Pfizer site review
Pfizer Inc. is a commercial research-based pharmaceutical company with global
operations.
Purpose and Target Audience
Its web site, www.pfizer.com,
is meant to provide information to customers, potential employees, investors,
and the general public.
Content
Pfizer's content is impressive. Some sections, such as invesment
information, smacked of shovelware. However others, such as history,
were clearly designed for the web site and were pretty well done too.
They essentially have a
whole nother web site to promote the company to potential employees.
For the most part the writing was tight and pages kept short, that is, the
content was usually chunked. I saw no spelling or grammar mistakes. Scannability
was clearly considered at times, such as this
longer page in the employment section. Naturally I can't tell if there
was 50 percent less text than they would put in their paper brochures, but (as
the just-cited page also shows) a tendency towards grandiose or marketing language
remains.
Site Plan and Navigation
The logo always takes you back to the home page. This is the main form
of navigation but it works, mostly people don't need to look at both animal
and people products on the same visit to the site or anything like that.
Sometimes they weren't good enough at telling you where you were going, such
as this kid-centered
page in the science
section which came as a bit of a surprise.
Navigation in the subsites varied, but there too you were generally left without
much navigation between hierarchies and sometimes only a link all the way back
to Pfizer's main home page. In one
example, they even failed to make the logo a link. This product
page in the Animal Health section has the navigation on the bottom where
a globe is supposed to stand for Animal Health. Right.
Links
Pfizer provides links relevant to its topics, and some thought appears to have
been put into the selection of these links. However, they were not well
documented; Pfizer did not provide the user with information about these related
sites.
Page Design and Creativity
This logo, with some variation, graces the top left corner of every page.
Although the history
section uses frames no frame-inside-itself linking mistakes were made and the
inability to link or bookmark a particular page within one sub sub-site isn't
major.
Plenty of graphics and goodlooking rollovers gave the page that professional
feel. The site did not have a consistent feel at all places, however.
Functionality
Pfizer.com
took over thirty seconds to display content and over ten seconds more to fully
load (with a T1 connection) the first time I opened it. (On later attempts
the 78.2 kilobyte page displayed much faster and fully loaded in 20 seconds.)
Pfizer violates Nielsens maxim that the best sites are fast.
In his Future Predictions chapter he re-emphasizes that bandwidth
will be increasing slowly and that Web design needs to cater to the masses.
Interior pages such as Animal
Health could take over 30 seconds to load but the text usually displayed
earlier. Nielsen would like these pages to display in a maximum of ten
seconds. In general I put the site on the edge between acceptable
and unacceptable response times.
Pfizers main sections list down the left-hand side do nothing by themselves
to indicate that they are links but instead a disjoint rollover turns the picture
next to them into a brief description of that section of the site that points
at the link. The problem is that for up to a minute after loading the
page there may be absolutely no reaction to rolling your mouse over the main
navigation.
Another, strictly appearance-related, problem with this particular feature
is that some of the time the background of the disjoint rollover is off-color.
Product and health information for both people
and animals
were both given in drop down forms- but for people you had to press go and for
animals it took you immediately. A little confusing.
Unique Feature
A unique feature is a page
to tell you when you leave the site through an outside link that they are
not responsible for, such as those in a dropdown list on their Animal
Health page. Unfortunately, they do not simply tell you this before
you follow the link, the page of course slows your progress to your destination,
and it makes using the back button to get back to Pfizers own site more
awkward.
Conclusion
Does Pfizer score a HOME-RUN with Jakob Nielsen as umpire?
I consider the content high quality and it is often updated, but
the download time is far from minimal. In terms of ease
of use, most of the site was but the business
page was abysmal. For example, I found the introduction of this molecule-nav
image map a bad idea.
Pfizer's site was relevant to users' needs and sometimes unique
to the online medium. As far as having a net-centric corporate
culture, they don't seem to be there yet but they look like they are heading
in that direction.
E-mail: melancon@student.umass.edu
|