What To Avoid To Make
Your Website Design Effective
|
The most effective design is the one that is the
simplest possible and that meets your users’ needs, because the
needs and expectations of the visitors to your website are your main
concern.
It is the one that announces, simply and clearly, what your website
is about. It is the one that quickly offers users exactly
what they are expecting to see on your pages, without troubling them
with insignificant information.
The biggest mistake of lots of web designers is to design according
to their own point of view, without considering what the users want
and need.
Factors damaging website design effectiveness
• Long download times
• Badly written content
• Complex design with too many elements
• Difficult navigation, incomprehensible for the user
• Poorly written, invalidated code that generates errors
Long download times
Your pages’ download time is extremely important. Your users will
simply leave your website without viewing it, if you exhaust their
patience waiting for your pages to download, and users are known to
have low thresholds when waiting to view web pages.
Remember, the other sites are only a mouse click away from them.
The download time is important no matter what type of element is
under consideration: graphics, multimedia, scripts, or applets that
are necessary for you to project your site’s message effectively;
and to this end, you need to be cautious about where on your site
you place such elements.
Don't put them in without thinking about the best place for them,
and don’t include them just because you or your designer had an idea
about it. Design them small-sized, as well.
Badly written content
Text prepared for print has nothing to do with text for the Web.
According to Jacob Nielsen, the Web usability guru, users have more
difficulties in reading the information on computers than in printed
editions. They scan it, rather than read it carefully. Huge text
blocks cannot be scanned and will not fit on a computer screen, and
hence are unreadable by your users.
The following means can be used to make text more readable and
effective:
• separate paragraphs
• titles
• subtitles
• indentations
• bullets
• bold type
• hyperlinks
• different fonts and sizes
Complex design with too many elements
Don't complicate users’ work by complex design with many elements,
which makes the website unclear in terms of its downloading and its
appearance on the screen.
Avoid frames. They could seriously damage your website usability.
Avoid having a site made exclusively in FLASH, because just to
download a Flash site, before your users can see anything of your
site at all, will take several minutes, so you won’t be able to
explain to your users in a fast and clear way, what your site is
about, who it would be useful for, or what your users could gain by
using your services.
If you insist, however, on including FLASH elements, a much better
option is to insert them into a regular html page as a
small, separate file, but even in this case, you should have a clear
purpose in including it, a purpose that contributes to the
overall effect of your website.
Always include a comprehensible title tag, which explains clearly
what is your page about (the title tag is the page title you see on
the top of the browser).
Always include text on your homepage that explains to your users who
you are and what you are talking about on your site.
Difficult navigation, incomprehensible for the user
Don't upset the user by poor navigation; it will make him feel lost.
A visitor could enter your site by any one of its pages,
not only by the home page. If he enters by a different page, it must
be immediately evident to him where he is on your site, and where he
can go by clicking on the links provided.
Don't leave your site without a site map. The site map gives the
user the opportunity to orient himself quickly and easily.
Always put on each of your pages a link to the home page plus the
firm's name and logo, and make them a link to the home page, as
well.
Avoid orphaned pages, where a user could get lost.
Don't change the default color of the hyperlinks, because users
expect to see them exactly that way. When a text is blue, the user
is used to thinking it is a link, and if it is purple, that it is a
visited link. Colors different from the default ones will
confuse them.
Don't make blue a text that is not a hyperlink. That will also
confuse them.
Don't place a link that leads to the same page, except those that go
to other sections on the page.
Poorly written, invalidated code that generates errors
The code your site is written in is validated according to browsers
from different types and versions.
Incorrectly written program code will make your site users close it
immediately due to its poor appearance in their browsers.
Correctly written code is the best way to ensure the proper
appearance of your pages on the greatest possible variety of
browsers. This includes both old and future versions.
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Veselin Andreev is one of the founders of Svilaves, which offers
website design and promotion services, the quality and effect of
which are aimed at the successful development of their clients’
business. Read the exact details of their services at
http://www.svilaves.com
-----------------------------------------------------------------
You have permission to publish this article electronically or
inprint, in your Newsletter, on your website, or in your E-Book, as
long as the author's Resource Box is included with the article.
Author Name: Veselin Andreev
Author Email: veselin@svilaves.com
Author Website:
http://www.svilaves.com
|
|
1. Choose a desired template of 8,500 +
finest templates
2. Describe your project to manager
3. Monitor production process and get
work done!
|
Our builder is a user-friendly that lets nearly anyone
create and handle a successful website quickly, and at a
great price!
|
|
The Best Affiliate Program |
|