Usability of Confirmation Email and Transactional Messages
73 Design Guidelines for Automated Messages from Websites to Customers

 

108 pages PDF format
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Summary

 

Confirmation email is one of the most important touchpoints for keeping customers appraised of the status of their transactions and for enhancing your reputation for great customer service. Good email usability can save huge amounts of money by reducing the number of telephone calls to your call center. Bad email will often get deleted unread; it'll definitely make customers feel uncertain and poorly treated.

The report contains 73 guidelines for improving the design of confirmation email and other transactional messages that are generated automatically by a computer (the report doesn't cover human-authored customer service email). The report is richly illustrated with 39 screenshots of many different email messages, showing usability problems we found in our testing as well as examples of highly-usable transactional email.

> sample chapter as thumbnail pages
> Jakob Nielsen's Alertbox summarizing the report

This report is based on empirical usability testing and shows what happens when real users interact with real email, starting with the inbox (where many messages get deleted ruthlessly), and continuing with the actual content of the message.

We observed a broad range of test users as they processed 40 transactional email messages. Most were confirmation emails, covering the following categories:


Table of Contents

 

108-page report.

  1. Executive Summary
  2. Study Overview
  3. How People Use and Manage Email
  4. How Email Affects Trust and Perceptions of Accuracy
  5. Guidelines List
  6. Email Guidelines and Discussion
  7. Dealing with Important Customer Concerns
  8. Anatomy of the Successful Message
  9. Methodology

What You Get

 


Who Should Read This Report?

 

This report has important information for:

Running a similar usability study yourself to collect comparative design lessons from a large number of emails would cost more than $40,000 and several months of an experienced usability professional's time.

Conducting business with enough sites to collect your own sample of message would require at least ten hours full-time work, and the cost of your sample purchases would be much more than the small fee for this report.

Please help us continue publish low-price reports by buying a site license if you have colleagues who will read the report. If you only need it for yourself, then that's obviously what the single-user license is for. If somebody "gives" you a copy, then please buy a download anyway to keep prices down in the future.

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