide what
you want to accomplish and build the site around that central purpose,
trimming details that don’t contribute.
- Why would users
come to your mobile website? What you want to accomplish with a site is
all well and good but if it doesn’t match potential consumer need it
won’t be effective. Answering this question can be very complicated or
very simple – think about how you access mobile websites. Put yourself
in the potential user’s shoes and think about what they want from your
site. If you’re a product manufacturer, your primary purpose in a mobile
site is undoubtedly to encourage sales of your products. But how best
to do that? You could offer long, in-depth details about your products
and the manufacturing process. But mobile users are much more likely to
prefer access to very basic product details, contact info if they have
questions and a dealer locator.
These are just two key
questions that need to be asked in the mobile development process.
Because you never want to duplicate your primary site on your mobile
site, questions like these help you to start thinking about how to pare
down your assets to a more streamlined and effective site.