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Three-click rule

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The three-click rule or three click rule is an unofficial web design rule concerning the design of website navigation. It suggests that a user of a website should be able to find any information with no more than three mouse clicks. It is based on the belief that users of a site will become frustrated and often leave if they cannot find the information within the three clicks. Although there is little analytical evidence that this is the case, it is a commonly held belief amongst designers that the three click rule is part of a good system of navigation. Critics of the rule suggest that the number of clicks is not as important as the success of the clicks.[1]

In his book, Taking Your Talent to the Web (2001), Jeffrey Zeldman wrote that the Three-Click Rule is "based on the way people use the Web" and "the rule can help you create sites with intuitive, logical hierarchical structures".[2]

The UK government's business advice site Business Link advises the use of the rule as a 'best practice' in web design.[3]

Criticism

The three click rule has been challenged by usability test results, which have shown that the number of clicks needed to access the desired information affects neither user satisfaction, nor success rate.[4][5]

In eCommerce websites, the Three-clicks rule can often be detrimental as in order to adhere to the rule, products on offer to customers must be grouped into categories that are far too large to be easily browsed.

Later, as an extreme version of [three click rule] appear a one click rule. For example, delete operation in Windows 8.

References

SEO implications of the 3-click rule

  1. ^ Testing the Three-Click Rule
  2. ^ Zeldman, Jeffery (30 May 2001). Taking Your Talent to the Web: Making the Transition from Graphic Design to Web Design. New Riders. p. 448. ISBN 978-0-7357-1073-3.
  3. ^ Best practice in web design
  4. ^ Myth #2: All pages should be accessible in 3 clicks
  5. ^ "Web Optimization: The Myth of the 3 Click Rule". CMSWire. Retrieved 2012-08-21.