|
|
|
|
| Tips on How to
Design a Usefull Website |
|
|
| |
In the
online world, won’t it be nice to have
a site that buyers just had to buy from, despite
themselves? Surfers will be drawn to the "Add
to Cart" button that squealed, "Click
me!" to them. They found that they just
had to click the button and buy the item.
The following tips will make your site load
more faster, easier to use and more pleasing
to your visitor. While they won't guarantee
you a sale, a happier and more satisfied surfer
should greatly increase your chances of a
sale. |
| |
| Don't Reinvent
The Wheel |
Probably
the first thing you want to do is to visit
some of your competitor's sites. It will give
you an idea of what your site could look like,
what features you want for your own site and
serve as a starting point for the design of
your own site.
Perhaps the best advice I can give you
here is to look at the sites from a customer’s
point of view. As a customer, what do you
like or dislike about the sites? Would you
buy from them, and why? Are you going to
revisit again, and why?
|
| |
| Ease Of Navigation |
| |
In
many cases, you don't read a web site like
you would a novel. You don't start from page
1, continue to page 2, and so on.
You would probably "read" a site
like you would a reference book. Maybe you
will read the introduction to get an idea
of what the book is about, and then you
will skip to the table of contents to look
for the location of the information that
you need. In some cases, you may turn to
the index at the back of the book to see
what on what pages the information you want
is referred to.
Notice the navigation aids - the table
of contents and the index. The first will
be found at the beginning while the second,
if available, at the end of the book. This
is a standard observed by all books.
Your site should be as easy to navigate.
- Main Menu. You should have a menu, located
either at the top, left or right, that directs
users to the various sections of your site.
This menu should be available from every
page of your site, and at the same location.
- Site Map. If your site is relatively
large, and you feel that users may have
a problem locating the information they
want even with a main menu, consider including
a site map. Site maps give much more detail
than the main menu and users will have an
easier time locating the information they
want.
- Search Engine. If your site is a very
large site, including a search engine is
a good idea.
|
| |
| Fast Downloading
Pages |
Many
webmasters will have broadband or cable connections
and they tend to forget about the poor souls
still struggling with dialup.
It is best that you keep the size of your
pages as small as possible to accommodate
users with slow connections. A general guideline
is to keep the size of your pages below
100k.
|
| |
| Graphics |
Pretty
graphics are nice to look at. But unless your
site is about graphics, it's probably best
to keep it to a minimum. It distracts users
the information you want to convey, and increases
the load time for your pages.
Don't forget to optimize the graphics that
you use. The jpeg graphic format is a compressed
format. You can choose to compress it as
much or as little as you want. The more
you compress it, the smaller it becomes,
but the image is of a lower quality.
To optimize your jpeg’s, start with
a jpeg of acceptable quality. Save the jpeg
with more compression and view it. If you
find the quality acceptable, save it again
with even more compression. Keep doing it
until you get an image with unacceptable
quality. The image before that will be your
optimized image.
Note that you cannot go from a low quality
image back to a high quality image. So remember
to save your high quality images into a
separate directory before trying any optimization.
|
| |
| Consistency |
We discussed
consistency regarding the location of your
main menu. This consistency should extend
to all areas of your site. In other words,
your fonts, color scheme, buttons, etc, should
be the same for all pages of your site.
|
| |
| Testing |
The
computer on your desk is called a PC, or personal
computer. Whenever I am asked why a particular
computer behaves in a strange way, I will
invariably remark that the computer is called
a "personal computer", and thus
will exhibit its own personality. :)
Similarly, surfers viewing your site will
also have their own personal computer, with
their own particular combination of software
and hardware. Therefore, it is best to test
your site under as many different types
and versions of hardware and software as
possible.
- Browsers. Although IE is the dominant
browser, some of your users may be running
other browsers like Netscape or Firefox.
Test your site in as many different browsers
as you can. Also, don't forget to test it
under different versions of the same browser.
- Screen Resolutions. Don't forget to test
your site under different screen resolutions.
|
| |
| How
to design a Search Engine friendly Website?
|
| |
|
|
|
|