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I personally loathe background music on a website. My client has opposite feelings on the subject. I added music because the customer is always right, though I'd like to revisit the subject with them.

Almost everyone would agree that it is annoying and wastes precious bandwidth but are there any usability studies or a recommendation for someone esteemed in the profession that can provide a valid argument against background music?

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10 Answers

vote up 20 vote down check

Metrics. You'll never be able to convince a business person with an emotional answer.

If you investigate the situation empirically you'll be able to give them something irrefutable.

I would would try an experiment: (get google analytics)

  • have one site with the music as-is, measure the bounce rate,etc
  • have an identical site without music, measure the bounce rate,etc

Have the server randomly serve up the different pages for a couple weeks (until you get a significant data) and see what happens.

Maybe we're wrong (I hate music too). I hope your customer is wrong, but who knows.

You could also add a survey link and try to get people to answer that as well (but without an incentive that might not work)

Stats can be your friend here :)

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Excellent advice. – Dan Dyer Jan 26 at 20:59
Great idea, using metrics should appeal to any business person. If it turns out that music helps then my idealism might shatter, but I'm curious to see how much music influences the stickiness of a site. – David Thomas Garcia Jan 27 at 16:40
please let us know how that goes – cbrulak Jan 27 at 17:40
vote up 3 vote down

Music also interferes with screen reader users. I'm a blind computer user and nothing annoys me more then having music start playing and drowned out my speech program that's trying to read the site. Nothing will make me close a website quicker then unwanted audio.

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vote up 1 vote down

Consider taking a different path with the client. Ask them what the purpose for the music is...

If it is to install a particular feeling or mood with the visitor of the site, consider taking them through all the points mentioned in answers here and discuss how that may violate the intended for the music. Then you will be able to talk to the client about different ways to instill the same "ambience" to the website without resorting to music. This is really a design issue and not usability.

If the background music/sound was to convey some information, then it is a usability issue as people who for technological or biological reasons cannot hear the sound at the correct volume will miss out on that. Therefore the site is not as usable as it should be.

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vote up 0 vote down

Unfortunately, as a service provider of sorts, all we can do is cringe and give the customer what they want - after documenting your disapproval both commented in the code and in writing to the client, of course.

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vote up 5 vote down

It took a bit but I found a site that talks about usability on web sites.

They have a video on the right hand side of this page:

http://www.ciaromano.com/evaluating/testing.php

It shows why audio ads are not a good idea on websites.

Hope this helps.

G-Man

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vote up 2 vote down

Just make sure that there is a way to turn it off. It really depends on the type of Website, because multimedia-heavy sites (i.e. sites for Movies or Games) can benefit from it, but if I'm listening to some of my own music, I definitely want a way to turn it off.

Oh and please, no crappy MIDI-Files that people already hated in 1993 when they were novel.

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vote up 11 vote down

I would also:

(calculate the size of the audio file(s)*the number of hits*months)/cost of GB per month

Then tell them how much money they are wasting.

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vote up 1 vote down

This is a tough one -- and what's amazing is that at the moment, I have a client who's demanding the exact same thing.

Personally I don't know of any usability studies addressing this topic specifically, but there's plenty of anecdotal evidence out there from users complaining about the intrusiveness or outright corniness of unrequested background music. * That said, clients still ask for it. Best you can do is try to explain the situation to them, try to gather a few good examples of people complaining about it from the Web at large, build a case, and hope the client goes for it.

In my case, she completely agrees that it's potentially annoying, understands it cuts against the grain of user expectations and politeness, but wants it anyway. So I'm building it. Whaddyagonnado.

* Indeed, you could probably use this thread as evidence! Good luck.

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vote up 8 vote down

Basically, it boils down to this:

  • Audio on websites is a bad idea. No one likes it.
  • Try to educate your client that it is a bad idea. (It's annoying, different levels of sound can cause problems, yadda yadda) Mention that most users don't take sites seriously if they use sound. It's a very '99 thing to do.
  • If you client does not budge, (politely) remind him/her that they are paying you for your expertise as an internet professional. You are the expert on the web, and they have hired you to give your expertise.
  • If they still won't budge, keep the sound and make sure they are happy. The bottom line is keeping the client happy.
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I've been in cases like this. The only bad thing about it is how it looks on your resume or portfolio. You can't really say "I did this project, but I personally didn't like the sound" in the project description. Bitter-sweet. – Jonathan Sampson Jan 26 at 23:02
i would skip step 3 – Dustin Getz Jan 26 at 23:03
@Dustin - 3 is actually remarkably effective. – davethegr8 Jan 26 at 23:35
vote up 42 vote down

Usability is not the only concern. Consider the following scenarios:

1 - Someone browses to the site while at work in a shared office, and now all of their co-workers think "Gee, he's wasting time".

2 - Someone browses to the site while in a room with a sleeping baby, and now they have to spend an hour getting him/her back to sleep.

3 - Someone browses to the site while they are listening to their own music, and now they hear a cacaphony of shrieks until one source is muted.

Also, consider that any benefit gained from the music on your website will be totally lost on anyone who has their speakers muted. So your audience can be divided between:

A - People who cannot hear the music

B - People who can hear it, but do not like it

C - People who can hear it, and do like it

I would not care to estimate the percentages associated with each of these groups, but keep in mind that category "B" is actively offended by your website. To take a line from the hippocratic oath, one rule of web design should be "do no harm".

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+1 on scenario 3 - that drives me nuts – Bramha Ghosh Jan 26 at 20:53
4). - Somebody in a quiet room has their speakers turned up high but nothing playing. They browse to the site and the music that blasts out scares the living crap out of them. – Dan Dyer Jan 26 at 20:58

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