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‘How-to’ get richer

18 Nov

We’ve just launched our shiny new How-to Guides at lovemoney.com.

They do just what they say on the tin – whatever your financial aims are, whether it’s managing milestones in life such as getting married, or being able to go on more holidays, or build up some savings, there’s a guide to help you achieve it.

How-to Guide homepage

I think they look pretty enticing with the carousel for navigation. Each guide has the tasks broken down within it, so there’s loads of information here.  I even learnt a thing or two from our testing!

We’re going to add the ability for users to comment very shortly – some of the most useful tips have been from the lovemoney.com users.

How-to Guide task

We’ve been working on some other things too, which I’ll post about very shortly.

Designed by Julia, built by Phil and coded by Joseph – excellent work guys!

Making it simple to search for a mortgage

30 Oct

mortgagehomepage1

We launched the new lovemoney.com mortgage engine recently.

It’s designed to

  • show you mortgages you’re eligible for
  • allow you to filter the mortgages on the market according to what you want

so that when you see the table of products listed, they will be suitable products that you are qualified for.

What we did

We started the project by spending a few months asking users what they wanted and developing the journey. We ended up with wireframes outlining what the journey might look like.

Homepage

SearchPage

SearchPage(Working)

SearchPageSubsequent

PossibleProducts

ProductSelected

Wallet

Then we specced it, built it, tested and launched it. It took a couple of months to spec out the work and about three months to build the first version.

Now we’re iteratively adding functionality. Since it’s been launched, people can share their searches with others and Instant Messaging went out in the last release, so people can now chat with our advisors.

There’s more in the pipeline!

All change

15 Apr

We’ve recently undergone a big change so I thought I’d make a few notes on how we went about it.

The Motley Fool used to comprise a mixture of personal finance and investing content. It was decided to separate this content into two specific sites – investing would be the main area of focus for The Fool and personal finance would be the main offering from the other site.

Initially, the challenge for us was to develop a new name and brand for the new site – I’ve written some details about how we did this here.

We also needed to communicate the change to our users and here is how we did it.

By the time we needed to begin communication, we had already put up a temporary site in order to build link equity and it looked like this:

lovemoney-temp-homepage1

As you can see, it was pretty basic, but featured comparison tables – Lena’s speciality, which are key to the site in terms of revenue and article churn, which contributed to the freshly updated content that Google loves. Carl also started a blog which added a nice human touch to the site.

On The Fool site, meanwhile, the messaging was done through the About Us section:

transition-about-us1

Emails also went out to our customers explaining the change.

A few weeks later, we moved to the second phase of the change. This involved changing some areas on The Fool site to incorporate the lovemoney.com site and make it clear to customers that lovemoney.com is the new offering from The Fool, whilst emphasising the differences in focus.

Here’s what the homepage looked like before:

fool-homepage-before5

…and here’s what the homepage looked like once the details about the new site had been added:

transition-homepage

As you can see the homepage gives significant focus to the new site, which is all part of the signposting and managing user expectations. There were also tool tips, written by Sara, which floated above the article titles on hover over, explaining that they were being sent to a different site.

The About Us page was also updated to outline the forthcoming changes:

transition-about-us2

Then the next step was the launch of lovemoney.com. For this, we built a new site in the background which featured all the bits from the original lovemoney.com site plus a registration box for people interested to learn more about the new features, new navigation including a top bar for comparing products and extra bits like home and car insurance. This is what it looked like:

lovemoneyhomepage1

Then, on April 1st, it blossomed into the current green and luscious looking site. Profiling details, comments on articles and Q&A were also added to this release:

lovemoney-homepage2

Of course the grass/growing concept is related to the ‘nurturing’ philosphy behind lovemoney.com.

I think a nice ‘paradise’ background would also look good as paradise is probably quite a nurturing place.

Love lovemoney.com!

7 Apr

lovemoney-homepage1

Ta da! lovemoney.com, our sparkling new site went live recently.

And it’s not just a pretty site.

It’s designed to help users grow richer and offers useful tools  which aim to motivate and support users to get their finances in order.  With personalised content and tools like Q&A, the idea is that users will be able to get access to  relevant content that will help them get to where they want to be financially.

As it will be a site that people use as a tool, the challenge is to make sure that it’s easy to use, with logical user journeys and clear messaging.

This is still very much a work in progress with new bits being added regularly and I think that will keep it looking and feeling fresh as the grass in the background.

Carl has been tweeting about the site and we’ve had some positive feedback from users. What do you think?

Hooray!

19 Feb

lovemoney

www.lovemoney.com is live!

It’s a new way of thinking about personal finance with lots of useful tools that will be launched soon. Love it!

Definitely need a beer after all that testing so we’re off to the pub!

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