The goal of most web designers is to create an attractive,
easily accessible and functional website that will convince the visitor to do
something. Creating such a website requires good graphic design, easy and
intuitive site navigation, logical site layout and good web copy. The following
suggestions are general web
design guidelines.
Web Content
You want the
visitor to see you as a knowledgeable information source and/or a reputable
business. Poor grammar and spelling will immediately reduce your credibility.
Remember that people use the internet to find information. Whether you are
selling your own product or recommending someone else’s products, you must
first provide valuable information to the visitor or they will click away and
find a website that gives them what they what they want.
Cross Browser
Compatibility
There are at
least a hundred different browsers in use. You must design your website to work
properly in the most widely used browsers. To do that you may not be able to
use all of the really great special effects that are available because they may
not be supported in most browsers.
Good web design
requires your web pages to work in Microsoft Internet Explorer, Netscape,
Firefox, Opera and Safari at a minimum. Validating your HTML code will help but
the final test is to view your website in different browsers running on
different platforms.
Graphics and
Photos
Web surfers are
impatient and studies show that most people will click away if a webpage takes
longer than 10 seconds to load. Always optimize your photos and other graphic
files to have as small a size as possible without sacrificing picture
quality.
Always use the
height and width attributes on the picture so the rest of the page can load
while the graphic files is downloading. Use the ALT HTML tag so people with
graphics turned off and those using hand held devices know what the picture is
supposed to be.
Background
Colors
If you use
anything other than white behind text, be sure to specify link colors otherwise
the user’s browser defaults will determine what color the links are which can
make them unreadable.
Multimedia
Multimedia is
composed of flash movies, video clips, audio clips and background music. Always
use streaming media because it reduces download time. Make sure the visitor can
stop and start multimedia files or in the case of flash introductions, skip
them if they want. That way people with slow connections or devices that don’t
support multimedia can ignore them.
Also, put any
important information presented in multimedia in text as well so the visitor
has access to that information without using multimedia. If a plug-in is needed
to use the multimedia, always provide a link to it so the user can install it.
Finally, always remember the 10-second rule for site loading when deciding to
use multimedia.
Site
Navigation
Site navigation
should be simple and intuitive. Studies have shown if a visitor cannot access
the information they want within three clicks, they will leave the site. This
is called the 3-click rule. Every area of your website should be reachable
within three clicks from anywhere else on the site. If you use anything other
than simple text links, make sure to test your navigation in all the major browsers.
Links
Periodically
test all site links to be certain that they are valid. Nothing chases a visitor
off faster than broken links. There are several free online services that will
periodically check your links.
Frames
Avoid using
frames, since they make it difficult to bookmark individual pages on your web
site and you want people to bookmark pages so they can come back.
Summary
Good Web design is
a combination of common sense and good planning. Your site should be attractive
and easy to use and most importantly provide the user with the information or
services they want.
Source By: [Web Designers]
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