2 Apr 22:25
Re: question: use of tabbed search boxes on home page?
We have a 3-tab search box on all our web pages (see, for example, http://www.lib.umich.edu/ ). A single-search (labeled "MLibrary", which includes the catalog, our LibGuides, database metadata, online journals, etc.) is the default tab; separate tabs are for "Articles" (our federated search tool) and Catalog. The first, default, tab gets almost an order of magnitude more usage. For the past two weeks, on one of the 3 webservers running the site: 11,648 Tab 1 (default -- MLibrary searches) 1,620 Tab 2 (Articles searches) 352 Tab 3 (Catalog searches) Searching from the first tab displays results from many sources, including the catalog, so these number don't represent total catalog searches, just starting points. -- Ken Varnum Web Systems Manager E: varnum@... University of Michigan Library T: 734-615-3287 309 Hatcher Graduate Library F: 734-647-6897 Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1190 http://www.lib.umich.edu/ On 3/31/10 3:23 PM, "Melissa Belvadi" <mbelvadi@...> wrote: Hi, We've noticed a big trend in academic library web sites is to layer several search boxes (eg catalogue search, journal a-to-z lookup, federated article search) in a tabbed box, usually with the catalogue on 'top'. We're wondering if anyone who uses this design has done either a formal usability study or logfile analysis of the different search boxes to see: 1. are people typing the right kind of search into the right box? 2. how often anyone even notices the tabs to use anything underneath the top, default one? (aka is the top one getting searches that belong in the others)? At the moment, our own site has four (yes, four) search boxes essentially listed down the middle of the home page. Our recent formal usability study is showing fairly conclusively that first year students have absolutely no idea what the journal a-to-z lookup one is for (and we don't have journal holdings in the catalogue, only in this), and changing the title or other verbiage above it doesn't seem to help. We're getting better results with the "Find Books" (catalogue) and "Find Articles" (federated search) boxes and are worried that if we layer the "find articles" underneath "find books" via that kind of tabbed layout, that we'll end up seeing a lot of article searches in the catalogue. Thanks! --- Melissa Belvadi Emerging Technologies & Metadata Librarian University of Prince Edward Island mbelvadi@... 902-566-0581 _______________________________________________ Web4lib mailing list Web4lib@... http://lists.webjunction.org/web4lib/
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