Get in touch

+44 (0) 28 9099 2882
deeper@fathom.pro

Fathom

The central role of ignorance in human folly

The central role of ignorance in human folly

Totalitarian states suppress their media outlets, or simply run their media directly, because they recognize the power that knowledge has to change the world. The sad corollary is that they understand the key part that ignorance plays in the suppression of their people, their potential and their aspirations.

Whilst it is sad that many live in ignorance and fear due to harsh political regimes, what is sadder still is the fate of those who can access knowledge and the power it brings, but choose not to, due to laziness or pride. John Heywood’s paraphrase of Old Testament prophet Jeremiah appears to be on the money “There is none so blind as he who will not see”.

The web has revolutionised the world because it has empowered everyone who uses it with the potency of knowledge. It is unsurprising to learn that the world’s most successful online businesses are committed to mining that knowledge on a never–ending journey of self–improvement. We do well to follow their example.

We can now know what content should be on our home page. We can now know what our calls to action should be. We can now know how our content should be structured. What imagery invokes the greatest response; what time we should send our emails for maximum impact; what our buttons should be called; what title we should put on our social media posts. All of these facts can be known, not surmised or guessed, because our users will inform us, if we bother to listen to them.

Unsurprisingly Google were the very earliest adopters of user–driven design, launching their first A/B test as far back as 2000. An A/B test is where a website provides a user with two (or more) alternates of a certain web page and when enough volume has been generated to provide statistically meaningful results, the better performing page is retained and the lesser page archived. Google wanted to know what number of search results per page was optimal for users, so 0.1% of users were shown 20 results per page, 0.1% shown 25 results per page, 0.1% shown 30 results per page and the remainder were shown the default 10 results per page. The findings provided a crucial insight that tenths of a second had a big bearing on user satisfaction and experience.

And so A/B testing became a way of life at Google and has been woven into their DNA ever since. In 2011 Google carried out over 7,000 A/B tests on its search algorithm alone. At any one time it is running so many A/B tests that it is difficult to know what the “real” Google is.

The greatest e–marketing project of all time, Obama’s election campaign 2008 (admittedly being pushed hard by the astonishing quality of the online coverage across a range of channels for the London Olympics 2012) put user knowledge at the heart of its design processes. With the aim of motivating website visitors to leave their email address (the singular most effective channel for converting them into donors) on the site, the home page featured a touching photo of the Obamas and a call to action button.

Can we prove that a button reading “Learn More” is objectively superior to a button reading “Sign Up Now”, or that a black and white image of the Obama family is evidentially better than a colour picture of Barrack doing his thing at the podium?

Yes we can! Given the choice of calls to action “Learn More”, “Join Us” Now or “Sign Up Now”, the highest performing option was “Learn More”, scoring 18.6% more sign–ups per visitor than “Sign Up”. The black and white Obama family picture outperformed the podium shot by 13.1% on the same metric. The result? A nearly 40% increase on the effectiveness of the home page to do its job.

As far back is 1597 Sir Francis Bacon stated that Knowledge is Power. We harness that power by putting the user at the heart of the design process.

By Gareth Dunlop

Gareth formed Fathom in 2011 and has been in the business of design performance for over two decades.

View more insights by Gareth

Like to read more of our insights regularly?

Receive our monthly insights newsletter straight to your inbox.

To prove you’re a human please rewrite the following into the box below.
kz0rgu5a

Latest from the blog

Our latest views and ideas

Our Cookie Policy

Find out more I accept

Like most websites, ours uses cookies to make sure you receive the best experience possible. These cookies are safe and secure and do not store any sensitive information. To continue, please accept the use of cookies.