I understand the premise now, but it took me a while to figure out how it worked. The problem is, what they really need to say is something like:
"You can put any email address in here. If Persona has seen you before you can just put in your password and you're set. If you put in an email address that we have an integration with (like Yahoo) then you're all set. If you put in an address that we dont know, we'll ask you to create an account and then you'll be signed in. We might well have seen you before, so maybe try your 'normal' email address but the chances are you won't know whether we know about you as this is all too new."
Because THAT is basically how it works (AFAICT) but obviously that's a lot of text and no one actually reads text on websites.
The problem is that no one knows WTF persona is. Like my Dad and my wife have no idea what it is. They are also REALLY nervous about just putting their email address and password for a separate account into a website they have never seen before, AND FOR GOOD REASON!
This is a total usability clusterfuck. You expect my Dad (who calls the entire internet "Google") to accept this and not get worried about it?
They need to put MASSIVE INTERNET BRAND LOGOS in that box. Like Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Apple. Brands like that. Brands that, you know, my Dad has actually heard of and might actually have an account with.
I can see they are going in that direction with the Yahoo announcement, and MASSIVE KUDOS to them for that, that's a big step. Bit right now the usability is fucked and will stay fucked until the Persona brand as as big as Apple's or Google's. So never.
There's a sleight-of-hand Amazon plays with their own sign-in box: they give you a single "email" box, and then two radio buttons -- "I'm new" and "I already have an account and here is my password" [with a password input below that option].
The clever thing is, the radio buttons are completely ignored -- if you have an account and the password matches, you get logged in; if you didn't put in a password, and the email isn't in their records, they bring you to the account creation flow. The radio buttons are just there to let users express a choice they expected to be able to make, and thereby keep them in flow.
A better Persona login box could just do the same thing, but without the password input box under the "I already have an account" option. In fact, since selecting an option is the last step of the flow, just have an email field with two buttons, "Sign Up" and "Log In". Both buttons do the same thing :)
"You can put any email address in here. If Persona has seen you before you can just put in your password and you're set. If you put in an email address that we have an integration with (like Yahoo) then you're all set. If you put in an address that we dont know, we'll ask you to create an account and then you'll be signed in. We might well have seen you before, so maybe try your 'normal' email address but the chances are you won't know whether we know about you as this is all too new."
Because THAT is basically how it works (AFAICT) but obviously that's a lot of text and no one actually reads text on websites.
The problem is that no one knows WTF persona is. Like my Dad and my wife have no idea what it is. They are also REALLY nervous about just putting their email address and password for a separate account into a website they have never seen before, AND FOR GOOD REASON!
This is a total usability clusterfuck. You expect my Dad (who calls the entire internet "Google") to accept this and not get worried about it?
They need to put MASSIVE INTERNET BRAND LOGOS in that box. Like Facebook, Google, Yahoo, Apple. Brands like that. Brands that, you know, my Dad has actually heard of and might actually have an account with.
I can see they are going in that direction with the Yahoo announcement, and MASSIVE KUDOS to them for that, that's a big step. Bit right now the usability is fucked and will stay fucked until the Persona brand as as big as Apple's or Google's. So never.