Left-Left-Left and Up-Up-Up have the least cursor movement, and Up-Up-Left and Up-Left-Up have the most cursor movement. This effect makes sense because it's harder for the user to move the cursor to the wrong plane when all the navigation is in the same executive email list direction. 4. Wrong choice Too many clicks indicate a wrong selection. When the primary navigation is on the left, the selection error rate is lowest (the left side has an 80% reduction in error rate executive email list compared to the top). When both primary and secondary navs are at the top, there are tons of selection errors.
Up-up-up and up-up-left are the worst in efficiency. When the secondary and tertiary navigation and the primary navigation are not in the same direction, the executive email list selection error rate will be greatly reduced. 5. User Preferences Most users prefer the primary navigation on the left, and the optimal layout is left-left-left and left-up-up. People strongly prefer secondary executive email list and tertiary navigation in the same direction. 6. The best layout Each layout is given an overall score based on performance across all categories. The best performing navigation layout is left-top-top, followed by left-left-left.
The two worst performers were top-top-left and top-left-top. Of the two best, left-up-up was about 17 seconds faster than left-left-left. Why is the navigation so designed and the experience better? Left-left-left is slower than left-top-top because it requires the user to executive email list scroll through the list of items when all menus are on the left. As the levels expand and deepen, users have to scroll to see more and can no longer see all the main item categories on one screen. However, executive email list the benefit of left-left-left is that users can consume more content per screen view. Users spend less time navigating content screens.