If everybody at Amazon works so hard, why does the site still looks like it is 2003?
Fear.
Amazon is like that because of fear.
They should have changed it a long time ago.
This is a mess:
Okay, so the last point might just be my own personal opinion. But don’t get me wrong, I agree with a lot of what people say who defend Amazon’s [possibly out of date] design.
…and yet, they’re still long past due for an update.
Any designer who spends at least a half hour could come up with something like this:
u how to make a design look good.
A good design is a combination of:
In fact, it’s easy to spot a design that was tested excessively but failed to develop in other directions. Why is this so?
How does revision after usability testing work:
Years of “usability patching” makes the design become cluttered, heavy, and wordy. You can usually spot that as well. As an example, take a look at ethn.io, — ironically, a tool for usability testing (otherwise it’s great; I use it).
How to deal with that? Dear Amazon, have some balls and redesign it once in awhile.
But wait, Amazon is great.
I love Amazon too. Amazon’s overall UX is great. As Jacob Nielsen pointed out in 2005:
In the same article, Nielsen lists what is bad. Number one in the list? Cluttered pages.
Amazon’s product pages are littered with extraneous features, ranging from a “Gold Box” over a “wish list spree” to promotions for reading glasses and other irrelevant products. A single book page I analyzed contained 259 links and buttons. It was so cluttered that key product information — like publication date, page count, and average review rating — was three screensfulls below the fold (on a standard 1024 x 768 screen). Cluttered pages might work for Amazon because its users are typically long-time customers who know the features and can easily screen them out. Although first-time visitors are no doubt overwhelmed, by now they account for a tiny percentage of Amazon’s revenues.
We agree that the title is provided by the seller. We disagree on how Amazon should treat it.
Amazon should moderate the titles. They have a whole service called Mechanical Turk for that.
I used to buy phones on Amazon. But not anymore. The usability is horrible, the same models appear over and over again, and you have to compare them manually. There’s a ton they could do to make it clean and structured.
We have the same problem ourselves. We’re a tiny company compared to Amazon, and we have 46,000+ items to name, group, tag, and search.
It’s a huge project if you ask me. We’ve used and continue to use a combination of methods:
The result? All icons are sorted by name, category, subcategory, style, and tag:
There’s a single “Flying Stork With Bundle” (the last line on the screenshot).
There’s no “Flying stork with the baby icon, flat, color, 48x48px, free download in SVG, PNG” and multiple entries like that.
If we could do it, Amazon can do it. They should have a single Motorola Moto G item, not “Moto G (4th Generation) – Black – 16 GB – Unlocked – Prime Exclusive – with Lockscreen Offers & Ads” and multiple entries like that.
They should.
It’s simple with smartphones. There’s
Google Photos had a much harder time organizing my photos:
Example of a Well Organized Marketplace
I’m sorry I’ve tortured you guys with the screenshots in Spanish and German. Here’s a pretty structured marketplace in Russian:
A marketplace that organizes the products well. Have a look at carefully selected product characteristics. Unlike Amazon, it says if the phone has a memory extension slot (useful for all), while Amazon lists a processor (which means nothing to anyone except for experts).
Update 2: I spent a half-hour adjusting the sketch based on your feedback. Here’s the original design I used in the first version of this answer.
Update 3: Bonnie Foley-Wong made an excellent point about why confusing can be good for retail.
Ivan Braun’s answer to why Amazon’s website is designed the way it is designed is epic. I checked out Icons8’s website too – it’s beautiful! Which brought to mind some interesting findings by the founders of Textio. Before developing their technology to analyze language in the recruitment process, they analyzed Kickstarter projects and looked for correlations between successful campaigns and the words and images in the campaigns.
If you’re a designer, you may want to look away now.
Kickstarter projects with long text and a variety of font styles correlated with success. Textio CEO mentions their early project in an a16z podcast.
As Pascal Morimacil notes, “Confusing websites can actually increase sales.”
So although good, clean design can guide a customer through a website intuitively, a confusing website may scramble enough emotional signals to lead to more purchases (and maybe buyer’s remorse as well).
Update 4: I appreciate the comment from Yuriy Zaremba, a designer at Amazon, who shares his experience:
Looks nice, but would fail A/B tests for several reasons. How do I know? I design for Amazon.
I won’t do a deep-dive, but for starters-
- Product title contrast lowered- you’ve now sold less product
- Star rating outline lost and contrast lowered- your poor vision customers now can’t tell a good rating from a bad one- so you’ve sold even less product
- You took the most important thing about the product, the fact that it’s Prime, and de-emphasized it- so you’ve sold way less
- You’ve changed treatment of text explaining there are multiple options to some abstract circles that are not clear affordances. My mom wouldn’t know what those mean. She wanted it in white but only saw this as black- you now lost her as a customer.
I can go on and on, but just because the UI is pretty doesn’t mean you’re communicating effectively or building trust with your customer.
Thanks, mate. We agree on all the problems of my mockup. Moreover, what you said is easy to fix.
However, there’s another difficult question. Is Amazon the gold standard?
I don’t know how it is, but I’ve read
What I hear is: Amazon tests a lot, therefore it knows better. I can’t agree with that.
I know how it feels when your clients offer help. At Icons8, many features and improvements were proposed by our customers and our community.
To name a few:
And we have a lot of insight from our problem-seeking sessions when we ask people via Intercom about a design problem they have (not only on our website).
A developer from Venezuela said she hates starting Photoshop for simple edits – we’ve created our effects for her.
And we’ve done one extra step creating omg-img, so she doesn’t have to run our web app either.
The website, the community — together we create the wonderful things.
Check my other “long-read”: While I Was Redesigning a Boarding Pass, Paper Got Old
About the Author
Ivan is a founder of Icons8. He got his first job after drawing a banner with CTR of 43%. After years of creating icons, he specializes in rapid prototyping and backlog grooming.
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