Answering voters' questions at county election websites

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Voters think about elections differently from how election administrators do. A presentation to NASED in San Francisco 2014.

Transcript of Answering voters' questions at county election websites

Answering voters’ questions at county election websites

Dana Chisnell

@danachis @ChadButterfly

Answering voters’ questions at county election websites

Dana Chisnell

@danachis @ChadButterfly

What questions did you have about the election?

How did you find out the answers?

Cataloged 147 election websites

Conducted 41 remote moderated usability tests

Cataloging

94% of the population lives in a county that has an elections website

Of 3,057 counties or equivalent, 966 didn’t have websites (31.5%)

“election department” varied by region

Insights

Remote moderated usability testing

What questions did you have about the election?

What questions did you have about the election?

What happened?

Insights

33 of 41 participants looked online for answers

23 went to county websites

Insights

None had been to a state election website

Voters are ballot-centricthey’re focused on that act, not conscious of the overall process

What’s on the ballot?

?

?

?

?

??

!?

Bad newsVoters don’t think to look in the polling place lookup widget for ballots

They don’t expect to have to give personal information to get their ballot

They’re unaware that their ballot could be unique

What’s on the ballot?

What are my options for voting?

absentee early voting Election Day

what’s the deadline to apply?

what do I have to do to get one?

when is it due?

where do I vote? where do I vote?

what’s the deadline to apply?

what do I have to do to get one?

when is it due?

where do I vote? where do I vote?

who is in office now?

do I need ID to vote?

what’s the deadline for registering?

But sites showed nearly the opposite process.

Elections = process

1. register

2. voting options

3. polling place location

4. voter ID

5. current office holders

6. military and overseas voters

7. sample ballot

What to do

Establish...you’re on a government website

it’s the election website

this is the source you want

when the next election is

What’s on the ballot?

How do I vote if I can’t get to the polling place?

Who are my reps now, and what districts am I in?

Where do I vote?

Do I have to show ID?

Priority content

Help voters find your website.

Connect your website to other government sites.

Answer the question: ‘What’s on the ballot?’

Group navigation to answer voters’ questions.

Help visitors know what site they are on and what will be covered there.

Write links that use words voters use.

Put the most important information in the main menu or the center.

Help voters find ballot information.

Use words that voters use in links, headings, and graphics.

Help voters see at a glance what each chunk of information is about.

NOI & DemocracyWorks

pilot

(funded by Omidyar Network)

2012-13: found voters’ mental models are opposite LEO process orientation

2014: tested sites with people who are blind or have low vision

29 websites from a range of jurisdictions from the largest to fairly small

participants used their own assistive technology

Find out date of the next election n=5237 succeeded (71%)

Find out what’s on the ballotn=5534 succeeded (62%)

Find information about accessible votingn=5427 succeeded (50%)

all the sites had issues

participants using screen magnifiers were more likely to be successful than those using screen readers

participants using sites from larger jurisdictions reported more problems

Field Guides To Ensuring Voter Intent

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civicdesigning.org/fieldguides

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!

Thank you.

Dana Chisnell

dana@centerforcivicdesign.org

centerforcivicdesign.org

anywhereballot.com/library@danachis@ChadButterfly