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Assessing
a Firm's Web Presence: A Heuristic Evaluation Procedure for the Measurement
of Usability |
R.
Agarwal and V. Venkatesh
Information Systems Research, 13, 2002, 168-186.
Web site usability is a critical metric for assessing the quality of
a firm's Web presence. A measure of usability must not only provide
a global rating for a specific Web site, ideally it should also
illuminate specific strengths and weaknesses associated with site
design. In this paper, we describe a heuristic evaluation procedure
for examining the usability of Web sites. The procedure utilizes
a comprehensive set of usability guidelines developed by Microsoft.
We present the categories and subcategories comprising these guidelines,
and discuss the development of an instrument that operationalizes
the measurement of usability. The proposed instrument was tested
in a heuristic evaluation study where 1,475 users rated multiple
Web sites from four different industry sectors: airlines, online
bookstores, automobile manufacturers, and car rental agencies.
To enhance the external validity of the study, users were asked
to assume the role of a consumer or an investor when assessing
usability. Empirical results suggest that the evaluation procedure,
the instrument, as well as the usability metric exhibit useful
properties. Implications of the .ndings for researchers, for Web
site designers, and for heuristic evaluation methods in usability
testing are offered.
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