Essays

Essays about Nice Touch

3 months ago

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Getting on Your Users’ Side

The first thing I looked for when I went to Hulu’s page for The Soup was the list of full episodes—someone had told me about a particular episode and I wanted to check it out. Scrolling down the page, though, I found only clips. My immediate reaction to discovering this fact was childish but came directly from my gut: I was pissed off. I wanted to see an episode of The Soup, I wanted to see it now, and now Hulu was standing in my way instead of making it easy for me like watching television online should be. Annoyed, I began to click away elsewhere while silently saying to myself, ‘I don’t care about their licensing predicaments and the intricacies of television broadcast rights—why can’t Hulu just get its act together and get this show so I can watch it?’

But then I noticed the little notice under the show banner.

Screenshot of the Hulu homepage for ‘The Soup’

It says, ‘Full episodes of The Soup are not available for online streaming at this time. We’ll continue to request them on our users’ behalf.‘ With those two little sentences, Hulu completely reversed the snap negative judgment I had hefted on the site. To the user, those sentences make it clear that not only is Hulu aware that this show is missing full episodes, but that they seem just as dissatisfied with the situation as I do. And what’s more, they’re working hard to change the situation.

The wording ‘on our user’s behalf’ is absolutely perfect for the intended effect. It made me feel like Hulu was on my side.

Users are unforgiving, and they’ll blame everything connected to your site on you even when those things are out of your control. So when something is out of your control, show the user you’re on their side. When you can’t give your users everything they want, commiserating goes a long way towards making them happy anyways.


Hulu goes a lot further than simply dumping boilerplate into this notice box. Many shows have descriptions of how many episodes are available for streaming at once, and when new episodes of the show will return if the show is on a hiatus.

Screenshot of the Hulu homepage for ‘Dollhouse’

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2 years ago

Thursday, October 18, 2007

Nice Touch: Background Window Scrolling in OS X

I was beaten to the punch. I was going to write a post about how great it would be if I could scroll windows in the background in OS X. I had even created a graphic for it.

A screenshot showing OS X’s “Stickies” application and webpage behind it.

“I’d love to be able to scroll through a webpage and take notes on it in Stickies without switching applications,” I was thinking.

But then Apple took care of it:

A screenshot from Apple’s website of a new feature in Leopard. It says: 'Scroll any open window, even if it’s not active. Simply position your mouse over the target window and scroll.'

Excellent!

3 Comments

2 years ago

Tuesday, October 9, 2007

Nice Touch: Tips Pre-Calculated on Restaurant Bill

Perhaps some of you have already seen this, but we were recently impressed at a restaurant upon noticing the tip percentages for our meal printed on the bill. Check it:

Nice Touch: A receipt with the tip percentages calculated for you.

You can even choose from three levels of benevolence. Have you run into this before, and do you find it useful? We think so, but do you find it tacky? Do you not like being told what to tip? Would a split-up of the cost between patrons be just as or more useful?

6 Comments

2 years ago

Saturday, September 29, 2007

Nice Touch: Search Stores by ISBN

Did you know that Amazon’s search field accepts ISBNs? It does — both the 10- and 13-digit variety. Type or paste in an ISBN, hit “Go,” and you’ll be taken straight to the book page. It’s perfect for when you’re searching for a book whose title isn’t very unique. (Sorting through the various editions of “The Elements of Style” is how I found this feature.)

It’s the sort of obvious, hidden feature you don’t think about until you try it. You’re hoping it will work, and it does. Sweet.

(This also works on Half.com, Barnes & Noble, and of course Borders, which is just an Amazon storefront.)

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