If you want a busy homepage, let your users organise it

My interest in web design is generally based on usability and accessibility, due to the fact I’m not the most artistic person in the world. I can appreciate attractive designs, but there are far better people than me in the world at creating them.

But something has struck me that I think could be a good rule for web architecture and design, based on my own experience of website redesigns, and trying to cram an awful lot of information onto a homepage in the fear that if it doesn’t appear, no-one will ever see it or find it. So here it is:

If you’re forcing homepage contents on your users keep it simple. If you want it to be cluttered, let your users pick how they organise it – or what it on it.

This is backed up by a few examples. For instance, Google is the oft-quoted archetypal example of a very simple homepage. And one that could make more money for the company if it was covered in banner ads – but that would wreck the essence of it’s success.

Meanwhile users can be overwhelmed by busy homepages – but when was the last time you saw an empty Facebook or Myspace profile, or an empty Netvibes page? Users are happy to have a cluttered page, as long as they’ve been able to create and organise the clutter – just the same as people are happy to work at a cluttered desk if they’ve worked out the clutter themselves.

The recent BBC homepage redesign is a good example of moving in this direction -without hopefully overwhelming too many users. Personally I was disappointed it’s still a walled silo of BBC content only – but it’s a start.The Google homepage - keeping it simple

An example Netvibes page created by a user

The best web design?

I’m currently looking at embarking on some new web projects, with both blogs and websites playing a part. And I know that the sites will be based on home coding and open source applications…(I was going to say cheap, but the labour and time involved definitely isn’t cheap).

I’ve had a look at various CMS systems etc, but I’m struggling to find any examples of really interesting design. It seems if you lock into a system like Drupal, you’re able to modify templates etc, just as you would here, but no-one seems to radically change things about, or hide the CMS behind a custom-coded main page etc?

DO you know of any such sites? They can use Drupal, Joomla, DotNetNuke or any other Open Source alternative you can suggest…