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A rant: "See Plans and Pricing"

3 points| matkem | 16 years ago |mattkempster.co.uk | reply

5 comments

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[+] thepsi|16 years ago|reply
If it means transparent fee structures and straightforward trials that don't require the intervention of a salesperson (and the ensuing followups) then I'm all for it.

Some of the sites you linked to suck for far worse reasons, anyway - why would I want to see AMPC's pricing when the homepage gives no indication of what they actually do? (something to do with postage and "exclusive industry benefits" apparently)

[+] GiraffeNecktie|16 years ago|reply
This is just three brief sentences, barely more than a half-formed HN comment, inexplicably whining about the use of single snippet of clear, concise and standard business English. In other words, a complete waste of pixels. I wish someone would do a rant about people who add links to random words in a sentence.
[+] micmcg|16 years ago|reply
So rather than using consistent language, so that users learn that no matter what SaaS site they are on, to look for the “See Plans and Pricing” link, each site should come up with their own copy? Do you even understand UI/UX consistency at all? Also self promoting your own crappy blog on HN is pretty lame.
[+] DenisM|16 years ago|reply
It depends on your goals, I suppose. If you want something that clearly converts well you should use what people found to work as a good starting point. But if you want to please some guy named Matt then you should clearly strive to be original.
[+] prodigal_erik|16 years ago|reply
This guy is so bent on being unique that he uses an unreadable scrawl in a link rather than the actual twitter logo. Aren't graphic designers taught that things that are alike should look alike?