"It seems like a such a huge undertaking," the Senior VP of Marketing told me. "Frankly, we're terrified we're going to make things worse than they already are."

The VP was sitting at the conference table with her senior staff. They'd been discussing the state of the web site and their desire to completely redesign it.

I couldn't really fault them. One person had created the site in 1997, basically to showcase some of their most basic features. Over the years, as the business needed a new feature or added a new service, they appended functionality and content to the site without fanfare or forethought.

Initially, they didn't consider the web important to their business. Like many small organizations, the web's strategic advantage to their business just crept up on them--they didn't plan it, it just grew that way. They woke up one day and realized that their web site had become critically important. Organic design, I call it.

Now, years later, they were faced with a site that seemed to defy architecture. Everyone at the table agreed. The look was dated--big fonts, too many graphics, and frames (you read that right--frames!). They all knew something had to be done.

That's why we were talking about a re-launch. More than anything, they wanted a major overhaul. A complete rethinking of the site. A total gutting--they will spare nothing--they will redesign everything.

It sounded good on the surface, but the dimensions of it were overwhelming. There was so much content--approximately 3,000 pages at last count. A complete new architecture had to come from scratch. They had to drive the design from the user's goals and tasks--a new mindset for people who normally think in terms of business units and organizational departments.

For example, they knew the current left navigation bar had to go. It was 24 independently scrolling links with ambiguous single-word terms, no specific order, and rarely useful to the user. They knew they wanted to replace it with links specific to the user's tasks. (For example, while exploring housing mortgages, the links would all be specific to researching, explaining, and applying for loans.)

The team to do this was limited with five full-time folks. None of them had ever undertaken anything of this scale. Even something as simple as a card-sorting exercise seemed daunting, because of their lack of experience.

It would have been easier to consider this if everyone hated the site. But, that was the problem. People loved the site! Customers regularly wrote emails saying that the site was great. Many generally considered them the most state-of-the-art of all their competitors. The industry trade press regularly hailed the site as an "example of the future."

Everybody thought it was great. Except for the designers, who knew, deep down, that they could do *so much better.* The VP leaned forward and asked me, "How do we orchestrate a re-launch on a site this big without upsetting our customers? Any change is going to be *so* dramatic that people are definitely going to complain. How do we do this?"

I leaned back in my chair, paused for a second, then dropped the bomb. "You don't, " I responded. "A re-launch is a very bad idea. I highly recommend against it."

The group around the table manifested what looked to me like a single confused look. It was as if they had a corporate standard for displaying puzzlement.

The Creative Director, who'd been very quiet up until now, broke the silence. "Are you saying that we keep the site as it is? Leave things the way they are?"

"No," I replied, "I'm just saying that you don't embark on a total redesign. There's another way to build a new architecture with a whole new site without the risks of a re-launch."

I explained that re-launches are a thing of the past. There was a time when sites launched in cycles, living from one major redesign to the next. Each new redesign would bring a whole new look, a whole new user experience.

Companies would often hire new outside firms to create and execute these new designs, abandoning the firm that made the previous design. The new firms would try to top the existing design with something dramatically different and attention-grabbing. After all, if you can't notice any change, why did it cost so much?

Subtle Evolution: the Success of Continuous Design Improvements

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jared M. Spool is a leading expert in the field of usability and design since 1978, before the term "usability" was ever associated with computers. He is the Founding Principal of User Interface Engineering (www.uie.com), the largest usability research organization of its kind in the world.