Introducing Monthly: Pay-Monthly Web Site Design and Development

Last week saw the launch of Monthly, a completely new web site design and development service I’m pleased to offer small and medium businesses.

Monthly Screenshot

Monthly is a fresh approach to designing, building and updating your web site. With Monthly, you simply subscribe to a monthly payment plan that covers your web site’s design, development, and updates. There are no set up fees and no minimum term contracts.

As a special launch offer, customers signing up to the Launchpad Plan before April 30th 2011 get a free custom site design included! Register today at monthlyhq.com.

Every Monthly plan includes a domain name and hosting, whilst the Business and Premium plans include benefits such as content management and functionality customised to your business (e.g. social networking or ecommerce). Monthly’s plans start at just £19 per month.

Read more about Monthly and register for a plan at monthlyhq.com.

Is your sign up process pushing customers away?

The sign up process is one of the most important functions of your app. It’s what converts potential customers into active and, hopefully, paying subscribers. Getting it right is essential, and you need to make sure it’s not pushing customers away.

Amberleaf Sign Up Form Screenshot

Amberleaf’s new price plan and sign up page

Spotting a problem

While analysing trends for Amberleaf, I noticed that a number of people had signed up and verified their account, but never completed their first login. I’d already minimised capture fields to lower barriers, but something else was stopping people trying out their new account.

Despite running through the sign up process countless times during testing, I’d missed one very big problem, and it was scaring people away.

Would you sign up to your site?

When I realised my mistake, I knew I wouldn’t have signed up to my own app! Customers were being pushed away from even trying Amberleaf because of a poor decision I’d made early in development. So what was the problem?

Just after signing in to start their 30 day trial, new users were asked to input their payment card details.

This was a huge barrier that had stopped a lot of people from even trying Amberleaf. The sign up process was working as it should technically (payments were never taken until the 30 days free trial had passed), but that wasn’t the impression given to new customers.

At exactly the moment a new customer should be experiencing what Amberleaf offers, I was instead insisting they hand over payment details.

Improving the sign up process

When I realised what was going on, I immediately revised the sign up code. I implemented a separate 30 day free trial plan on Spreedly, and tied Amberleaf into it. This had the added benefit of removing a step from the process. Not capturing payment details right away meant new users could be subscribed to the free 30 day plan automatically when they first logged in. This resulted in a smoother sign up process, and helps to build users’ trust in the software.

The new sign up process went live a few days ago. I took the opportunity to tidy up the sign up screens, bringing the registration and payment plan page together. I’ll see how these changes affect conversion rates over the next few weeks. Either way, I’ve certainly learned a valuable lesson in designing the sign up process.

An Example of Near-Perfect Design

I’ve been a long-time fan of Google Calendar, mainly because I can see where I need to be from any web connection. But probably its most useful feature is the thought that has obviously gone into the interaction design.

The Problem
When using calendar software, it is painful to have to click between each field, setting hours and minutes, locations etc. then confirming with an OK. I have been known (more often than not) to forego any form of calendar, instead relying on scrawl left on scraps of paper around the office. Whilst less organised than a calendar, this said scrawl is a lot easier to jot down. Needless to say, though, it is also a lot easier to lose.

A Solution
In Google Calendar, the designers have captured my need to quickly jot down when, where and who. No longer do I need to tab between fields, carefully tapping out 24-hour clocks (or 12-hours, depending the software’s mood). Instead, events can be entered as simply as:

meet joe at company friday 11am

Google Calendar will then automatically pick out the important information and add the appropriate event. No fussing around with mini-calendars or remembering to use mm/dd instead of dd/mm – the app just works. This is, for me at least, near-perfection user design – and I hope more software begins to take note (Apple’s new iCal 3.0 does not).

Google Calendar’s ‘Quick Add’ is an example of removing layers of abstraction (or barriers) between the user and the system, and quite correctly why should the user conform to the system? It should surely be the other way round. Mobile phone OS designers should note, why should it take 4 menu items to get to a message inbox? Perhaps Google’s new Android will help to iron that one out…