University Web Developers

University Web Developers

I've only been in the Higher Ed industry for 4 months now, but in that time, I've looked at just about every university site in the United States. I've come across many similar designs out there, but today I came across one that seems to have possibly borrowed a little too much.

The University of Alabama - Huntsville ( http://www.uah.edu ) has redesigned their site sometime in the past 6 months or so. I'm not exactly sure when, but my colleague pointed it out to me. When I went to their site this morning, it immediately struck me as VERY familiar. I spent about 15 minutes trying to track down where I had seen that design before and traced it back to Brown University ( http://brown.edu ).

While UAH doesn't make their menu interactive like Brown does (maybe they thought that would be borrowing too much) it is obviously a design borrowed heavily from the Brown homepage.

My question is this: How far is too far when 'borrowing' ideas from other websites? Did UAH go too far, or did they go just far enough as to keep the design their own?

Tags: borrowing, brown, copyright, design, ideas, stealing, uah, university

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Thanks Eric. :-) I was just about to point out that usability and accessibility aren't the same. I've spent several years reading research on usability, and while a relatively small percentage may not find trouble with the site's layout, the majority could.

Reply to This

Well it's been up at least a year (since it was reported "stolen" a year ago) and I would hope they did some kind of conversion impact tracking of the new layout.

What sorts of usability issues are you seeing?

Reply to This

I wasn't meaning to criticize. :-)

The biggest one that strikes me right off are the horizontal layout of links on the right. People scan lists, links, etc. in a more vertical manner, following an F pattern.
Also interesting to me is that the homepage design was copied by our own bookstore, without our (Public Affairs Office) knowledge or input:

http://bookstore.brown.edu/

We're not sure if they did it because they thought it was a good solution for a bookstore (it's not), or because they thought they were required to (they weren't), or they thought it would help emphasize their affiliation with the university (I don't think it does).

Anyhow, it seems to me that time and again when our homepage design is imitated, not much concern is given to the details that make it successful (despite whatever flaws). For example, we work hard to source strong imagery that fits in the narrow horizontal space; we keep text to a minimum; we refined the design over time to minimize unintended "moving links"; we refresh the content frequently to create pleasure in "discovery".

The imitators tend to fail on one or more of those criteria.

Reply to This

Regardless of what you think of the design—there's a proverb attributed to Picasso that sums it up nicely:

Bad artists copy. Good artists steal.

Within one's own institution, I think the acceptable limit of copying is extended. In the race to get our initial Engineering website off the ground, I copied, stole, grabbed, groped and borrowed a lot of markup and CSS from our main MU website. At the end of the day, that office and I have the same boss (the system president). Version two, however, was rebuilt from the ground up, and solved our problems our own way, but still tips the hat to that design.

But, when you're talking about two different legal entities, there should be a respect of the labor, time, and money that was spent.

The basic problem is lack of respect for the discipline of design & designers in general. It's not that anybody is maliciously trying to hurt the profession. It's that most human beings never come in contact with a graphic designer. They don't know what we do or how it's done. It's like the difference between a doctor and the engineer that designed the MRI machine. Everyone knows the doc, the MRI machine, but what do engineers do...?

As for plagiarism, it's the same discussion we could have about our athletic marks that gets ripped off by high schools around the country.

Nobody at any level—from teachers to t-shirt shops have any understanding of how that design came into being: "What's the harm? It's a cool tiger."

The harm is that 1) Another legal entity paid a designer actual money with which they fed their family and paid their mortgage. By stealing that person's work, another designer is not being paid actual money. 2) When your local mom-n-pop t-shirt printer makes a print of our mark, mom-n-pop got paid for work they simply didn't do, nor were they licensed to use it.

In the edu, there is a similar lack of respect for web design, which is why so many academic sites are selling Viagra as we speak ("good job temp student!"). This is just a large scale manifestation of what happens on the front of t-shirts.

I applaud Brown for being gracious about the whole thing, and for hiring Pentagram, (and not some crap "agency." Don't get me started on that either).

I'm fascinated by the design, and would love to see some analytics from it.

Reply to This

RSS

Elsewhere

Latest Activity

We've been exploring SocialEngine for the last few weeks and just made the purchase this morning. It has "subnetworks" within your installation, which I believe will help you keep folks separate and achieve what you're looking for. We bought one lic…
1 minute ago
6 minutes ago
Michael Fienen added a discussion
Hey everyone, just wanted to toss out some shameless self promotion. My .eduGuru blog posting about the #heweb09 Great Keynote Meltdown of 2009 was nominated for the Edublog Most Influential Blog Post of 2009. We'd love it if you'd take a second and…
42 minutes ago
Couple more- from my alma mater- Keene State College - This year's card from Providence College - I'd love to see what else everyone is doing if you care to share... Happy Holidays! -Dan Web Developer Providence College ddemmons@providence.edu
2 hours ago
Same story at SUNY-ESF -- Ning network for accepteds rolled out 1/08 with a plan to 'retire' it, well, now actually, and then to relaunch for the next class. The network had student ambassador and admissions staff members, and it included dedicated…
2 hours ago
stephen mosley, Mali Sauntry, Larry Hackman and 3 more joined University Web Developers
12 hours ago
Groundswell is great
16 hours ago
Heather Jackson added a discussion to the group Canadians
Hi Fellow Canadians, I'm looking for recommendations on email marketing providers that are based (or at least their server is based) in Canada. I've been using MailChimp out of the US, and it's great, but because of BC's privacy law I can only gath…
16 hours ago
Jeff added a discussion
Hi all, We are looking into a tool, software or vendor that could help us develop an online student orientation. Which would include video and flash elements. We recently reviewed Comevo and was wondering if anyone knows of other companies/vendors t…
17 hours ago
Doug Thompson added a discussion
This company (http://www.universityparent.com/edu) was mentioned at a meeting today, and I was wondering if anyone had any insights as to whether this sort of thing is commonplace, practical, useful, etc. Thanks in advance for any info, Doug Thomp…
17 hours ago
This group is for anyone interested in how to use Ning
19 hours ago
I work in the Marketing & Public Relations department. We started our first college Facebook page. We call it the official college page. Other departments have Facebook pages, such as the Library, eLearning, Student Services, etc. All Facebook pages…
20 hours ago
Thank you, everyone for your replies. The powers that be are asking us to test a new program called "Socialtivity" created by a local developing company. I'll let ya'll know how it plays out.
20 hours ago
Kristin Greenberg added a group
Group for users of ActiveAdmissions CMS
20 hours ago
OmniUpdate has completed end-user OU Campus CMS training for Sullivan County Community College – State University of New York. We anticipate great results from this great group of people, and look forward to working with them in 2010!
21 hours ago
Have you looked at http://www.thindata.com/ and http://www.campaignmonitor.com? Not sure if they offer everything that you are looking for but their emails are well designed in my opinion.
yesterday
annalisa added a discussion
Anyone have any recommendations for books/papers on Social Media and/or "Web 2.0" Thanks very much, Annalisa
yesterday
RhondaK and Maya Chanthaphavong joined University Web Developers
yesterday
yesterday
The new State College of Florida, Manatee-Sarasota, website looks great and was quickly launched using OmniUpdate’s OU Campus web CMS.
yesterday

An adjunct to UWEBD. UWEBD has been in existence for more than 10 years and is the very best email discussion list on the Internet, in any industry, on any topic.

About

© 2009   Created by Mark Greenfield

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service

Sign in to chat!