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Sarah Worsham / May 7, 2009

On a Crusade Against Drop-Down Menus

crusadepuroticoricoAnyone who worked with me at the publishing company will know that I am completely (almost) against using drop-down menus on websites.  Why?  Well there are lot’s of reasons…

They’re cool

I hate using anything because it’s cool.  If you have a business reason for using something, that’s one thing, but using something because it’s cool, just isn’t.  Most things that are used for this reason are annoying and quickly become yesterday’s fad.  Besides, you’re running a business, not trying to join a high school clique.

They don’t work well

While this problem has improved, many sites still don’t implement drop down menus very well.  They’re hard to use and clicking on just the right link is very difficult.

They don’t show up on mobile devices

This has been improved as well.  But even if they do work on mobile devices, they’re even more difficult to use than when you have a mouse.

What about people without a mouse

There are people out there using computers without mice – text readers and other devices for people with disabilities, and other devices.  Some drop-down menus will have accessibility for people with keyboards or other devices, but often this is forgotten.

They’re a crutch

In order to properly (if there is such a thing) use drop down menus, information needs to be organized in a way that makes sense.  There needs to be some sort of hierarchy.  Most sites that use drop down menus don’t have a true information hierarchy, they just use cute titles that only make sense to the designer or marketing guy.  And there’s almost always a bunch of pages that don’t fit anywhere and are thrown under a Misc. heading – not very helpful.

It’s hard to find things

People are much faster at scanning a page than mousing over menu items to see what’s in them.  While your drop downs may seem like they’re saving time, they really are causing seconds of time for every use – that really adds up.

They’re annoying

I don’t know how many times I’ll go to a site with drop down menus and my mouse will happen to be over one of them.  All of a sudden a menu pops up when all I’m trying to do is read an article.  Now I have to take the time to move my mouse so I can do what I came to the site to do.  Or, I’ll be trying to navigate through a site but I can’t seem to get my mouse in the right place to keep the menu open long enough to click on the text – it can be pretty trying to click on a small word just to go to another page.

They’re a fad

For the most part, large sites have started to go away from drop-down menus (yay!).  They’ve found that people can scan through a long list of links much faster than they can hunt through different drop-down menus.  Having all the major links on a page means that it’ll be easier for people to find other reasons to stay on your site, instead of leaving or clicking off.

(photo by puroticorico)

Technorati tags: drop-down menu, usability, design, business, marketing strategy, marketing

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Sarah Worsham / May 7, 2009

Internet Marketing, Strategy & Technology Links – May 7, 2009

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  • Clickable Introduces Scalable Online Advertising Platform For Companies With Local-Business Customers (Ad Operations Online)
  • 6 Useful FeedBurner Features that are Normally Ignored (Daily Blog Tips)
  • Is Social Media Marketing Illegal? (SEOmoz)
  • 8 Things I Wish I Knew When Starting My First Business (Quick Sprout)
  • SocialToo Charging $20 for Emails, Reliability: It’s the “Spanging” Business Model! (ReadWriteWeb)
  • AdSense Announce ‘Google Ad Planner’ – Showcase Your Site (ProBlogger)
  • Video: Highlevel of the Five Eras of the Future of the Social Web (Web Strategy by Jeremiah)
  • Firefox Could Be the Real Facebook Challenger (ReadWriteWeb)
  • The Retweeting Movement Adds Some Powerful New Tools (Mashable)
  • Using Social Media Sites As “RSS Readers” (Web Worker Daily)
  • Biggest Danger on Social Networks Isn’t Hackers, It’s Dumb Employees (GigaOM)
  • Microsoft Must Buy Twitter (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • TV Revs to Decline 21% in 2 Years; ‘Transformation’ is Only Hope (Marketing Charts)
  • “Can You Sell?” Workshop (Tricycle)
  • 1-hour to understanding web business (Josh Klein Web Strategy)
  • Study: Retailers Shift Marketing Dollars Towards Social Media (Mashable)
  • Dear readers, I need your help! (Futuristic Play by Andrew Chen)
  • Don’t Look Now, But Someone’s Building Yet Another Techmeme (ReadWriteWeb)
  • Hulu CEO: Revenue ‘Ahead Of Plan’ This Quarter (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • Microsoft Starts the Layoff Machine Again With Thousands of Cuts: Steve Ballmer’s Memo to the Troops [MediaMemo] (All Things Digital)
  • Why Apple Won’t Buy Twitter (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • Demand for Bandwidth Leads to Fiber Boom (GigaOM)
  • Why You Can’t Trust Keyword Research (Search Engine Guide)

We post links to stories about how to use the web effectively throughout the day on Twitter, Google Reader Shared or Delicious.  Also, if you have a post or link you think is worth sharing, please let us know!

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Sarah Worsham / May 6, 2009

Internet Marketing, Strategy & Technology Links – May 6, 2009

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  • eMetrics San Jose 2009: Omniture Introduces Google Organic Search Ranking Segmentation (Web Analytics World)
  • The Changing Face of SEO (Duct Tape Marketing)
  • Media Execs Get a Little Less Grouchy: Are Ads Creeping Back? [MediaMemo] (All Things Digital)
  • How to Choose the Best Keywords for Optimized Public Relations (Online Marketing Blog)
  • 17 Statistics to Monitor on Your Blog [Day 30 – 31DBBB] (ProBlogger)
  • Yahoo And Microsoft Crawling Closer To Search Deal (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • Twittl: The Love Child of Digg and Twitter (Mashable)
  • The Future Of The Social Web According To Forrester, Owyang (Social Media Explorer)
  • Aggregate or be aggregated (Being Peter Kim)
  • Strategy Analytics and DIS Consulting See Cloud Computing and 3D as Key NAB Takeaways (Ad Operations Online)
  • 5 Questions with Jay Goldman on Social Media (Web Analytics World)
  • Give Your Twitter Page More Personality with Bubble Tweet (ReadWriteWeb)
  • DeeperWeb for Google Combines NeuSearch Cool Factors with Traditional Search Functionality (ReadWriteWeb)
  • Build a Twitter-Monitoring Dashboard Using TweetGrid (Web Worker Daily)
  • Interview: Mr. Youth and the Future of Social Media Marketing (The Social Times)
  • Why Push Gmail for Blackberry Is a Big Deal (ReadWriteWeb)
  • Google Apps Will Soon Play Friendly With BlackBerry Enterprise Server (TechCrunch)
  • How to Save Media (Technology Review)
  • SF Startup Mashery Kicking Butt In API Market (Silicon Alley Insider)
  • Social Media Campaign Gives NBC’s Chuck a Fighting Chance (Mashable)
  • Facebook Shuts Down RSS Feed App (ReadWriteWeb)
  • Behold the power of “Thank You” (B2B Web Strategy Blog)
  • Google Latitude Now Lets You Publish Your Location To Gmail Chat And Your Blog (TechCrunch)
  • In Defense of Splash Pages (The Bivings Report)
  • B2B Media Revenue Falls; Online Offsets Some Print Losses (Marketing Charts)

We post links to stories about how to use the web effectively throughout the day on Twitter, Google Reader Shared or Delicious.  Also, if you have a post or link you think is worth sharing, please let us know!

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About Sazbean


Sarah Worsham (Sazbean) is a Webgrrl = Solution Architect + Product Management (Computer Engineer * Geek * Digital Strategist)^MBA. All views are her own.

Business + Technical Product Management

My sweet spot is at the intersection between technology and business. I love to manage and develop products, market them, and deep dive into technical issues when needed. Leveraging strategic and creative thinking to problem solving is when I thrive. I have developed and marketed products for a variety of industries and companies, including manufacturing, eCommerce, retail, software, publishing, media, law, accounting, medical, construction, & marketing.

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