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POLL Responsive [RWD] or Adaptive [AWD] ?

Responsive OR Adaptive?

  • RWD - responsive

    Votes: 12 66.7%
  • AWD - adaptive

    Votes: 6 33.3%

  • Total voters
    18
But since shoppers are conducting very different activities, depending on the device (as this study shows), shouldn't adaptive hold the upper hand?
Mobile%20activities.png

http://digitalsolutions.autotrader....rader.com-Multi-Device-Car-Shopping-Study.pdf
 
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Reactions: eddyshaf
So we are in an area where 4G and High Speed are not always readily available - will users experience load time issues with a responsive or adaptive site...especially on a 3G or slower wireless connection?

It could. They're going to load desktop assets and scale them down. Browser detection is often done on the client side, so it makes it difficult to provide different assets for different devices.
 
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Reactions: eddyshaf
But since shoppers are conducting very different activities, depending on the device (as this study shows), shouldn't adaptive hold the upper hand?

http://digitalsolutions.autotrader....rader.com-Multi-Device-Car-Shopping-Study.pdf

This is another of the reasons that I believe in adaptive.

Responsive is a trend at the moment - I believe it will eventually become the norm, but even then I believe that there should be 4 websites; Mobile, Tablet, Desktop, Kiosk. Each one should be responsive, but I don't think your mobile website and your desktop website should have identical assets, videos, service forms, etc.

Our service form works on mobile, but I would much rather see a simpler version tailored to mobile (currently in testing). http://www.oakridgeford.com/departments/service - this page is an adaptive theme loading a responsive page - obviously needs work.
 
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Reactions: ed.brooks
But since shoppers are conducting very different activities, depending on the device (as this study shows), shouldn't adaptive hold the upper hand?

Ed, for me, this is the 800lb Gorilla. It's exactly why amazon (and others) didn't jump into responsive. Few people deeply understand device context. IMO, you have to nail this 1st before you cement yourself into a new tech that may complicate and color your design feedback.
 
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Reactions: Mitch Gallant
surprised that more people would not be interested in this topic...especially with thee impending Google updates...

Remeber - the title of your forum thread is like the subject line of an email campaign. The better the subject line, the better your open rate.

Ed, It was cool and industry relavant to use AWD or RWD, but I'm sure it hindered your view rate. Hence the slow return on feedback from the community.

Advice to the community - think through the title of your post before clicking submit.
 
Remember - the title of your forum thread is like the subject line of an email campaign. The better the subject line, the better your open rate.

Ed, It was cool and industry relevant to use AWD or RWD, but I'm sure it hindered your view rate. Hence the slow return on feedback...

Guess I am just a smart ass at heart :egads:
 
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Reactions: Jeff Kershner
So we are in an area where 4G and High Speed are not always readily available - will users experience load time issues with a responsive or adaptive site...especially on a 3G or slower wireless connection?

They'll typically experience more issues with a responsive site. The reason is that a responsive site is sending back a payload (images, javascript, css, etc.) for ALL devices. Based on the size of the viewport (screen) it will show specific content. But all that HTML markup, say for your normal navigation and your mobile navigation is sent back together in one file. In the case of adaptive, it will send back only what is needed for that specific device. It's much more efficient and it allows for a much better UI if the vendor really cares about that sort of thing.

In the case of a vehicle details page or a search results page, a responsive site is sending back ~50% of HTML markup that's not even used. If you're showing 20-50 cars per page, that can add up quickly.

With dealer websites, for me the holy grail is a desktop site that can be sized down appropriately for tablets (iPads). Then a mobile layout that is done right. It's the hybrid approach like @craigh mentioned. So far I haven't seen a vendor hit a home run with the mobile site. I've seen one or two say they have, but they're probably one of the most un-usable mobile sites I've come across :/

One of the other issues I've seen with the mobile sites so far is the designers forgot that mobile devices have touch screens ;) I want to swipe through the photos.
 
So far I haven't seen a vendor hit a home run with the mobile site. I've seen one or two say they have, but they're probably one of the most un-usable mobile sites I've come across :/

One of the other issues I've seen with the mobile sites so far is the designers forgot that mobile devices have touch screens ;) I want to swipe through the photos.

Agreed. And I admit my own team is on that list as well. We are overhauling our mobile sites entirely with a mobile-first strategy because what we have now is the "bare minimum" for a mobile site. It's light years better than many options, but it's not something I'm about to stamp my name on and call "done".
 

✨ AI Highlights

eddyshaf asks whether dealership websites should use responsive design (one site for all devices) or adaptive design (different versions for different devices), prompting discussion about Google rankings, performance, and practical implementation. The consensus is that responsive is the eventual standard but currently has performance problems, making adaptive a viable interim solution; Google doesn't significantly favor one over the other, and vendors can blend both approaches (as Amazon does). Key concern: in areas with slower internet speeds (3G), both approaches may face load time issues, though the thread doesn't fully resolve this.

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