We tested the virtual front doors of the Top 20 full-time MBA programs to see which Web sites delivered the goods. Here are the results
In choosing a business school, one of the first things an applicant does is hit the Web and pull up individual school Web sites. It's there that, one hopes, basic information need to start the search is only a few mouse clicks away. And while that's the case at many sites—a recent look at the online presentation of BusinessWeek's Top 20 MBA programs finds that some have lost sight of their essential purpose: educating students about the program in a simple, straightforward way. Too often, key information is obscured by a forest of links, Web animation, and poorly placed headings. It's not surprising. Jakob Neilson, an expert on Web usability, said too many Web sites preoccupy themselves with aesthetics. "It's a complete waste of money," he said of flash-based design and other visually appealing graphic effects. "Web sites should invest in simplicity, not complexity." Our own test, conducted last month ranked the sites of the Top 20 schools on BusinessWeek's most recent full-time MBA ranking using a single, admittedly unscientific measure: how long it took to extract useful information from the site. While this doesn't capture all of the nuances of a Web site's effectiveness, it's a reasonable measure. When slogging through site after site, speed is of the essence. More than anything else, prospective students want to know whether a school is right for them, and how they can improve their chances for admission. Every second wasted on dead-end links and hard-to-read headings gets in the way of that. KEY FACTORSWe asked users of BusinessWeek.com's MBA forums, staffers, and some prospective MBA applicants we knew to weigh in on what matters most when they're surfing school Web sites. The feedback we received provided a long list of factors. From that list we selected five items, and timed how long it took to find all of them from each site. The list doesn't include everything a prospective student is looking for, but everything on it is highly important, if not crucial, for most visitors to the sites. We searched for: •Application deadlines. These should be front and center on any admissions site—before strategizing on what to do to get into a school, one needs to know by when they have to do it. •A complete list of application materials. Because of the sheer volume of information available on most business school Web sites, it can be easy to lose track of specific application requirements. They should be listed somewhere on the site, ideally in checklist form. •The admissions director's name and contact information. This person weighs applicants, answers questions, and controls admissions decisions. They are also in many ways the ambassadors for the business school. Their identity should not be a mystery. •Financial-aid information. Business school is expensive. A school's Web site should help a student understand how they might pay for it. •A description of the curriculum. Possibly the most important element to evaluating an MBA program is what it will teach. This information should be readily available, and ideally, would include a course list. METHODOLOGYFor consistency's sake, we tried to locate this information for the full-time MBA programs of each school. What we discovered about usability from this search almost certainly applies to students seeking information about Executive MBAs or undergraduate programs. Each search began at the school's home page. Using the site's search function or site index to track down what we were looking for was not allowed. While it's common to resort to these when information is hard to find, none of the above items should be so deeply buried that one has to use them. If something was extremely difficult to locate, we gave up looking for it after an unspecified period, somewhere around five minutes. |