 |
|
|
  |
|
|
 |
|
Website
Application Methodology
To create a website, just like building a house requires
a plan. You must know exactly what your sites purpose
is. This will act as the foundation for your site and
also tend to dictate style.
- The Plan - examples:
A.
The purpose of my site is to share memories
with family and friends.
B.
I want to market my homemade candles and expand
my customer base.
C.
I would like to create an information sharing site
where individuals may learn
more
about the parenting of difficult children.
D.
I want to present the solutions and services my
business provides.
- The Design - As you can see each
of the above have distinctly different purposes
which need to be strongly considered. Family and
friends may not be as bothered by slow loading pages
of the grandchildren, the candle buyer who will
become frustrated and move on. What kind of image
are you trying to create? Sophisticated, whimsical,
stylized, sleek, cutting edge, dramatic, or what
we like to call, "down and dirty or less is
more" - does what's needed as minimally as
possible.
- Focus - Most websites try to
do too much, are incredibly busy and frequently
far less effective as a result. Overburdening your
viewer is a mistake. Like a good instructor, try
to convey one or two things well, rather than providing
dozens of things that won't be really digested.
- Navigation - One of the biggest
keys to a great site is easy, straight forward navigation.
A person should not get lost on your site nor struggle
to get to any location they seek. From any page
on your site, make it possible to go directly back
to the home page. Also, check out our e-zine on
one of the most innovative techniques we use - side-tab
navigation.
|
| |
|
|
|