Relaunching can sink you

Relaunch that site, and visitors may find comfort somewhere else. Here's when to relaunch, and when to think again.


In the twin worlds of IT and media, the word "relaunch" carries a special power. Software companies pray their new version 4.0 will entrench their market dominance or rein in the industry leader. Newspaper executives look to relaunches to attract the younger, hipper readers they lack. Television producers declare that their popular old show, relaunched for the 2000 season, will prevent or arrest a ratings slide.

But nowhere is the relaunch so popular as on the Web. This is the Internet, so things have to change all the time, right - and besides, we've got these cool new graphics! So from AltaVista to Netscape to Telstra to Apple, sites redo their look-and-feel, their technology, their information design. In a June 1999 report, Internet research firm Jupiter Communications found 37 major sites had altered their look-and-feel, on average, every 10 months.

Yet the evidence suggests site relaunches carry heavy risks. Most Web site visitors want to do something or find something. Make them change the way they do things at your site, and you may confuse or discomfit them to the point where they leave. Faced with a plan for a relaunch, many site managers should Just Say No.

Redesigns do make sense in at least four cases:

If you must change, change carefully. Tell regular users what will happen several weeks ahead (a step which Jupiter estimates at least half of all relaunching sites fail to take), and explain why the changes will help users. And if possible, change in gentle stages, incorporating new ideas one-by-one. Amazon.com made a long series of changes to its original 1996 site, but you'd have been hard-pressed to spot most of them. (The exception was its early 2000 trial relaunch.)

Former Fairfax chief executive and newspaper industry veteran Steve Mulholland liked to describe papers as acting "like a warm bath" - a comfortable and familiar space. Many Web sites serve their users the same way. And like newspapers, Web sites should be wary of splashing the water around.

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This item first filed on Monday, February 14, 2000 and last modified on Friday, March 05, 2004