Why what I do matters

My day job is as a tech writer. I do end user documentation, but I also work on things like interface design and usability. This all sounds like gobbledygook until you’re standing in the middle of a situation in which no one cares about interface design or usability.

So I ordered something for Arthur from Office Depot. Their website was down so I called. After the order was placed I was given a Customer ID number and a Confirmation number. These are the exact words the doofus on the phone used. Customer ID number. Confirmation number.

So Arthur didn’t get his item and I went to the website to see what I could see. I find a page called “Order Tracking.”

Step 1: Enter your Order Number.
Step 2: Enter your Phone Number or Account Number.

You understand, I had neither an “Order Number” nor an “Account Number,” and this is where most people would have given up. But being me, and kinda into these things, I entered the Confirmation number as my Order Number, and I entered the Customer ID as the Account Number, and ba-da-bing, there was my order.

On a usability scale, this is a FAIL.

So, my quest is to save the world one web page at a time.

5 comments

  1. MJ Ray says:

    “my quest is to save the world one web page at a time” – I like that and I seem to spend much time doing it. I think I’ll steal it, if that’s OK?

  2. LP says:

    So…why didn’t Arthur get his order? Did the web site mention that?

  3. Deborah Lipp says:

    In fact, it was delivered…to me.

    I had the bonehead order-taker of all time. And despite spelling Arthur’s name three times it was delivered to Deborah Lipp.

  4. Paula C. says:

    I’ve recently encountered similar issues with a United Way website. Thank you for caring… so few seem to.