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    Advertising agency culture. The key to solving racism in the industry.

    June 15, 2020

  • Content Strategy

    The deliciously dangerous and euphoric period of a con game.

    June 23, 2020

  • Content Mindfulness

    Headphones. The condoms of content.

    June 9, 2020

  • Content Strategy

    The power of consistent content. What Facebook’s content lawsuit reveals.

    June 2, 2020

  • Content Strategy

    Businesses have a plan for essential workers. Automate the essential part.

    May 19, 2020

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    Breathe. You do it to live. Now use it to live better.

    May 12, 2020

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    Voice experiences will be the future or the end of your business.

    May 5, 2020

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    How Can I Help?

    April 23, 2020

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    Working from home? Meet your new boss. Structure.

    April 21, 2020

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    The B(r)and is breaking up. How music services like Spotify are killing artist brands.

    April 14, 2020

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    Don’t fear, embrace uncertainty. Opportunity waits on the other side.

    April 7, 2020

  • Content Strategy

    Call To Action (CTA) tips

    March 31, 2020

  • Small thinking leads to big things

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    As careers navigate COVID-19, big wins must start with small thinking.

    March 23, 2020

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    The gods of technology demand a sacrifice.

    March 17, 2020

  • Content Strategy

    When function follows form. And how content strategy is affected.

    March 10, 2020

  • Content Mindfulness

    Hey kids, want some yummy apps?

    March 3, 2020

  • Content Strategy

    What’s the buzz about buzzwords?

    February 25, 2020

  • Content Strategy

    Genderfication. Why women are woefully scarce in tech firms and tech firm leadership.

    February 18, 2020

  • Content Strategy

    The three types of writers.

    February 11, 2020

  • Content Mindfulness

    Can a minimalist buy a $1,400 iPhone?

    February 4, 2020

  • Content Strategy

    What is Natural Language Processing?

    January 28, 2020

  • Content Mindfulness,Uncategorized

    Health. Wealth. Love. Your three everyday happiness investments.

    January 21, 2020

  • Content Strategy

    Working and consulting in tech in 2020. Five predictions.

    January 15, 2020

  • Content Mindfulness,Content Strategy

    Looking back at 2019 to think forward: Hit Rewind Here.

    December 18, 2019

  • Content Mindfulness

    Looking back at 2019 to think forward: Happiness.

    December 13, 2019

  • Content Strategy

    Looking back at 2019 to think forward: Voice Assistants Killing Brands

    December 10, 2019

  • Content Mindfulness

    Looking back, thinking forward: Fight Club’s 20th Anniversary.

    December 5, 2019

  • Content Strategy

    Looking back, thinking forward: Kayfabe

    December 3, 2019

  • Content Mindfulness

    Why I’ve learned to accept grace.

    November 26, 2019

  • Content Strategy

    The needle in a haystack. Why the need for content strategy is universal and timeless.

    November 19, 2019

Content Strategy

How to say, “I’m sorry.” Creating error messages.

March 5, 2019 by Brooks Richey

It’s hard for most of us to admit we’ve made a mistake.

It’s often even harder to feel the anger and disappointment from those we’ve let down through our mistakes. Those anxieties also apply to when we fail to deliver digital experiences.

So when a user clicks, taps or voice commands access to content and can’t get to it, what do you do?

A user will receive different error messages.

Sometimes websites and the backend of some digital experiences show specific numbers (e.g., 404, 501, etc.) to represent the error. Those numeric levels are geek-speak to designate the reason a page or content can’t be served to the user.

There are different types of “geek speak” error messages.

“401” Unauthorized.

Content and access to the page are restricted because you are not authorized to view it.

“400” Bad Request.

An error message when the web server is telling you that the application you are using (e.g. your web browser) tried to access the page incorrectly or that the request for page content was corrupted somewhere along the way.

“404” Not Found.

The server that satisfies a user’s request for content believes the specific page or content the user is looking for doesn’t exist or can’t be found. Often, this is due to an existing page being moved and the links pointing to the new page location are not updated.

“500” Internal Server Error.

This covers general and broader messages without being specific. For instance, the web server is overloaded.

The digital platform’s way of saying “I’m sorry.”

If you can feel the empathy and sincerity while seeing a “404” number on a grey default page, you are better than most of us. The rest of us want more communication and humanity.

So regardless of the error number, you as a content developer are going to have to tell users “I’m sorry,” in a better, more human way.

So how do you do it?

Three key steps to creating an error message.

1. Acknowledge the problem.

Many of us know that feeling when someone has let us down or wronged us and they don’t acknowledge it.

The fact that they seem oblivious to their error is more angering than the initial letdown. It creates an infuriating mix of feeling belittled, ignored and walked on.

It’s an exponential escalation of anger that can be mitigated simply by communicating to the user, that you truly understand that your digital experience is not meeting their expectations. That you hear them and that you understand they are not getting what they want.

2. Acknowledge the user’s feelings.

Even if they don’t become irate and red-hot angry, they are likely to be frustrated. Your error screen needs to act less like a robot providing a status and act more like a human being.

A good way is to design error pages that inject empathy and compassion in your message. Some examples.

”

I like this one. As it acknowledges my frustration and my feeling of wanting to take out my frustration on someone. The fact that they playfully acknowledge my feeling is cathartic and makes me feel they understand how I’m feeling and I’m not being minimized.

3. Give them a next step.

Your digital mistake is not helpful. Now it’s time to show them that you really do want to be helpful.

The best way is to show, don’t tell, by providing users with a next step so they don’t feel stuck and unproductive. For example, have a link to a help section or similar content so the user can feel they are making progress and getting closer to satisfaction.

CONTENT STRATEGY CONSULTING

Content strategy is defining today’s successful business and leaving those too slow behind. Looking for more ideas and strategies around content marketing and delivering satisfying digital experiences for your brand, website or mobile application contact me for a free consultation.

 

 

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