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Efficacy of User Surveys in Designing A University Website - A Case Study
Kuldeep Nagi1.
A website devoted to an academic institution sometimes fail to address its main
purposes. In the process of satisfying the need of all stakeholders- the students, faculty, alumni
and outsiders, the elements of web design are compromised to an extent that either the website
becomes too complex or it becomes irrelevant. With advances in technology, the role of web
designers is also beginning to change from just being creators of a website to the facilitators of
crafting a powerful User Experience (UX). The very purpose of an academic website is now
burdened with implementing elements of new technologies, such as flashing banners, streaming
videos, and other gimmicks. The constant demands brought in by the advent of new tools and
technologies and the changing role of designers makes it difficult to focus on the purpose of a
website, but there is no choice for them, but to keep experimenting. This paper is based on a
random survey of 296 users of a university website to gauge its strengths and weaknesses. This
survey resulted in a list of observations and demands, some realistic and many others, exhaustive
and impractical. The purpose of this paper is to show that the web design has to focus on its
tactical objectives. To meet these goals, this paper also suggests few means and methods for
implementing core elements of a website design to boost UX and add value.
Affiliation:
- Assumption University, Thailand
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