Registration Rules

28 Jun

Accept Contributions Up Front

A lot of users turn away when they see a login or registration
screen
. On my site, the number of is around 94%. Part of the reason is
probably that people are just tired of going through registration
forms, and they don’t bother when the benefits of doing so is
dubious. Part of it, most likely, is that they’re wary of handing out
their email address, because they’re more scared of spam email than
they are of junk mail, even though the time and effort required to
deal with physical junk mail is far greater — and don’t even
mention the environment.

Rule #1: Accept the user’s contribution before asking them to
sign in.

By letting the user contribute what he or she has to contribute
before asking them to register or log in, the chances of them
going through with the registration improves. The user will have
invested some of his or her time
in making the contribution, and
they don’t want to see that effort go to waste.

It’s the same trick used in most questionnaires. If you can get the
person started on filling in the survey, chances that he or she will
finish it, no matter how long it is, are pretty good. The initial
investment will make them want to finish, rather than end up feeling
that the whole thing was wasted.

But Don’t Forget

Unfortunately, registration processes can be lengthy. Maybe the
user isn’t sure whether he or she has already registered. Or she
knows, but forgot her ID or password. She may have to receive and
email and click back to the site to change her password. Or maybe she
left out some required field in the registration form.

Even in the light of such complications, you must obey the second
rule
:

Rule #2: Never forget what the user said.

It’s very impolite to forget what someone said, just because you had
to go about dealing with some bureaucratic measures. It pisses people
off, and rightly so.

Ensuring that the user’s contribution doesn’t get lost on its way
through a complex registration process isn’t exactly rocket science,
but it doesn’t come without conscious effort, either.

An example of a site that does rule #1 right, but disobeys rule #2, is
Epinions. I
haven’t tried all possible routes through their registration process,
but what I did try was entering my opinion, trying to register with
an email address already in their system, get a forgotten password URL
sent by email, then go to that URL to change my password. And my
lengthy contribution was gone.

If you’re not going to obey rule #2, you had better not follow rule
#1, either.
It’s better that the user don’t waste time
contributing at all, than have their contribution go to waste because
you don’t have your registration process under control.

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