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8 Tips for Designing a Great Website
8 Tips for Designing a Great Website
Square buttons, round buttons, flashy buttons … will
they match my shoes, my handbag or my tie? Are you stuck
in a maze of buttons, headings, bullets, sub-headings
and colour schemes?
STOP!!!!
Take a deep breath and read some practical tips for
professional looking websites.
1. Select a colour scheme and stick to it.
If your company has a logo or preferred colours on its
stationery that’s a good start. For those of you
starting from scratch, choose two or three complementary
colours and stick with them – don’t change colours on
every page.
The most common colour schemes include:
- Red, yellow and white
- Blue and white
- Red, grey and white
- Blue, orange and white
- Yellow, grey and white.
If you’re not sure what colour scheme to choose, surf
the internet and find a website that you like. You can
then model your colour scheme on what already exists.
2. Use templates.
Can’t find a website you really like? Another option is
to choose a template. There are many templates or
pre-set designs. These come as part of your web design
software (such as FrontPage) or you can check out some
websites that specialise in designing templates.
Visit:
www.web4business.com.au emplates1.htm
www.newtemps.com
www.website-templates-resale-rights.com
www.123webtemplatesandmore.com
3. Provide an easy to use navigation system.
This is one of the most important issues to consider
when designing a website. You need to ensure your
visitors can find what they are looking for easily. Most
websites either display their navigation bar on the left
or at the top. And since most people are used to this
type of navigation, it’s best to stick with it.
It also helps to include your navigation bar at the
bottom of each page to save your visitors from having to
scroll back to the top.
4. Don’t go overboard on special effects
Whilst it is ok to have one or two special effects to
jazz up your website, spinning graphics and logos often
distract your visitor from the content, not to mention
they can take too long to download. Your visitors may
click away even before your spinning logo finishes
loading.
5. Backgrounds
Ensure your visitors can read the text on the
background, ie. no black writing on dark blue background
or yellow on white. Also be careful that your links are
visible before and after being visited. The default for
links in most programs is blue (before being visited)
and burgundy (after being visited), so if you have a
dark background, ensure your links are light.
6. External Links
It is a good idea to open links to other websites in a
new window. That way your visitors can easily return to
your site when they are finished browsing the external
link
7. Site Map & Search Feature
If you website is more than 15 pages, it is useful to
have a site map or a “Search” feature to ensure your
visitors can easily find what they’re looking for.
8. Content is King
While it is important that your website looks clean and
professional, it is far more important that you
concentrate your efforts on the content and promotion.
If you want a professional website, things to stay away
from include:
1. Flash intros, revolving globes, bevelled line
separators, animated mail boxes
2. Loads of pop up or pop under boxes
3. Autoplay music. Allow your customer to play music
only if they choose.
4. Hit counters of the free variety, which say “you are
27th visitor”
5. Date and time stamps, unless your website is updated
daily or weekly
6. Busy backgrounds.
Don’t sweat the small stuff and get yourself focussed on
what to include on the website and the best way to
promote it. We will cover these topics in future
articles.
This article is written by Ivana Katz whi is the owner
of Websites 4 Small Business - www.web4business.com.au,
a company specialising in the design and promotion of
small and home-based business websites.
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