Good Web Site Design in 7 Steps
No matter if your website is a personal site with a few pages or a huge corporation website, having a good design is one of the most important things. It matters a lot to visitors and can make the difference between leaving a site or bookmarking it. Here are a few tips to help improve your design:
1. Pages should load fast. Most people will leave your site if it's not done loading in ten or 15 seconds. And even if you have a fast Internet connection, not everyone does and disl-up modems still exist.
2. Text should be easy to read. The text size should be big enough, and the background should not obscure your text. If you want to be safe, use black text on a white background. If you want more color, choose very carefully to make sure it's still easy to read.
3. Your website should be easy to navigate. Each link should be clearly identified as such and graphic navigation elements like buttons and tabs should be easy to read and use. You do not want people leaving because they could not figure out how your Flash menu works.
4. Your layout and design should be consistent. If you switch between styles too much, you will confuse your visitors. If the design is too different, people will believe that they are now on a different website since the layout changed.
5. Avoid music and sounds. Very few people like to have music forced on them while they navigate, especially if they are already listening to music or surfing at their job! If you really cannot do without music, turn it off by default and ask visitors to start it themselves.
6. Design for browser compatibility. Many people do not use Internet Explorer on Windows. Make sure your site is at least viewable in Mozilla Firefox and Opera (if possible, you could even try testing on a Mac). Sites that target markets like technology should be more careful, since readers are more likely to use the newest browsers and gadgets like PDAs.
7. Design for all screen resolutions. You may like to surf in 1240x1080 with your new screen, but some people still use 800x600, or even 640x768! A site that looks perfect in high resolution may turn out to be impossible to view correctly in 800x600.
And, if you have a doubt, test, test and test! You can also ask your family and friends for help. Being less familiar with the website, they can help find a lot of things you overlooked.
we hope the following resources will be of benefit to you.
Web Site Design Resources
- Rich's Web Design
- Custom Web design and development services in NC with professional site upgrades, search engine optimization and clean graphic design.
- Create Web Site
- Create a website that rivals sites created by expensive website development firms!
- Web Site Designer
- New York web design company offers content management system, company logo design, cd business cards, ecommerce and software development.
- Web Design
- Web hosting Reviews and Webmaster Discussions.
Propose to add your site.
Web design and development news and information. Advocate of accessibility, usability, web standards and many related topics. Until next time - Laura Carlson
Accessibility
Two new links: "Deafness and the User Experience" and "Beijing 2008 Part One: accessibility gives a top level".
Cascading Style Sheets
Five new links: "Why Adding Variables to CSS is a Good Thing", "Supporting IE with Conditional Comments", "Setting Web type to a Baseline Grid", "Enhance Your Input Fields with Simple CSS Tricks", and "Specifics on CSS Specificity".
Events
One new link: "South by Southwest".
Information Architecture
One new link: "The Information Architecture Behind Good Web Forms".
Javascript
One new link: "Primitive Data Types, Arrays, Loops, and Conditions: Part 2".
Copyright © 2007 Robert Sherman
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