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Consider Eye-Tracking for Placement of Your Website’s Most Important Content

An eye-opening session from SES in New York

Have you every wondered where your users are looking on your website? Are they paying attention to your most important content, the advertisements on your site or the images you display?

Knowing where your audience looks on your webpages will help you better serve them with content. This, in

An eye-opening session from SES in New York

Have you every wondered where your users are looking on your website? Are they paying attention to your most important content, the advertisements on your site or the images you display?

Knowing where your audience looks on your webpages will help you better serve them with content. This, in turn, will help build a strong community around your website.

When it comes to your website, placement matters.

To decipher where people look, eye-tracking has been used online for about the last 15 years. Eye-tracking is done to monitor:

-Where users’ look

-Why they look in certain areas

-To predict where they will look next

-Where users do not look

-The sequence they follow while browsing your website

At SES in New York, I attended a session entitled Placement Matters: How Eye-Tracking Helps Improve Display Advertising. Kate Kaye, Senior Editor at ClickZ News, moderated this session while speakers Leslie Chacon, Founder of User First and Kim Krause, Founder of Cre8pc, shared their insight.

One important piece of information taken from this session discussed how users often ignore very large images that are associated with top stories.

Users are typically browsing sites with the following concepts:

-Where am I currently?

-Am I in the right place?

-Where can I go next?

-How do I get there?

[text_ad]

These questions aren’t necessary conscious thoughts, but they do describe how the user interacts on web pages. It’s important to keep users engaged and make sure they aren’t confused by the content you are displaying.

Results

Traditional studies have shown the “F Pattern” as a tendency of how users look on websites. See the image below for an example.

F Pattern
F Pattern from UseIt.com

Users often look at the upper left first, over the top of the page and then down. The way the eyes move within the page creates the “F Pattern”.

Tips for better site engagement

According to the presenters, images influence where the eyes go. However, don’t include ones that are incredibly large. Make them comparable to the other content on the rest of the page.

Be careful with stock photos. Many people tend to ignore them.

When laying out pages, use limited font types and stick with plain text if possible. If you are going to show images of humans, faces and cleavage tend to attract the most attention.

Biggest problems with advertisements

Ads that look like website images are not accepted well with users. People do not like to be fooled and they feel deceived when it happens.

The allocation of words and images can be an issue if they are not located close enough to each other. You do not want to make the user to have to look back and forth as this may create frustration and prohibit further engagement.

Fun facts from the session:

-When human beings have trust for something, their eyes dilate. The same happens with cats as well.

-Looking at site maps of how the cursor moves alone the page may not be accurately describing where the user is looking.

By Amanda MacArthur

Research Director & Managing Editor

Amanda is responsible for all the articles you read on the Mequoda Daily portal and every email newsletter delivered to your inbox from us. She is also our in-house social media expert and would love to chat with you over on @Mequoda. She has worked with Mequoda for almost a decade, helping to evolve the Mequoda Method through research, testing and developing new best practices in digital publishing, editorial strategy, email marketing and audience development. Amanda is a co-author of our four digital publishing handbooks.

Co-authored handbooks:

Contact Amanda:

Contact Amanda via email at amanda (at) mequoda (dot) com, @amaaanda, LinkedIn, and Google+.

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