Issue Wiki
Navigation Issues
Can visitors actually find their way around? The cat checks menus, landmarks, and calls-to-action.
Can visitors actually find their way around? The cat looks for clear menus, proper page structure, and obvious calls-to-action.
- Missing Back NavigationYour visitors have no clear way back. It's a one-way street with no U-turn — and the browser back button isn't always reliable.
- Missing BreadcrumbsYour visitors are lost in your site with no trail to follow. Like Hansel and Gretel without the bread crumbs — except no witch, just a bounce.
- Missing Call-to-ActionYour page has no clear next step. It's a shop with no checkout counter — visitors browse, shrug, and walk out empty-handed.
- Missing FooterYour site has no footer with contact or legal info. It's a business card with no phone number — visitors can't trust what they can't verify.
- Missing Landmark ElementsYour page has no header, main, footer, or nav elements. It's a book with no chapters — just one endless wall of text.
- Missing Navigation MenuYour website has no primary nav menu. Visitors are wandering a building with no signs, no directory, and no idea where anything is.
- Missing Search FunctionalityYour content-heavy site has no search. It's a library with no catalog — visitors know what they want but can't find it.
- Poor Focus ManagementYour keyboard users are trapped, lost, or invisible. It's like a revolving door that won't let you out — disorienting and infuriating.
- Small Touch TargetsYour clickable elements are too small. Trying to tap them is like pressing elevator buttons wearing oven mitts — frustrating and full of misfires.
Missing Required Field Indicators
Your form doesn't tell visitors which fields are mandatory. They submit, get errors, and rage-quit. Mark required fields properly.
Missing Navigation Menu
Your website has no primary nav menu. Visitors are wandering a building with no signs, no directory, and no idea where anything is.