Einstein Industries

Beauty & Brains in Website Design: More Than a Pretty Face

Jul 15, 2016 @ 04:00 PM — by
Tagged with: Internet 101 For Doctors

 

People are psychologically hardwired to trust beautiful people, and the same goes for websites. Our offline behaviour and inclinations translate to our online existence.  — Dr. Brent Coker, University of Melbourne study on online consumer behavior

 

Fair or not, people are hardwired to trust beautiful people. The same holds true when it comes to your website, your face to the world.

But unlike a stunning portrait hanging in an art gallery, a website has to be more than just a pretty face.

To be discovered and delight, your website needs to offer an optimum experience in both form and function to build trust in you and your services.

A website that is unattractive, clunky, and confusing undercuts your perceived value.

The biggest source of frustration is the inability to find relevant information on a website. The best way to stop defection to other websites, and increase loyalty, is to be interesting.

Being pretty, but with nothing to say, is not enough. — Dr. Brent Coker, University of Melbourne study on online consumer behavior.

Judgments about your website are made in the blink of an eye. It takes just fifty milliseconds for people to start making conscious and subconscious judgments about your credibility and trustworthiness based on your website's design.

Is your site:

Now more than ever good design requires both beauty and brains.

The Hallmarks of Good Design

Good design caters to the user, and here's where simplicity triumphs. A simple, clean design reduces the cognitive load — the mental effort — required to understand how to use a website or what it's trying to say.

Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler.
— Albert Einstein

 

The more mental effort required to use a website, the more likely people will be confused, miss important information, or just leave.

Just as your computer slows down when too many programs are open, so does the human brain. Inundated with too much information or a confusing format, people become  overwhelmed. Then, when they max out, they leave.


Responsive Website Designs

Examples for Plastic Surgery, Dentistry, Fertility, Ophthalmology


Well-designed websites reduce the cognitive load by giving people the information they need — but not until they need it.

The trick is discovering the right mix of form and function that resonates with your audience. Unlike people looking for a movie or a pizza, people looking for health care struggle to find a balance between their right-brain and left-brain: A right-brain pursuit of wished-for results and a left-brain quest for facts that will reassure them.

To fulfill these dual needs, you need to understand your audience's mindset as well as their online behavior.  

You can't rely just on logic for the answers to these questions because, frankly, people aren't always logical.

They fail to make optimal choices on websites because they are prone to "satisficing," opting for choices or judgments that are "'good enough." Sometimes those choices are simply blind guesses because the mental effort required to understand a confusing website has exhausted their patience. At other times they just choose to leave.

So if logic isn't the Holy Grail of web design, then what is? Data.

Data-Driven Design

When people say one thing and do another, then data is where the truth lies. With more than 20 years of data on health care websites, Einstein Medical draws on a wealth of knowledge — not just hunches — to design websites with both beauty and brains.

We've captured millions of interactions that reveal how prospective patients look for information, navigate websites, and make the leap from visitor to patient. The process has allowed us to introduce a new class of data-driven designs that blend form and function, catering to the dual need for websites to please both search engines and people alike.

Because of the volume of data we have, we are uniquely positioned to draw statistically significant conclusions about the best ways to convince more patients to contact our clients' practices. Then we act on those conclusions, designing not just for looks, but for success.

Traits of Good Design:

Designing for Success

In today's multi-device world, design has more hurdles than ever to overcome. As consumers jump from mobile to laptop, design has to keep pace.

Don't be lulled into complacency by assuming the journey for important decisions like health care happens only on desktops.

In our tech-tethered society, you won't know when a micro-moment will happen. And you don't know where. But if your website embraces both beauty and brains, you'll be putting your best foot forward whenever, wherever it happens.

Responsive Medical & Dental Websites