Categories
Subscription Website Publishing

Link Affordance Usability Testing for Website Design

A great affordance test is to print off web pages in grayscale, give a test user a yellow highlighter and ask them to highlight anything on which they think they could click. The first thing you will notice is that anything that is underlined will get highlighted. Those words that may or may not

Link Affordance Test

A great affordance test is to print off web pages in grayscale, give a test user a yellow highlighter and ask them to highlight anything on which they think they could click.

The first thing you will notice is that anything that is underlined will get highlighted. Those words that may or may not be colored but which are not underlined will most likely not look like links to your test user.

Headlines that are not linked might also get highlighted because they are different in size, weight and location to the main content, all possible visual cues to a desperate information seeker. Users may also highlight images that are not linked while overlooking images that are linked based solely on subtle cues like outlining, drop shadows and 3-D effects.

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+.

One reply on “Link Affordance Usability Testing for Website Design”

Hi Amanda… just a little reminder. As the author of the article from which this content is pulled, I really need to make sure there’s a citation somewhere or the publishers of any books where I use or quote my own content will be down on my like a ton of bricks. I have a book chapter in line for publication at Peter Lang (it was supposed to be published two years ago, but that’s the way academic publishing works) and too much of this post is “word-for-word”. Thanks for keeping that in mind.

Roxanne

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Exit mobile version