- Joined
- Jan 14, 2010
- Messages
- 1,791
- Reaction score
- 25
- Location
- Devon
- Hive Type
- Commercial
- Number of Hives
- 140
Almost a year ago, I complained to a number of 'bigwigs' at the BBKA that the website was not fit for purpose. I had lost patience with what I saw as a cosmetically-driven waste of money, but as well as strong critique I provided clear advice on how to resolve the problems.
My biggest concern was that there was a configuration issue which had been outstanding since the introduction of the online shop. The issue in itself was not disastrous - indeed it allowed me to download past papers for free - but the fact that it had gone unnoticed for so long rang worrying alarm bells: clearly there had been no security audit or testing of the site otherwise the blatant error would have been picked up.
My initial email was blunt in order to provoke a response; I sent it to various persons within the BBKA whom I knew and who knew my direct approach. It quickly became a semi-public conversation with Doug Brown, BBKA Chairman and apparent owner of the website.
My observations and advice were not wanted. I was told, in effect, to stop emailing people about the problems. I was told that my comments would be referred to the BBKA Exec for consideration. Four quarterly Exec meetings later and I understand that issues with the website have never made it onto the agenda. I'm fairly certain that the underlying problems haven't been fixed, bar a couple more sticking plasters here and there.
Most worryingly, I feel that certain individuals won't allow criticism to be aired lest it reflect badly on them. Their approach appears to be to ignore the criticism and just keep applying sticking plasters when problems are found. It is a shame that they put their embarrassment above the risk to the BBKA of having a difficult, error-strewn and potentially insecure website. I am still seeing simple errors such as outdated content on the site which show that even my most basic recommendations regarding quality control and checking have gone unheeded.
By the way, I am reliably informed that almost £40,000 has been spent on the new website since it was launched. If you are a BBKA member, perhaps you would like to consider if the website is fit for purpose, satisfies your needs for information, represents a good investment, and so on. For the record, I will publish below my correspondence and the reception that it received.
My biggest concern was that there was a configuration issue which had been outstanding since the introduction of the online shop. The issue in itself was not disastrous - indeed it allowed me to download past papers for free - but the fact that it had gone unnoticed for so long rang worrying alarm bells: clearly there had been no security audit or testing of the site otherwise the blatant error would have been picked up.
My initial email was blunt in order to provoke a response; I sent it to various persons within the BBKA whom I knew and who knew my direct approach. It quickly became a semi-public conversation with Doug Brown, BBKA Chairman and apparent owner of the website.
My observations and advice were not wanted. I was told, in effect, to stop emailing people about the problems. I was told that my comments would be referred to the BBKA Exec for consideration. Four quarterly Exec meetings later and I understand that issues with the website have never made it onto the agenda. I'm fairly certain that the underlying problems haven't been fixed, bar a couple more sticking plasters here and there.
Most worryingly, I feel that certain individuals won't allow criticism to be aired lest it reflect badly on them. Their approach appears to be to ignore the criticism and just keep applying sticking plasters when problems are found. It is a shame that they put their embarrassment above the risk to the BBKA of having a difficult, error-strewn and potentially insecure website. I am still seeing simple errors such as outdated content on the site which show that even my most basic recommendations regarding quality control and checking have gone unheeded.
By the way, I am reliably informed that almost £40,000 has been spent on the new website since it was launched. If you are a BBKA member, perhaps you would like to consider if the website is fit for purpose, satisfies your needs for information, represents a good investment, and so on. For the record, I will publish below my correspondence and the reception that it received.
Dan Basterfield - 6/11/2013 said:Subject: That £^€%ing BBKA website
Folks,
I am writing to you in desperation and dismay. Can you please do something about the BBKA website? Yet again, having to use it for simple tasks I am left fuming at its crapness, that it is a triumph of design and appearance over content or communication, and that it is fundamentally untested and lacks apparent quality control. It has been a cosmetically-driven waste of BBKA money from its inception, and it obfuscates BBKA communications, information, and resources. Sorry to be so blunt but this is a significant public presence and membership resource, and it is embarrassing and unprofessional.
1) It is still trivially possible to download all of the Module past papers without paying. This has been possible since the online shop was put in place, and I am reminded of it as each Module exam date approaches. Thousands of companies sell their software via online shops as digital downloads, if they allowed such laxness with their income stream they would go bust. I will not tell you how this is done - the process is trivial; simple vulnerability testing of the website would reveal it. It highlights a design/security flaw that should be revisited, and suggests that certain procedures need to change. What other vulnerabilities exist if this has gone unnoticed for so long? It is the appetite for testing & quality control that is needed, not a sticking plaster for this particular example, hence my reticence to divulge specifics.
2) The recent 'News' items are broken. Click on Latest News, click on the 5th Nov article, arrive at the News & Events page (not the news item you wanted), click on Latest News (again), click on the 7th October article, arrive at the News & Events page, etc. Earlier items are linked correctly so there has simply been a lack of testing that published items are working as intended. Simple mistake, big implication in terms of image & professionalism. How has this not been noticed in a month?
3) On my iPhone using iOS 7 & Safari, the BBKA website navigation menu (the three bars, top left) is not working. This renders the site largely inaccessible. I understood the recent cosmetic make-over of the site to have been a refresh in order to make the site phone/tablet friendly. Can anyone immediately tell me if it's just my phone, or if it worked yesterday, or last week, or on iOS 6 before I upgraded, or how many iPhone users might be affected if there is a problem... or is it just assumed that all is well...?
I know that the website is operated by BBKA staff and trustees, some of them on a voluntary basis. This is not intended as a criticism of them as individuals, but at the way the BBKA as an organisation approaches its website. These willing amateurs need support and guidance. Perhaps it is time now to invest money in professional technical advice rather than in further design & graphics?
I believe that the content of the website needs to be reviewed, as do the procedures for testing & quality control, as does the testing of the security and technical configuration of the site. There is also the issue of general sprawl and nesting of pages of links to further pages and whether this helps or hinders site visitors.
I would recommend that site content is broken into logical areas, and that each area has a single owner who is trained & enabled to upload, edit, delete, and test pages, and who is responsible for what is communicated (and how) in their area.
There needs to be an emphasis on simplifying navigation paths through the site by collapsing the nesting of linked pages. To assist with this, you should invest time in learning to use Google Analytics; it is free to use and with the addition of a simple tracking code you can follow site visitors' progress through the site. This will tell you which pages are heavily used, which are not, and how many pages/links they traverse before they find what they are looking for. If significant users are always starting at a particular sub-page (presumably bookmarked or typed-in directly) this suggests that this is content of primary importance and should be more readily accessible to all visitors: lift it upwards. Where many layers of linked pages are present, ask how this helps users, and justify why one or two layers fewer would not be beneficial. Where pages are rarely visited, justify why they shouldn't simply be deleted.
There must be an instinctive 'live' test of any change to any content immediately after it is published, otherwise the public, the press, and the membership will see any issues that arise. Is there a staging area so that significant changes can be tested before they go live? There also needs to be regular 'joe public' spot-checks of popular pages and resources, to ensure that all is well. That a new items has been broken, without realisation, for a month is not professional; that the website may be unusable from an iPhone is not professional. Would we distribute printed leaflets or posters with glaring spelling mistakes or technical inaccuracies on them?
Google Analytics will also reveal the devices and browsers that visitors are using. I would expect (from using Analytics on other sites) that at least 20% of visitors are coming in on iPhone/iPad/Android - do they all see a broken navigation menu? Is there a testing strategy (and suitable devices) in place to verify correct function and usability if these platforms are significantly used? The technical capability to address such devices should lie largely with the website hosting company/platform and with the designers, but if we (as their customer and this site owner) are not doing the most basic checks to verify correct function, then who will? The public, the press, our membership...
I have been away from this sort of work for ten years, professionally, but still can see obvious problems and possible solutions. I do not want the job of resolving this, but I do want to see the BBKA take its website in hand and ensure that it ceases to be a pretty embarrassment.
Regards,
Dan.
Sally said:Dan
I think your outburst about the quality of the BBKA web site is out of order and churlish ... [snip] ... who do you think it is going to help and why do you think it is anything to do with you.
Sally