Archive for February 25th, 2010
Google facts and figures (massive infographic) | Royal Pingdom
Posted in Shared on February 25th, 2010 by herkulano – Be the first to commentLow-Hanging UX Fruit, How a Well-Designed “Thank You” Inspires Community Uptake
Posted in Shared on February 25th, 2010 by herkulano – Be the first to comment- Tumblr, you have your user create her first blog post
- Twitter, you have your user find cool people to follow
- LinkedIn, you connect with your email address book
- Meetup, you have your user join a group
- a data verification step
- a reiteration of your brand’s identity and tagline
- a jumping off into content (where the bound rate will be high and not super effective in terms of engagement, relationship development, etc.)

Now, let’s look at the redesign of the Thank You page, which puts primary focus on Facebook Fan acquisition v. promoting both Twitter and Facebook equally:

- Inspired by the idea of the excitement around an “acceptance letter”
- Focused on the fun of university life and community
- Featured access to current students, faculty, and admissions through Facebook
- Increased Fan Page uptake from 28 fans per week (a consistent rate for one year) to 300+ fans per week (2+ weeks of ongoing data)
- Increased the quality of interactions on the Fan Page, where we were encouraged to see prospects asking questions that were fielded by students, admissions, and faculty
- Increased interaction with blog content, driving traffic to the parent site and making better use of all editorial collateral
- Integral—A necessary part of the conversion experience, it’s no longer just a simple hello/goodbye world
- Instantly Gratifying—If you’re testing a conversion experience the results are ongoing and take time. Adding a secondary conversion exercise like Facebook Fan acquisition is an immediate way to leverage (in real time) effects of your messaging
- Social—Leverages warm fuzzies in innovative ways and gets users connecting with one another
- Sticky—The last thing the user will remember about your brand, and can have the added possibility of taking the conversation even deeper into her personal network
Fresh Stuff From ROA in Paris
Posted in Shared on February 25th, 2010 by herkulano – Be the first to commentSync/Lost: an Immersive, Multi-User Visualization of Music History
Posted in Shared on February 25th, 2010 by herkulano – Be the first to comment
Sync/Lost [3bits.net] is a multi-user data visualization installation that allows users to become immersed in the history of electronic music. Starting from a complex timeline, user interactivity allows rhythms and sub-rhythms to merge into new sounds. The user interaction is accomplished with wiimote controls, wireless handheld pointers which are relatively easy to use and learn. The audible feedback is provided via wireless headphones.
The project's objective is to create an interface where people can explore all the connections between the main styles of electronic music through both visual and audible feedback. The interaction with the resulting network graph leads to "a collective consequence in the spatial visualization of information".
Via Visual Complexity.
