JDM Digital

Life Below the Fold: Is Scrolling Bad?

There's a lot of people who think information on a website below the 600px height (aka "the fold") is as good as gone. That simply isn't the case, and I should know. I'm a copyright notice.

There’s a lot of people who think information on a website below the 600px height (aka “the fold”) is as good as gone.  That simply isn’t the case, and I should know.  I’m a copyright notice.

Ever since the first person wrote something online they thought was worthy of a copyright notice, I’ve lived here, far below the fold.

Over the years, I’ve seen a lot of changes in web design.  Some come and go.  Others rise and fall, only to rise again in popularity.  Perhaps my favorite is the (silly) concept of “the fold.”

A nod to the newspaper days of old, “above the fold” refers to the location of an important news story or a visually appealing photograph on the upper half of the front page of a newspaper.  In web design terms, it usually refers to the first 600px of vertical space: what you see before scrolling down.

I hear clients and agencies talk about those of us living “below the fold” all the time.  The conversation usually goes something like this:

Agency: “Here’s the website comp.  Isn’t it awesome!”

Client: “Where’s the fold?”

Agency: <turns on the guides/rulers> “Right here.”

Client: “Hmm, yeah, we’re going to need those articles, these links, and these 6 images to be above the fold.”

And just like that, there goes any sense of user experience, readability, and storytelling.  :(

The path to the prize

I’m not saying the fold doesn’t matter at all.  Designers simply need to think more in terms of “the prize” (what you want your readers to get out of the page), and worry less about arbitrary vertical space.

Credit: Paddy Donnelly

Back when my copyright date was young, everyone sort of agreed that “the prize” should be at the very top. Everything below that was pretty much wasted space.

The internet was slow, and everyone had clunky mousewheels that took forever to scroll to the bottom of a page. Scrolling was a chore.

Now we’ve got  broadband speeds everywhere, touch screens galor, and more intuitive OS interfaces, scrolling is just more fun (gives me hope).

These days, USING the scroll to build value and tell your story before getting to the prize can pay off by creating a unique user experience for your readers.

So, the first 600px still matter.  They just aren’t the prize.  They make the promise of a prize.

Don’t take my word for it.

What do I know.  I’m just a copyright notice.  Some really smart people did some research, and turned up these results:

Perhaps a little less scientific, it’s worth mentioning that in July 2011, Apple removed the scrollbar from Mac OS X.   That pretty clearly illustrates that even the usability experts at Apple believe that people are SO familiar with scrolling, they don’t even need a visual cue for it.

According to the Neilsen Norman Group, user scrolling vs attention follows one of the two behaviors illustrated in the following gaze plots:

 

So, give the fold the finger!

The web is filled with boring websites with boring layouts (big header with call-to-action, 1/4 sidebar, footer with useless stuff in it).  Don’t blindly follow layout “rules”.  Challenge them to the delight of your audience.

I’ll be here, at the very bottom of the page, watching. ;)

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