Identifying user‐based criteria for Web pages
- 1 December 1997
- journal article
- Published by Emerald Publishing in Internet Research
- Vol. 7 (4) , 252-262
- https://doi.org/10.1108/10662249710187141
Abstract
Reports on Phase I of a two-part project to identify and implement user-based design criteria in World Wide Web pages. The purpose of the identification phase (Phase I) is to identify the criteria that influence a particular user community’s use of the Web and to analyze these within the context of the users’ overall information-gathering behavior. Data were gathered through a questionnaire and electronic focus group session with nine faculty from four business schools. Participants identified 49 Web page features which clustered into eight broad categories of criteria having a significant positive or negative impact on their use of WWW pages. They also identified types of information normally used in work activities; methods of finding this information within the current information service environment; likely changes in behavior if the information became available via the Web, including willingness to pay.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The missing linkACM SIGCHI Bulletin, 1996
- HCI and the WebACM SIGCHI Bulletin, 1996
- World Wide Web home page design: Patterns and anomalies of higher education library home pagesReference Services Review, 1996
- Guidelines for Internet resource selectionCollege & Research Libraries News, 1996
- Guidelines for designing usable World Wide Web pagesPublished by Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) ,1996
- Writing Web page standardsCollege & Research Libraries News, 1996
- SunWeb: user interface design for Sun Microsystem's internal WebComputer Networks and ISDN Systems, 1995
- EDGAR: Electronic Data Gathering and ReceivingBusiness Information Review, 1995
- Internet resources for economicsCollege & Research Libraries News, 1994
- Internet resources for businessCollege & Research Libraries News, 1994