Developing effective websites often requires organisational change to a culture where people at all levels in the organisation adopt behaviours that make a 'good user experience' an important goal. A good user experience is one where a user achieves their goals and is highly satisfied with the process; it will encourage reuse and recommendation of the site. If the organisation is not focused on providing a good user experience, they will be unable to build an effective web site. Understanding the user experience, through research methods like usability testing, can be a powerful tool in driving the organisational change needed to develop effective websites.
Three key organisational issues can get in the way of developing effective websites:
It is critical that everyone in the organisation who can affect the user experience has a clear understanding of what the website is trying to achieve - that is:
In our experience, strategic confusion rather than strategic clarity is the norm, as these questions have not been answered. Often the strategy is just "We must have a website!" with no detailed thought given to: which audiences are to be targeted; what goals users want to achieve; and how the site will deliver value for the organisation. Even if these issues have been addressed they are often poorly communicated, so different people in the organisation are working on different assumptions about what the site strategy is.
Websites are often designed to reflect the internal structure of the organisation. But users don't care about departments and functions; users just want to achieve their goals, and this is likely to cut across internal structural boundaries. Organisational staff will be very familiar with how their organisation works; users do not come with this knowledge. So, without a detailed understanding of users, their likely goals, and how they want to achieve these goals, the website will inevitably end up with an organisational rather than user focus.
If only one person is responsible for producing content for a site, it's easy to get consistency. However, as soon as several people have this responsibility, the website is likely to become variable in quality and style. This is exacerbated when content providers have a poor understanding of the site strategy and users, and have experience of developing content for print media rather than the web. In order to have an effective website, these distributed content producers need to understand what information needs to be presented to meet user and organisational goals, and how this needs to be presented to make the site usable.
Change often fails in organisations either because change is not focused on the 'right' business issues or because people don't change their behaviours in the long term. The trick is to get people to change their behaviours to focus on the 'right' issues - e.g. having an effective website. This needs user-based evidence on how to meet user goals, clear leadership to direct and inspire, and the participation of the organisational members in changing their behaviours. To paraphrase Henry Mintzberg et al (1997), a well known writer on strategic change:
"Managers must understand what's happening, ensure staff know what's happening and set frameworks for change - but ultimately allowing people to figure out how to change."
But changing behaviours is easier said than done. Organisational culture - or 'the way we do things around here' - is described by Ed Schein (1994) as having three levels: the behaviours, which are underpinned by espoused values about how the world works, and which in turn are shaped by hidden assumptions and values, derived from both the organisation and individuals' own experiences.
Behaviours are explicit - you can see them; assumptions and values are normally tacit, or hidden. Only by affecting the tacit assumptions and values can behaviours be changed. Just telling people what to do won't work - change will only result if the tacit issues can be influenced.
Understanding the user experience can be a powerful tool in disturbing tacit assumptions and 'mental models' about how the world works. The user is often not well understood by staff within the organisation. It is only by watching users on the website and seeing their frustration, often over things which should be very easy to do, will people develop new mental models of users' requirements, and be motivated to change things.
Change cannot be 'done' to an organisation - the organisation has to commit to the process and 'do it to itself'. Because change ultimately has to take effect at the level of individual assumptions and values, it is very specific to the organisation. Prescriptive blueprints won't work. However, there are certain key elements that need to be incorporated into a change framework aimed at focusing the organisation on developing and maintaining an effective website:
Schein, E.H. (1994) Organizational Psychology, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall.
Mintzberg, H., Ahlstrand, B. and Lampel, J. (1998) Strategy Safari, Hemel Hempstead: Prentice Hall.