Web Design Tip #7 – Make finding information on your site easy. Navigation is usually the first thing you'll notice that sets apart professionally-designed sites and amateur ones. Amateur sites will have bulky navigation, hard-to-use controls, and links that go nowhere. A professional site will be easy to use, intuitive, and clean.
Web Design Tip #8 – Keep it organized. This is part of navigation, of course, but it's a separate idea as well, since a site can have great navigation, but still have very little information organization. After all, easy to move around and easy to find things on are two different and important aspects of a website.
Web Design Tip #9 – Include your contact information. If this site is for professional purposes, then you want your potential (or current) customers and clients to be able to contact you easily. This means you need to have contact information on your site. Form-to-emails are fine, but you should have more than that: phone/fax number, physical address or mailing address, etc.
Web Design Tip #10 – Optimize your site for users, not search engines. If you believe all the marketing hype (usually from marketers, of course) about how essential it is that your site rank high on the search engines, then you'll believe that this is the only way to get anywhere on the Web. That's only partially true. Sure, being ranked high on searches is good, but if the customers who do the searching then find an incoherent site full of keywords and no full sentences, they're going to leave without buying. Make the site user friendly FIRST, then worry about SEO.
There you go. Those are my top ten web design tips. If you keep them in mind while you're designing, building, and implementing your site, you're likely to go far.http://track.moreniche.com/hit.php?w=131712&s=94
Page 2 of 2 :: First | Last :: Prev | 1 2 | Next
|