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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best and most usable titles on User Experience Design
From 9 to 5 (well, a "little" after 5 most days), I am an Application Development Manager in my company. In my years doing this, I have read a lot of books on the topic of Web and User Experience Design. So far, only a handful stand out above "Designing the Obvious" by Robert Hoekman Jr. and even some of those, he takes his hat off to (such as the case of "Don't Make Me...
Published on February 25, 2007 by Manny Hernandez

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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A fine little book
Not essential reading, but a really good little book. If you diligently follow companies like 37 Signals or other smart web application development practices, you've probably already thought of most of this. But it's nice to have it in a single, well-written, volume. One problem is that the author talks about "common sense" and "obviousness" as if they were universal,...
Published on February 12, 2008 by Andrew Otwell


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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best and most usable titles on User Experience Design, February 25, 2007
This review is from: Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design (Paperback)
From 9 to 5 (well, a "little" after 5 most days), I am an Application Development Manager in my company. In my years doing this, I have read a lot of books on the topic of Web and User Experience Design. So far, only a handful stand out above "Designing the Obvious" by Robert Hoekman Jr. and even some of those, he takes his hat off to (such as the case of "Don't Make Me Think", for instance).

Hoekman proposes the "unthinkable" for those entrenched into rusty web design practices, but when you step back and reconsider the experiences you've had, his framework makes perfect sense. Here are a couple of thoughts he brings to the table, to give you an idea:
-Design an application that does one thing, and does it very well. For every additional feature, there is more to learn, more to tweak and configure, more to customize, more to read about in the help document, and more that can go wrong.
-People (users) don't always make the right choices. They make comfortable choices... they make choices they know how to make. To deal with this, he supports Goal-Directed (also called Activity-Centered) Design, as opposed to Human-Centered Design.

Web Design anathema? Violation of User Interface "basics"? Maybe it sounds so at first, but if you read through his arguments, you will find them very compelling and may end up (like myself) reconsidering some of your initial assumptions.

One of the reasons why his proposal resonated so much with me is because throughout the book, Hoekman introduces concepts that are not familiar in the Web space, borrowing them from long-established best practices in manufacturing (where I worked the first four years of my professional life), such as:
-Kaizen: improving things constantly, in little tiny ways that add up to gigantic results.
-Poka-Yoke: software "devices" meant to prevent user errors from occurring.
-Pareto (80/20 rule): Good, clean Web application design means that 80 percent of an application's usefulness comes from 20 percent of its features.

For longtime professionals and newcomers into the field of User Experience Design, Hoekman's book has turned into an absolute must read.
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21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Advice so obvious you never would have thought of it, May 29, 2007
By 
Eric D. Austrew (Brookline, MA United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design (Paperback)
The danger in reading a book that tells you to do obvious things is that you may find yourself thinking that since you could have thought of each piece of advice on your own, you would have. Alas, unless you have the depth of experience that someone like Robert Hoekman has acquired by working on dozens of projects, chances are there is at least one obvious thing in this book that you have missed in your last project.

If you're like me there is probably considerably more than one thing.

Hoekman lays out the basic principles of web application design clearly and succinctly. He starts by describing some of the practices that designers should adopt in order to understand how their users actually behave and what they really need. These practices are meant to cure readers of the habit of asking users what they want, which frequently results in honest but inaccurate answers. Hoekman's tools of choice for generating understanding are various forms of shadowing users while they do the tasks your application will perform, and his preferred method of documentation is the use case. No one who has worked in software development for any period of time will be surprised at the use case rules he lays out, but the example he gives is a rare glimpse into how the mind of an expert polishes a basic use case into something truly professional.

He next tackles the question of what features to put into your design and which to leave out. Here Hoekman is firmly in the minimalist camp exemplified by 37 Signals. He advocates ruthlessly stripping out "nice to have" features, and simplifying the rest. Although I had previously read much the same argument in "Getting Real", ([...]) once again I found that the example at the end of the chapter gave greater practical insight into how to actually select features to remove.

I found the chapter titled "Support the User's Mental Model" to be the most valuable in the book. As someone who is more often on the project management than the implementation side of web applications, I have often had an engineer propose a feature or refinement that makes perfect logical sense, but for some reason doesn't feel right. After reading this chapter, all of those vague feelings snapped into focus for me. Engineers are so deeply immersed in how the application works, and the possibilities that are available, that they sometimes want to structure interactions in ways that reflect the logic of the code rather than the logic of the activity. Previously I had been attributing most of these errors to the desire to provide more options to the user. Being able to distinguish between the two should help me in approaching these proposals better in the future.

The chapters on helping first time visitors become intermediate users quickly and on handling errors were also valuable, mostly because they focused on the introductory experience. There are dozens of books on design and interactions, but I have yet to see one that focuses exclusively on the crucial first visit of a user to a new site. Since this is where most of our products either succeed or fail, it's great to get some practical advice on how to gently guide a neophyte while still preserving the power a more experienced user will demand. Once again the blow by blow examples that tackle specific interaction problems and solve them are worth their weight in gold.

The rest of the book emphasizes the value of uniformity and novelty, and seemed less useful to me. It's possible that at my intermediate level of knowledge, those were the obvious things I HAVE thought of!

I only had one quibble with the book. Hoekman includes lots and lots of references to web sites and online articles that could be helpful, but each one is buried in the text. A page at the back that simply listed each of these sites would have been very helpful. Or better yet, list them on the author's web site and keep them up to date! What better way to promote yourself as an author long after the original book is dogeared and falling apart?

But this book is an invaluable resource, and one I expect will still be on my shelf long after all the sites it references have gone offline.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Great philosophy, questionable implementation, January 22, 2007
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This review is from: Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design (Paperback)
I thought this book was very useful on many points. Through the use of illustrative examples, the author really points out what people are doing wrong (and right) in a lot of common web designs. His philosophy, essentially functional minimalism, means that you spend a lot more time stripping features off of applications than putting them on, and this is probably a great idea.

The only issue I have with this idea is that some of the exercises he proposes to help you pare things down are (in my opinion) very hard, or impossible. After all, if we were all decisive enough to excise things from the spec when they weren't strictly useful, they probably wouldn't be there in the first place.

Basically, it boils down to this: Figure out exactly what your application does. This is ONE thing. Then, remove everything that doesn't do that. If you can still do that thing, you won, and have a good design. The book goes into greater detail about a lot of things you can do to make your application as smooth for the user as possible, and helps to avoid common pitfalls. All designers should read this book - and all engineers should read it twice.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Simply Amazing, December 6, 2006
By 
Dan B "Dan B" (Fl United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design (Paperback)
I have been designing web sites and web applications for many years. I purchased over 100 books on web development and I have to say that "Designing the Obvious" is a breakthough book for web design and application development.

Clearly and precisely, Robert Hoekman Jr., explains the how's and why's of proper web design. The book not only explains the concepts of common sense designs, but why they should be implemented. The reader is given examples of web sites both wrong and right, for comparison.

The book is laid out in several chapters and covers every aspect of design, from simple registration screens, to complex content editing. The techniques represented show a clear method to allow you, the designer, to create the next application that can rival even the best web sites out there.

Robert also introduces you to a set of tools that can assist you in creating the perfect web application. After reading about them, I registered for several of the free features and even upgraded one to the full pay version. (Thanks Robert!)

Don't think this book is just for programmers. This book is also for web designers, whether graphic designers, Flash designers or otherwise. The book is well rounded and teaches many design from many perspectives.

This book is a must for anyone who designs, writes, edits, critiques or reviews web sites.

5 stars is not enough.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Solid, July 14, 2007
By 
R. Dumas (Massachusetts, US) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design (Paperback)
As a UI designer I enjoyed the book. It was clearly written with many useful nuggets of wisdom for those of us building web apps. Typically books like this deal with informational websites or ecommerce, this one covers the missing gap. While most of the examples were fairly light-weight web apps, the foundations covered in this book apply across the board. Usually I skip around in these books since the writing is so dry. Robert has written this one in a conversational tone and I read it cover to cover. Recommended.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best collection and modern usability advice I've read yet, May 12, 2007
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This review is from: Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design (Paperback)
As the popularity of WordPress has grown I've learned many lessons about design and usability, often the hard way. I wish this book had been around 4 years ago when WP got started, because we could have avoided dozens of mistakes along the way.

After I was about half-way through this book I ordered a copy for everyone in my company, even non-developers, because it concisely summarized so much of what I think we should do.
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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A fine little book, February 12, 2008
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This review is from: Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design (Paperback)
Not essential reading, but a really good little book. If you diligently follow companies like 37 Signals or other smart web application development practices, you've probably already thought of most of this. But it's nice to have it in a single, well-written, volume. One problem is that the author talks about "common sense" and "obviousness" as if they were universal, when they're not. It would have been nice to have some evidence from, say, the science of human visual perception to support some of the claims made here.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Good value: sensible, clear, readable, February 28, 2008
By 
antenna (ex-UK now US) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design (Paperback)
This book is to web application design what Steve Krug's Don't Make Me Think: A Common Sense Approach to Web Usability, 2nd Edition is to website design. Many of the same concepts are echoed, the style is fairly engaging (if you can bear the occasional coy "dear reader" kind of aside), and the publishing format is similar.

I agreed with much of what this book said. For example, the author advocates:
* Accommodating the users' mental models instead of forcing them to learn new concepts/skills
* Turning "beginner users" into "intermediate users" as quickly as possible
* Building applications that do one thing, or just a few very closely-related things, very well -- rather than ones with loads of add on capability
* Understanding users, but doing lots of (iterative) testing (incorporating feedback into the next version for testing) rather than a lot of research upfront

I had a few minor quibbles, including:
* Many of the illustrations seem rather gratuitous, making me suspect that they were thrown in there simply to increase the length of what is a slim volume. (A contrast with the Steve Krug book, where the illustrations genuinely add to the information content)
* The tone was a bit arch for me in places.
* For some of the points he made, I thought that there were better example applications than the ones the author used.

Nevertheless, this is a very easy and thought-provoking read. It will only take you a few hours to read it from cover to cover, but its recommendations will stand you in excellent stead for many years.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Creating powerful twenty-first century websites that are user-friendly, December 30, 2006
By 
Diane Cipollo (Editor at BellaOnline.com) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design (Paperback)
I have to admit that although I love all the new bells and whistles that come with each new upgrade of my favorite software, I sometimes use the older versions. Why? Because the older versions have a lower learning curve and are less complicated to use. This is also true for the internet and the new web technologies. Many website designers continue to create simple, static webpages because they are easier to create and their readers find them easier to use.

Designing websites today isn't as easy as it was just a few years ago, especially with the increased popularity of Ajax and other new scripting languages. Websites are becoming more like desktop applications and less like those old static pages. Of course, internet users expect to see these new features on your websites and that's the way it should be. After all, that's what makes the internet so exciting. However when creating these new, powerful twenty-first century websites, you also need to keep them user-friendly. The author, Robert Hoekman, Jr., shows you how to do just that in Designing the Obvious.

He begins by explaining his approach to designing user-friendly websites. He covers the basics such as understanding the user and evaluating what new features to use on your site. He uses many well known websites to demonstrate how today's new web technologies are being used successfully. After discussing how to design your site for these new website improvements, he then shows you how to implement them into your site.

Once you have the wireframe, or blueprint, for your site, he identifies the usual problem areas and common mistakes and shows how to avoid them. I especially liked the section that covered how to design user-friendly web forms. Web forms are still the best way to collect information from your site visitors for many web applications and the author shows you how to use the new technology to improve the usability of your web forms. He shows may ways to add what he calls Help Aids that assist the user as he progresses through the form and how to design your forms so that user mistakes are almost impossible.

Robert Hoekman, Jr. is a professional Interaction Designer and Usability Specialist. He has authored many books and training courses in this area.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Straight forward, concise and intelligent, November 1, 2006
This review is from: Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design (Paperback)
Design should be obvious. It is a really simple concept actually; if you want to make something usable, make it as easy to use as a door or a light switch. However, the genius of this book is not only its ability to make that argument, but also to instill the knowledge necessary for those of us lacking a design sense to make a usable interface.

In my personal opinion, every application designer and developer can benefit from the wealth of information and experience in this book. My company has adopted it as required reading for every one of our developers.
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Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design
Designing the Obvious: A Common Sense Approach to Web Application Design by Robert Hoekman (Paperback - October 22, 2006)
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