The Drupal project has been doing user experience work for several years but the pace has really picked up in 2008. This year alone we've have already completed two studies, both for Drupal 6.

Over the last week Leisa Reichelt, from Mark Boulton design has continued her user experience studies with iteration four of the redesigned Drupal.org site. In testing iteration four here's what the team from Mark Boulton design found.

  • We need to remove the word ‘Join’. Users need to be steered towards joining the community in the context of when they need to, not before. It just sends the wrong message.
  • We need to think about revising the ‘What is Drupal’ bit at the top of the non-logged in homepage. Leisa suggests putting case studies in there – it’s what everyone wants to see; who’s using Drupal and for what.
  • We need bigger and better signposting in the central section of key pages to download/extend, and community.
  • The logged-in homepage only appealed to hardcore community people. Even those who are fairly active, with 5-6 months experience, don’t find it that useful.


The results of those improvements can be see in prototype iteration 5.

The second user experience study is related to Drupal 6. Becca Scollan, from the interaction design & information architecture program at the University of Baltimore is starting her second Drupal user research study. Becca is studying strategies and workflow of web developers when building and maintaining a web content management system. Earlier this week we recruited thirty participants on the front page of Drupal.org and these participants are being invited to participate in 60 minute interviews. She will release the report in January and it should help to advise the Drupal community's efforts in improving the administration interface. If you would like to take part in the study please fill out this form.

The tools and techniques being used for improving open source software are becoming more accessible. We are working hard to make user experience studies an ongoing part of our every thing we do in the Drupal project. If you are interested in conducting your own studies let us know in the Drupal usability group.

Comments

erunixinc’s picture

I didn't have a chance to try drupal. :P I am banned from the site. BTW how i can delete this account? I don't need a reimbursement or anything just delete it since I am banned from the drupal.org website makes no sense for me to be here.

Thank You

ashish-ado’s picture

Till now we were using wordpress and joomla but after joining the community and hearing many good things about drupal, we are looking forward to adapt drupal as a platform for building sites and applications for our users.

Drupal is good and its has progressed a lot over the years. I personally like drupal and hopefully i will be convince everybody to switch over to dupal. I am just worried about building new web applications aspect of drupal. Can drupal be used to create and develop new application? Thats my major concern and i am still experimenting to find out the answer.

Outshine Solutions

vkdwivedi’s picture

There is definitely a misconception among people that Drupal is only for developers or people with programming skills. The message needs to clear that misconception.

toddtomlinson’s picture

I'm authoring Apress Publishings "Beginning Drupal 7" book, due to be published in March 2010. I highlight that misconception in the book - and walk the reader through the simple step-by-step process for building sites in Drupal 7. Part of the issue is education - people who make those statements clearly haven't invested any time in trying to learn the platform and all the things you can do with it without touching a line of code.

Watch for the book -- >http://www.apress.com/book/view/9781430228592 I hope to see many of you at DrupalCon.