Suppose you are working as a web designer in a software house. A software house launched a website with poor navigation that makes it inaccessible to users. You have been asked to improve its usability. Briefly describe the changes you would make
Answers
Answer:
Top 10 Tips for Making Your Website Accessible
Choose a content management system that supports accessibility.
Use headings correctly to organize the structure of your content.
Include proper alt text for images.
Give your links unique and descriptive names.
Use color with care.
Design your forms for accessibility.
Answer:
Usability replaced the outmoded label “user-friendly” in the early 1990s. “Usability” has had trouble finding the definition we use now. Different approaches to what made a product “usable” splintered between looking at it with the view of the product in mind (i.e., the ergonomic design, such as a curved keyboard); looking at it from the point of view of the user (how much work and satisfaction/frustration he/she experiences using it); and the view of the user’s performance, which involves how easy the product is to use if it’s to be used in the real world.
Explanation:
Usability” refers to the ease of access and/or use of a product or website. It’s a sub-discipline of user experience design. Although user experience design (UX Design) and usability were once used interchangeably, we must now understand that usability provides an important contribution to UX; however, it’s not the whole of the experience. We can accurately measure usability.
A design is not usable or unusable per se; its features, together with the user, what the user wants to do with it, and the user’s environment in performing tasks, determine its level of usability. A usable interface has three main outcomes: