The Amazon Jungle, Part II
I’m really liking where the Amazon UI is heading.
Not to say that their interface has been devoid of good design decisions over the past 9 years. I mean, they were the first e-commerce company to truly leverage collaborative filtering, essentially taking advantage of The Long Tail of online consumerism, long before the terminology was officially anointed within the context of new media. Just getting those features into the interface — placing more eyes on more products — drove the business model and the promise of the New Economy circa 1998.
But crafting the balance between user search, participatory and discovery scenarios within the interface was definitely an afterthought. As a matter of fact, at one point in time, it seemed that Amazon had little concern for any interaction design considerations within the interface at all, satisfied to add features within a scroll-driven, hierarchical construct to no end.
Well, that has seemingly changed. Check out a new test version of the product page:
Am I the only one standing up and applauding? The interface now completely supports the common needs of all users at a point-of-purchase.
- Clearly display the product price & savings
- Show the product itself
- Provide the ability to purchase it or add it to a Wish List
- Then provide the ability to move into search, participatory or discovery scenarios
Amazon reduced the cognitive friction of the previous interface
by removing the bookend columns of contextual navigation and by moving only the highest priority scenario features (reading reviews and looking inside/searching the book) under the primary sales window. The affordance for the DHTML window on the product image needs to be increased, as it is currently one of purely learned behavior, but the simplicity of the new interface does wonders in focusing my attention.
Take a look at the old interface in comparrison:
For someone that has reached the conclusion of their search or discovery scenario, the shopping experience is now set up for the user to determine price feasibility, drop the product into their cart and either head for checkout or continue to discover.
For someone who’s in the midst of a discovery process, the interface hasn’t changed for the worse, as an anchor link still drops the user down to user reviews. It’s now just better placed. The interface continues to present other collaborative filtering information below the fold. With these smart design decisions, Amazon now finds itself in a position to add elegant customization, because elegant design parameters have been established.
The Amazon jungle is evolving, and in very smart fashion. In my book, that’s pretty cool.
Tags: affordance, Amazon.com, business, customization, design, discovery, ecommerce, elegant, experience design, hierarchy, information architecture, interface, internet, parameters, personalization, review, scenario, search, The Long Tail.Search
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