Although the Internet is not without its critics, many popular and academic
writers are particularly effusive in their praise of the World Wide Web's
interactive features. A content analysis of the formal features of 496 Web
sites, drawn randomly from a sample of the top 5,000 most visited sites det
ermined by 100hot.com, was performed to explore whether the capabilities of
the World Wide Web are being exploited by Web page designers to the extent
that the literature suggests they are. Specifically, the study examines th
e differences between the formal features of commercial versus noncommercia
l sites as well as the relationship between Web page complexity and the amo
unt of traffic a site receives. Findings indicate that, although most pages
in this stage of the Web's development remain technologically simple and n
oninteractive, there are significant relationships between site traffic and
home-page structure for Web sites in the commercial (.com) as well as educ
ational (.edu) domains. As the Web continues to expand and the amount of in
formation redundancy increases, it is argued that a site's information pack
aging will become increasingly important in gaining users' attention and in
terest.