Home
  • About
  • Contact
  • Presentations
  • WordPress Consulting
  • Advertising
  • Guest Posts
  • For Students
  • Jobs
  • Podcasts Book Reviews

    Archive for caroline jarrett

    Making Help Content Enjoyable to Read — Impossible Quest?

    January 25th, 2011 | 21 Comments »

    manreadingthumb2

    In my previous post (“Less Text, Please”), I argued that users want shorter texts. I also explained how social media and Internet sites have possibly rewired our brains to incline us toward shorter content — according to some, our gnat-like attention spans can only consume a few short paragraphs before tapping out. The Onion has a great parody of how a single block of uninterrupted … more »


    Best Practices for Writing Interface Text [Organizing Content #24]

    August 13th, 2010 | 15 Comments »

    interfacehelpsmall
    This entry is part 19 of 50 in the series Findability

    In this ongoing series on organizing content, we’ve shifted from organizing help outside the interface to organizing help inside the interface. Moving help inside the interface has many advantages, and there are plenty of best practices for style and format. But the biggest shift in perspective, which I argued in my last post, is to stop differentiating between the interface and the help content. The … more »


    Removing Inline Links to Increase Readability

    June 19th, 2010 | 28 Comments »

    In the unfolding saga of inline links within posts and the decline in readability that these links bring about, Adriel Hampton’s post helped me persuade me more to this idea. Hamptom quotes from Nicholas Carr’s book, The Shallows: What the Internet Is Doing To Our Brains. Carr writes, (In a 2001 study) one group read (a short story) in a traditional linear-text format; they’d read … more »


    Embedded Links and Online Reading Accessibility: Whitney Quesenbery and Caroline Jarrett, #stc10

    May 7th, 2010 | 16 Comments »

    This entry is part 2 of 19 in the series STC Summit in Dallas

    In this video, I talk with Whitney Quesenbery and Caroline Jarrett about the feasibility of removing links embedded directly within paragraphs — which Kathryn Summers and Ginny Redish describe as “exit points” that confuse and disorient low-literacy readers.


    Forms that Work – Interview with Caroline Jarrett (podcast)

    June 20th, 2009 | 3 Comments »

    [Audio clip: view full post to listen] Download MP3 Length: 11 min. In this podcast, Caroline Jarret talks about her new book, Forms that Work: Designing Web Forms for Usability, which she co-authored with Gerry Gaffney. Forms she discusses go beyond merely the type of IRS forms you fill out at tax time. Every website usually has some online form to collect information from users, … more »


    STC Summit Atlanta Adventures: The Agony and Ecstasy of Presenting

    May 8th, 2009 | 16 Comments »

    This week I returned from the annual STC Summit in Atlanta. Every year is always a series of adventures at these conferences. I’d never been to Atlanta before. I arrived a day early, because I was originally scheduled to give a workshop on blogging, but it was canceled due to lack of participants. Attendance at the STC Summit overall was down by about 35%. I … more »