Ten Design Mistakes to Avoid
by William Hanke Avoid these mistakes and your site will be
steps ahead of your competition.
1. Not planning your site
Before you even have a website, you must have an idea, a focus.
Why do you want a website? What are your plans and goals for the
site? Sit down and draw out a map of possible pages and ideas for
your site. Include your site's purpose --whether it is to sell more
product or make the public more aware of your issue -- whatever
it may be. Build your site from it's strong foundation (your goals)
and you'll have a better, more solid site.
2. Failing to put contact information in a plainly seen
location.
This could be disastrous. If a customer doesn't see this information,
they can't contact you. You should consider a 'Contact Us' button
or link from your Home page. Even better, make a link to your email
address in your header or footer, somewhere that will show up on
every page. Even if no one ever contacts you this way, just the
presence of this information comforts edgy customers.
3. Broken Links
Do you enjoy clicking on a search result only to get a Page Not
Found Error? No one likes them. Check your site statistics at least
once a month (if not more) to make sure you don't have bad or broken
links.
4. Outdated Information
A sure turn-off to a potential customer is the presence of old information.
If it's July and your website is announcing the 'new' products available
in February, your site just lost major credibility. Make sure your
information is up-to-date. Consider adding a 'Whats New' button
or a Business Blog.
5. Too Many Font Styles and Colors
This is a huge pet-peeve of my company. I've had people ask me to
review their website and the first thing I notice is 4 different
fonts. It looks bad, unorganized and unappealing. Different colors
may attract the eye for a short time, but constant flashing or otherwise
bright fonts (and graphics!) become annoying. Beware, this is a
sure-fire way to scare people away from your site!
6. Orphan Pages
Every website has a heirarchy, a sort of tree that branches out
from the Home Page. While most of your visitors visit you through
your home page, there are times when a page further down interests
someone, and they may copy that link and send it to a friend. This
is where you need to pay attention. That friend may like what you
have to offer, but they can't find out how to contact you, or how
to get back to your Home Page. That's an orphan page. Every page
on your site should, at a minimum, have a link back to your Home
page. I would suggest adding a contact link at minimum.
7. Frames
Frames at one time were the talk of the industry. They were the
original Content Management System (CMS) for your site. Nowadays
they are few and far between. If you are designing a site, don't
use frames. Newer technologies such as server-side includes are
much more common and accepted. Your pages look fresher and those
silly bars don't get in the way.
8. Disabling the BACK button and excessive Pop-Ups
Have you been to a website and decided that it wasn't the information
you were looking for? When you clicked the BACK button, did you
suddenly get a barrage of windows (or, pop-ups) to your dismay?
These things rarely actually work, and worse off, the reason you
hit the BACK button is because you DIDN'T want any more information
from that site. Don't break the BACK button. There are other ways
to get your user's attention.
9. Slow loading pages
While personal and hobby sites may normally be slow, there should
be no reason for your business or other professional website to
be slow loading. Today's Internet surfer won't wait long for information
from your site - there are too many others with the same thing!
Make sure your pages load quickly. If the server is slow, consider
a different host. If your webpages are full of applets or large
graphics, consider a page/site redesign.
10. Using Leading-Edge Technology
While the Internet is all about new and fancy stuff, don't be the
first to do it. While it may 'look cool' to you, you ultimately
need to decide if it actually enhances your user's experience. Do
the flashy cartoons make your customer more apt to buy from you?
Probably not. How many of your customers have to install a Plug-In
just to see your page right? Do they have to upgrade their browser
to contact you? Not good. Wait until the technology is either more
of a standard or gone - you'll save face with potential and future
customers.
About the Author
Will Hanke is a self-proclaimed geek who owns and operates Lighthouse
Technologies (www.techlh.com),
a web development and hosting company based in Arnold, Missouri.
For questions or comments, email him at will@techlh.com.
And buy yourself a good virus program so he doesn?t have to fight
your emails with anti-virus spray.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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