Out

This is the dialogue heard during a movement/dance piece to be presented 23 June 18 — think of many meanings…. I wanted out begin/ began turned opened closed turned again step (one two) then turned…

Smartphone

独家优惠奖金 100% 高达 1 BTC + 180 免费旋转




Your Error Messages Deserve Some Love

I recently attended a compelling presentation. 😍

In our distributed company, English is a second or third language for most of the teammates. We have a dedicated English teacher. Camille runs training and workshops to help us to improve.

Camille recently worked on our products’ error messages with our product management team.

The first goal was to ensure the correctness of these messages.

She pushed the exercise at a far more advanced level.

Error messages

When running into an error message, the experience is, most of the time, frustrating.

Something unexpected happened, and it breaks your productivity flow. You now have to understand why this piece of software does not work the way it’s supposed to. You have to figure out what to do to be able to move on. And you have more interesting to do.

An error message has to be crystal clear

Each message has to guide the user and must be self-explanatory, concise, and accurate.

When we write error messages, the temptation is high to detail as much as possible. What happened, what are the business rules. We should focus on helping the user to work around the issue and to move on.

Error messages don’t have to be boring or impersonal. An error message is a way to engage with your users. It can be user friendly, using “you” and “we” pronouns creates a more human feeling.

For instance:

Our messages have to be consistent across your whole application. We can adapt their content depending on the user persona we’re talking too. But keeping a consistent tone of voice is essential.

Another good practice is to write them positively and to avoid negative sentences.

For instance:

Conciliate these pieces of advice can be challenging, what to do when in doubt?

Error messages are a critical part of the User eXperience

Looking at most of the software I use, error messages appear to me as a second class citizen of the UX.

We can fix this in our industry. We can improve. We can craft great error messages. We can make them more engaging and as enjoyable as success messages.

Last words

Dear Camille, thank you! For pointing out this problem, for evangelizing and training our teams. Write great error messages is a step forward to deliver a more engaging experience to our users. 🦄

Add a comment

Related posts:

Best tips to create a home video in a few hours and share

Today I was at a Mud Run event. I got home with many awesome videos and photos of my friends and I jumping, climbing obstacles and crawling in the mud. I had tons of raw video on my phone and camera…

Revenge

Just the other day I left my gym bag in a stairwell. I was going to sleep there for the night, and I didn’t want to lug my gym bag around while I got shit-faced drunk in Koreatown (everyone has a…

An Offering to the Solar Eclipse of 2017

Could you feel it yesterday? The energy was palpable. I couldn’t put words to it as I stopped for a moment to feel. Is it me? My mind? The pure energy of the Earth pulsating through my being? I…