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The way you communicate with your users plays a very important part
in the perception users have of your site. A consistent
communication that is tailored to your target audience is vital if
you want to build a trust-relationship with your users.
Language
A first condition for an efficient, consistent communication is that
you always address the user in the same language. This may seem
evident, but on multilingual sites this is very often not the case.
Even single language sites in a language other than English
sometimes make the mistake of providing feedback or error messages
in English, because that's the language most programmers use as a
default.
Tone
Depending on your target audience, you will adopt a certain tone in
the communication with your users. That tone comes through in
different aspects of communication; in your writing style, but also
in the way you address the user. In English there is only one
personal pronoun for the third voice, "you", but in
French, Dutch and German for example there are two, one formal and
one informal. Take care to always be consistent; it is very
unprofessional for a Dutch-language site to sometimes address its
users with the formal "u" and sometimes with the informal
"je".
Standardised dialogues
If you offer a number of different forms on your site, make sure all
the forms are structured in the exact same way, with identical
terminology and order of the fields. Try to also word the
instructions and feedback messages in exactly the same way. By
always using the exact same turn of phrase, you create a sense of
uniformity that not only makes it easier on your users, it also
looks a lot more professional.
Identical buttons
The rules that apply for the instructions and feedback of forms also
go for the buttons: if the same button appears on several pages,
always use the exact same words and spelling. If your site has
several different forms for example, don't use one type of button at
the end of one form and another button at the end of another form
but always use the same simple 'Send' button.
Consistent layout
The communication with users isn't limited to the texts on your web
site, the layout of your site also communicates a message. The same
rule that goes for verbal communication is also true for visual
communication: be consistent. Especially on e-commerce sites,
consistent visual communication is very important. Users find it
very confusing when a site takes them to a page that looks
completely different from the rest of the pages from that site and
they often start wondering whether they're still on the same site.
Users are very hesitant to trust their credit card data to a site
that doesn't even succeed in making all of its pages look the same
way, especially if it's the payment page that has a different look
and feel.
Els Aerts & Karl Gilis
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