Little things mean a lot: Usability & the wonky tray table effect

Even relatively small usability problems can have a big effect on user experience and user confidence on your site, especially at crucial stages of the user journey. 

Very often in usability testing we see things that are minor or cosmetic usability faults but which have a larger consequence than expected due the context in which they occur. 

For example if a person sees a spelling mistake on the shopping basket page of an e-commerce site they might think "I'm about to give these guys my credit card details in a minute, but they can't even spell words in proper English. I'm not so sure now... maybe I'll check out that other site I saw." Shopping cart abandoned.

I call this the Wonky Tray Table Effect and full credit to our client who told me the story which gives it this name. Apparently he was on a long flight having the in-flight meal (rarely a pleasant experience in economy class) and the fold-down table was a bit broken. The hinged strut holding up one side of the table was missing a screw, so every time he pressed down to cut his food the tray tilted. Drinks slid and almost spilled. A pretty unpleasant experience at 30,000 feet.

Airline meal
 
What has this got to do with usability? Because although he knew that it was only to do with his tray table, he found himself looking out the window and thinking 'Hey, how are those engines doing? Do they normally wobble & shake so much under the wings?'
 
So he had extrapolated his minor problem of a tiny missing screw into doubts over the structural integrity of the aircraft and the brand of a major international airline that shall remain nameless. Totally irrational I know, but we humans are like that sometimes.
 
Similarly when your customers experience a typo or a misplaced apostrophe (my personal bugbear) there is a risk that this could trigger much wider doubts over credibility & security.
 
The user experience means more than just usability and one reason for this is the context of use. Especially when entering into the checkout and buy phase, when the site is asking the visitor questions instead of providing useful info, people are a bit sceptical and easily dissuaded. 

They don't want to be filling out the form in the first place, but they need to in order to get the stuff they want. Showing your customers your faults at this point is more likely to cause them to think twice.
 
The moral of the wonky tray table story is don't overlook or accept even the apparently small errors, especially on the home page and registration or checkout. Excuse me while I go proof read the User Vision site again....

Chris Rourke is Managing Director of User Vision and a guest blogger at Econsultancy.

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Reader comments (8)

  1. Avatar-blank-50x50 David Travis

    11:05AM on 9th October 2009

    "I'm about to give these guys my credit card detals in a minute, but they can't even spell words in proper English."

    Shouldn't "credit card detals" be "credit card details".

    These little things matter, Chris. :-)

  2. Chris Lake Chris Lake Staff

    Director of Product Development at Econsultancy

    11:13AM on 9th October 2009

    Good spot David: now fixed. We should have caught that one prior to publication really.

  3. Roberto Hortal Munoz Roberto Hortal Munoz Silver

    Head of Digital at EDF Energy

    11:14AM on 9th October 2009

    And I suspect "airlane" stands for "airline"? ;)

  4. Avatar-blank-50x50 George - Planet Anarky

    11:14AM on 9th October 2009

    Chris was clearly testing our proof-reading... ;)

  5. Avatar-blank-50x50 Colette - Think LIke a User

    12:35PM on 9th October 2009

    An excellent analogy - I use one with hotels.

    Customers can tolerate a bit of a queue checking in. They start to wonder when all the lifts are broken. And when they're greeted by leaky taps and a moldy shower curtain in their bathroom, they're convinced they've checked into hell and wish they were some place else.

    Users will forgive an occasional oversight, but a series of mistakes soon create an unpleasant snowball effect, and then you've lost that user for ever.

    Nice post - and now I can vary my analogies when I'm teaching - cheers :)

  6. Avatar-blank-50x50 Hayley - Short Couture

    12:37PM on 9th October 2009

    I thought only I distrusted sites with bad spelling and grammar. Good story, point well made.

    Um...apparantly should be apparently and us humans should be we humans. Sorry - lesson over.

  7. Chris Rourke Chris Rourke Gold

    Managing Director at User Vision

    1:55PM on 9th October 2009

    Hi All - Oh dear that is what happens when a person  types up a blog post on a cramped overnight flight (hence recalling the tray table incident) , proof reads, spell checks and corrects the mistakes, and then whilst changing flights in an airport in a jet-lag fog and enthusiam to publish promptly uploads the original (incorrect) version. Nice one.   Many apologies and 1 red face.  Getting someone else to publish next time.  Made the point stronger though....

  8. Avatar-blank-50x50 craig

    5:52PM on 14th October 2009

    You don't know how histerical this post is. I meen hysterical. I mean funy.... Oh fuggit.

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