Top
sites don't work in multiple browsers
By Dominic Jones, IR
Web Report
ONE of the basic rules of good web design
is that websites should work for people using
different browsers. However, many companies
including some with award-winning sites
are ignoring this accepted practice.
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Failing
to support other browsers
makes companies look incompetent
and unresponsive.
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According to our reviews, there are widespread
browser compatibility problems on IR websites
today. They range in severity, but most
are due to sites favoring proprietary technologies
and not being designed to recognized international
web standards.
Making matters worse, at least one website
awards program has recently given top honors
to sites that are defective. This calls
into question the validity of the awards
since they recognize companies that are
snubbing up to a third of their online audience.
Companies whose websites do not work in
multiple browsers risk alienating users
and damaging their credibility. Investors
who experience sites that don't work properly
in their preferred browser are likely to
perceive that the company uses unreliable
technology and that it lacks expertise.
The negative impression is aggravated if
the problems are not fixed for extended
periods, or when users are technologically
sophisticated and know that the company
is not following standards and managing
its website properly. Informed users may
even conclude that a company is mismanaging
its money if it unveils a new site that
isn't compatible with multiple browsers.
Firefox, I.E. 7.0
put compatibility back on agenda
Cross-browser compatibility has always been
a standard part of good web design and development.
However, due to the almost complete domination
of the browser market by Microsoft's Internet
Explorer many web managers and developers
have neglected cross browser testing.
However, with the introduction in 2004
of the new Firefox browser, many
companies will find that their sites don't
look or function the same way in the new
browser as they do in Internet Explorer.
This is because Firefox adheres to the standards
of the World
Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the standard-setting
body for the Internet. As such, it does
not support Microsoft and other proprietary
coding that web developers may use on their
sites.
Since its release in November 2004, Firefox
has rapidly grabbed market share, with global
share in January 2006 estimated at about
11%, according
to Onestat. In the U.S., the share is
12.55% while in Canada it is 18.43%. Other
surveys put Firefox's share as high as 30%
in Finland and 25% in Germany.
Even mighty Microsoft has taken
notice. It is working on an unscheduled
upgrade of its Internet Explorer browser
to compete with the superior functionality
of Firefox. Furthermore, in its upcoming
Internet Explorer 7.0 browser, Microsoft
plans to support W3C standards more completely
than in the past. The result is that sites
designed for the vagaries of Internet Explorer
6.0 may not work properly in the new browser,
as described in this
checklist put out by the company's browser
team.
It's important to take note that even though
it's overall share is low, Firefox users
make up a highly influential segment of
the Internet population. Part of Firefox's
demographic dovetails with that of online
investors and opinion leaders. These users
are well educated, earn high incomes, are
early adopters of new technologies, and
typically have the capability to influence
others through blogs and other media.
However, one should not make the mistake
in thinking browser compatibility is all
about Firefox and Internet Explorer. There
are other browsers that may have problems
viewing your website. They include Apple's
Safari browser, Nestcape Navigator
and the less well-known Opera. Also
increasingly important is software for mobile
devices and for disabled users.
Award-winning IR sites
fall short of best practice
Our reviews in recent months confirm that
problems are widespread. Among the sites
experiencing severe problems are some that
have recently been honored in awards programs.
This raises serious questions about the
validity of the awards and the expertise
of the evaluators.
Take Edison International as an
example. In February 2006, the company was
recognized for having the "Most Innovative
& Trendsetter IR Website" by the
IR Global Rankings, a program run
by a Brazilian outfit called MZ-Consult
that is backed by the local Sao Paulo offices
of ADR sponsor J.P. Morgan, audit firm KPMG
and law firm Linklaters.
Edison International has a Flash-heavy
investor relations website that is slow
and cumbersome in Internet Explorer. In
Firefox, however, the site is utterly unusable.
This is shown in the two screen shots below.
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| Edison
International's analyst homepage viewed
in Internet Explorer. |
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| Edison
International's IR homepage viewed in
Firefox. |
Another example is British American
Tobacco, which has won many awards for
its IR website. In 2005, it was ranked #1
in the United Kingdom by MZ-Consult in its
IR Global Rankings & Awards.
But there's one rather significant detail
the evaluators seem to have missed about
BAT. Its site did not work in Firefox the
same way it did in Internet Explorer. The
screenshots below show how pages on the
site are jumbled and the left navigation
does not work in non-Microsoft browsers.
The result is that BAT's site is unusable
for a significant segment of the online
population because it is not standards compliant.
More importantly, the company does not seem
to be reviewing its site regularly in multiple
browsers, because this problem persisted
for several months not what you would
expect of a best practice IR website.
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| BAT's
share price data page correctly displayed
in Internet Explorer 6.0 |
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| The
same page rendered in Firefox presents
an apparently blank content area. In
reality the content area and the right
column content are pushed below the
fold because of poor coding. The left
navigation bar does not open because
it relies on nonstandard code. |
Another of MZ's award-winning sites, that
of Brazilian bank Unibanco,
has similar problems. The site's navigation
scheme is corrupted in Firefox, which effectively
renders the site unusable. (See screenshots
below).
The Unibanco situation has an added twist
because the site is only three months old.
To the astute user, this suggests that despite
widespread publicity of the need to design
websites to international standards, the
bank and/or its vendors are either ignorant
or negligent.
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| In
Firefox, Unibanco's IR website is not
navigable because the sub-menus for
each section of the site are invisible. |
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| This
screenshot, taken in Internet Explorer
6.0, shows how the top horizontal navigation
bar is supposed to look. |
More broadly, many IR websites that use
Thomson Financial's products are
not properly supporting Firefox users. Three
common issues are:
Even when sites are properly designed and
coded, users of other browsers may have problems
viewing content that requires a plug-in. Firefox
users may have to reinstall
Flash and Java before the browser will
render content formatted in these technologies.
Web managers should anticipate potential
problems when providing Flash and Java content
by providing HTML versions of the same content
by default, and by using detection code and
help features when plug-ins are required.
More attention to
IR websites needed
Browser compatibility problems are symptomatic
of a wider neglect of web-based communications
by IR and other communications professionals.
Managing an IR website effectively is a
difficult and complex task. It requires
skill, attention to detail and a keen understanding
of the audience. Most of all, it takes a
commitment to building effective relationships
with investors and shareholders.
The Web is growing more complex and sophisticated
at a very rapid pace. Investors are able
to access the Internet through a growing
number of devices, from handhelds to super
large screen monitors. New technologies
are changing the way in which information
is published and distributed, including
RSS for news and XBRL for
financial data.
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Rapid
changes in technology and
regulation mean it's vital
that firms pay more attention
to their IR websites.
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The Web is also being increasingly recognized
and relied upon by regulators to ensure
equal and more effective access to information
for all market participants.
All of this means IR departments need access
to competent consultants, web developers
and service providers. They need to make
someone in the department responsible for
managing and coordinating all aspects of
the IR website. At large companies with
many shareholders, this is a full-time position,
even when parts of the site are outsourced
to vendors.
Yes, it costs money and it's difficult
to measure the value. But the reality today
is that most investors spend more time
interacting with a company's IR website
than any other type of contact with
the company. A site that doesn't work in
all browser software, or which fails to
meet the needs of investors in other respects,
is an indication that the company doesn't
value its shareholders.