Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Designing Social Interfaces: Principles, Patterns, and Practices for Improving the User Experience

Rate this book
From the creators of Yahoo!'s Design Pattern Library, Designing Social Interfaces provides you with more than 100 patterns, principles, and best practices, along with salient advice for many of the common challenges you'll face when starting a social website. Designing sites that foster user interaction and community-building is a valuable skill for web developers and designers today, but it's not that easy to understand the nuances of the social web. Now you have help.

Christian Crumlish and Erin Malone share hard-won insights into what works, what doesn't, and why. You'll learn how to balance opposing factions and grow healthy online communities by co-creating them with your users.

518 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2009

25 people are currently reading
564 people want to read

About the author

Christian Crumlish

52 books9 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
90 (34%)
4 stars
86 (32%)
3 stars
61 (23%)
2 stars
25 (9%)
1 star
2 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Christian.
Author 52 books9 followers
March 13, 2023
Since I co-wrote it, I'll resist rating it.
Profile Image for SALEM.
382 reviews165 followers
September 16, 2014
This book is full of joy for someone like me who is very addict to Social internet. Also it is very useful for those who are tide to design a social network as a complete reference.

Two points that I am seriously recommend this book for any one are:
- It literally covers all the topics and issues about Social Networks.
- For someone who hardly find a time for reading like me, or someone on rush to find information about a specific topic, this book will let you get in the point and get all answers related to (What, Why, Who, How, ...) and so on. You don't have to read too long paragraphs to get the point, you just need to read the needed information in the form of points, which by the why will boost the rate of getting what you need. And sure all examples in the screen shots of the very familiar sites we are using in our daily life, it is another magnificent asset while reading.

finally as people who are working on this project are Yahoo-guys or something like that, I am totally trust their knowledge!



Merged review:

This book is full of joy for someone like me who is very addict to Social internet. Also it is very useful for those who are tide to design a social network as a complete reference.

Two points that I am seriously recommend this book for any one are:
- It literally covers all the topics and issues about Social Networks.
- For someone who hardly find a time for reading like me, or someone on rush to find information about a specific topic, this book will let you get in the point and get all answers related to (What, Why, Who, How, ...) and so on. You don't have to read too long paragraphs to get the point, you just need to read the needed information in the form of points, which by the why will boost the rate of getting what you need. And sure all examples in the screen shots of the very familiar sites we are using in our daily life, it is another magnificent asset while reading.

finally as people who are working on this project are Yahoo-guys or something like that, I am totally trust their knowledge!
Profile Image for Tom Olson.
89 reviews
August 3, 2016
Originally submitted at O'Reilly

When I purchased this book I was hoping to get a better grasp on common social interface patterns and their usage. I wanted to build better autocomplete tools so users could more readily find users and connections, or learn better ways to organize groups of users so they'd be easier to find and isolate in an interface. While this book has given me descriptive patterns and current examples of those patterns, I still felt like it missed giving me the insight I was really looking for. I felt like this book focused much more on presenting the patterns than it focused on keeping the interfaces engaging.

On the other hand, it is a useful book of definitions and patterns. The simple naming makes it easy to take a unknown description and map it to one of the pattern. I also appreciate that the book breaks down a pattern into "What", "Use When", "How", "Why", "Related patterns" and "As seen on". The "How" section provides a good sanity check for added features. This section gently reminds you that you can, for instance, add subscriptions or saved searches to a social search, and other minor things that you may not initially consider when trying to implement a pattern for the first time.

All in all, I find this book to be a decent purchase, and a good reference tool when I need it. This book would probably work best for the person that has real problems designing social interfaces. Maybe if you have to constantly redesign or deal with unhappy customers, this book would help you focus on stabilizing your interface.
Profile Image for Ash Moran.
79 reviews40 followers
April 27, 2010
The book labels itself as "Principles, Patterns, and Practices", but primarily it's a pattern library. I've come to this knowing very little about social media and social networks, so my review is a newbie perspective.

The book documents patterns of social UIs extensively. Most of the examples are from a small set of high-profile sites, with a bias towards Yahoo (due to being authored there). Patterns range in scope from the almost invisible (Welcome Page, Avatar, Sign In) to ones so complex whole applications are based around them (Calendar, Groups). All of them come with implementation recommendations and lessons learnt from history.

By "Practices", the authors mean "Best Practices". Or, "do what we tell you because it's better than making it up as you go along". The book has relatively little debate, and therefore is very accessible for beginners, but might not have enough to engage experts. (The flipside is that it gives a common language both ends of the community can use.)

Despite being largely prescriptive, there was enough background, history and opinion in this to keep me engaged. Interesting topics given brief essays include: identity management; influence of competitive patterns (eg Leaderboard) on community dynamics; the nature/effect of relationships between "staff" and the community; new open social network standards (eg OpenSocial); and the facets of being "open".

Overall, a great introduction, and a very handy reference to evaluate social sites.
Profile Image for Dhuaine.
233 reviews31 followers
April 27, 2012
This book is just a pattern library with next to no discussion on the topic. The patterns are familiar and common sense to anyone who has used social web. Each pattern is presented with very short description, "when to use" recommendation and some examples, mostly from the same subset of sites. For me, the examples were most interesting; although I felt that the book would have been better if it included some examples of bad implementation and anti-patterns as well.

All in all, I learned only a few new things, mostly about services I haven't used myself. I'm not sure who this book is targeted at - absolute beginners? Designers running out of ideas and deadlines and looking for some inspiration or a quick fix? Either way, it's not a book you would read from cover to cover if you're using the web to do more than just check email.
Profile Image for Sandro.
49 reviews
December 18, 2023
This is a very well-written book, filled with explicative design patterns related to social interfaces and numerous known examples in the form of website images.

For experienced interface designers or even for some of the most observant web users, the patterns presented in this book may come across as obvious.

However, that's why they are called patterns—they are the most well-known common practices in the field compiled in one book.

I highly recommend this book. Even if people don't read it from start to finish, it still serves as a great reference book to have on your shelves, ready for you to consult a particular design pattern at any time.
Profile Image for Rose.
31 reviews3 followers
February 21, 2010
Obviously, this is a good reference for those who want create social apps. On the other thought, all aplications are meant to be used by humans who are by nature social. So I believe, this is a good beginner's book.

I considered it as beginners. If you've been a long time social web app user, the ideas presented here are not that surprising.
Profile Image for Dave.
25 reviews2 followers
March 7, 2011
This one is mostly common sense for anyone who's used more than a few social oriented services. It does a good job though breaking down features across all of these sites into single unit functions that can be helpful in communicating about social features. Worth a skim through if you're starting a social project.
Profile Image for Nathanael Coyne.
157 reviews56 followers
July 23, 2015
A useful resource. Not a book you would read cover to cover but still packed with plenty of ideas, guidance and examples for the interaction designer working with social websites.
Profile Image for Alexander Debkaliuk.
77 reviews2 followers
April 16, 2013
This book is more of a catalogue of patterns way too familiar to anyone in the industry. I didn't really see much value in it. Could be written by anybody else.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.