Do people read the web?

Do people read the web?

·

4 min read

Actually, they don’t…

People only read word-by-word on the web when they are really interested in the content. On the average Web page, users have time to read at most 28% of the words during an average visit - 20% is more likely. They usually skim the pages looking for highlighted keywords, meaningful headings, short paragraphs and a scannable list. Since they’re in a hurry to find the very piece of information they’re looking for, they’ll skip what’s irrelevant to them.

So as they look for information, how much time do visitors spend on web pages? Not too long:

Let’s do that math - 19 seconds divided by 72 “eye stops” equals about a quarter of a second per glance.

Definitely. Not. Reading.

“As you watch users’ eyes negotiate pages at mind-blowing speeds,” write Pernice et al., “you might think that … it is just pure luck that anyone ever finds anything worthwhile on the web.”

In 2013, analytics vendor Chartbeat analyzed Slate and other websites and found that most visitors scroll through about only 60% of an article page. People rarely read Web pages word by word; instead, they scan the page, picking out individual words and sentences.

No alt text provided for this image

Most publishers spent time optimizing content above the fold however recent research from Chartbeat suggests that 66% of attention on a web page is spent below the fold. Publishers today rely on data to make decisions as conventional wisdom would suggest banner advertisements to be placed above the fold.

No alt text provided for this image

According to an eye-tracking study by Eyequant, when users land on your site, their eye path starts from the upper-left corner, where will get the most attention, and moves down and right from there. The bottom-right terminal area is where you should place your call to action.

Perhaps one of the most cited is the F-shaped reading pattern for web content, which we identified in 2006. Over the years, many have referred to this research, sometimes correctly, and in many other instances misinterpreting it.

No alt text provided for this image

Heatmaps from user eye-tracking studies of three websites. The areas where users looked the most are colored red; the yellow areas indicate fewer views, followed by the least-viewed blue areas. Gray areas didn’t attract any fixations.

So don’t expect people to read content that seems neither easily scannable nor relevant for them, therefore long text blocks, unnecessary instructions, promotional writing and “small-talk” should be avoided on the web.

How little do users read?

  • In 2013, analytics vendor Chartbeat analyzed Slate and other websites and found that most visitors scroll through about only 50-60% of an article page. What’s more interesting, it seems to be no correlation between sharing and scrolling: people readily share your articles even without reading them – You Won’t Finish This Article

No alt text provided for this image

  • In a usability study, Gerry McGovern discovered that only 1 out of 15 users could locate a specific piece of information that was not scannably placed on the page.

  • Steve Krug claims in Don’t Make Me Think that one of the most important facts about web users is that they don’t read, they scan.

Where are they looking?

So which words do they read? The microcontent, or online display copy. In a study by Conversion XL, here’s where web visitors focused their attention:

  • 97% read headlines. They averaged 2.9 seconds, which gave them time to read 7 words, according to the researchers.

  • 98% read decks, or the one-sentence summary under the headline. They spent 2.8 seconds, or about 7 words.

  • More than 90% viewed captions.

Web visitors also look at the:

  • Subheads

  • Links

  • Bulleted lists

  • Bold-faced text

And if you want to reach web visitors, that’s where you’ll put your messages.

When people read word-by-word

  • If people find the very piece of information they are interested in, they are likely to read the related content word-by-word.

  • Research shows that if people read a piece of content for pleasure, they read more thoroughly and find reading effortless even on a computer screen.

  • Studies show that there are methodical web readers who usually don’t scan but read from top to bottom.

  • Well-structured pages that are designed for cursory reading are more likely to be read.

Let’s bust some more myths around.

...