By Patrick Dugan, who works as a Product Designer. Originally published on Quora.
A common pitfall in mobile application design is a reliance on a “hamburger menu”as a catch-all for common actions as well as for general navigation.
Looking at a comparison of two note taking applications, Google Keep and Todoist, the use of the hamburger menu and its negative implications are quite apparent.
Focusing first on Google Keep, the applications navigation bar is crowded with unlabeled icons whose actions are not made clear to users. One of these icons, the hamburger menu, is where Google Keep stores navigation points into such screens as Notes, Reminders, Archive, Trash, and Settings.
Additionally, inside the hamburger menu is where users can access the application’s Labels feature (synonymous with folders).
Conversely, the application Todoist features no hamburger menu at all.
Navigation points into screens such as Folders, Labels, and Filters take the form of a tabbed navigation controller which is visible from the application’s home screen.
The applications navigation bar features entry points into Notification and Settings screens when on the home screen, and is replaced with Folder and Label titles once a user drives down into the application’s hierarchy.
The benefits of Todoist’s decision to eliminate a hamburger menu altogether are numerous, and include:
The hamburger menu is featured prominently in most of Google’s first party iOS and Android applications, and this is likely because it’s a cornerstone of Google’s Material Design framework (in which it is referred to as a navigation drawer).
I’ve generally found that incorporating a hamburger menu into an application’s information architecture ultimately leads designers to act lazily.
Rather than focus an application’s primary use cases or attempt to truly understand ways to effectively allow users to navigate throughout an application, a hamburger menu allows designers and product mangers to add new features or screens within an application that have the ultimate effect of making said application harder to learn, use, and understand.
By Patrick Dugan, who works as a Product Designer. Originally published on Quora.
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