3 Top Tips for Great Web Page
Design
Great web page design
is very important to making sure that your customers see
your company in the way that you want them to.
Just as you put a great deal
of effort, time and resources in ensuring that your bricks and
mortar storefront is bright, clean, and attractive, your
website needs the same kind of attention.
This article will explain the
top three ways to make your website work for you!
When I started Future Access
in 1995, St. Catharines website design guru's thought that good
web page design was no more than putting up a few pictures, a
page of text, and that was it.
Little to no thought was given
to how things made you feel, the logical path you would expect
someone to take through the site, or where you wanted them to
end up.
It was much more about being
trendy and cool by being one of the first companies in your
industry to have a website at all!
Today, now that
bandwidth limitations have been greatly reduced and
multimedia content is everywhere, great web page design has
become a way for small companies to level the playing field and
compete on par with much larger rivals.
In my experience, as we have
developed better and better websites over the years, our
customers' customers continually give positive feedback (and
their business!) to companies that have made effective use of
their design.
People have enough
stressors in
their life as it is today, and they don't need their experience
on your website to add to them.
Everywhere you look, busy,
highly pressured individuals are seeking after a Zen-like
experience, feng-shui, or just simplicity in general. So should
it be on your website.
Do away with the unnecessary
extras, flashy gimmicks, and fancy doo-dads. Resist the
temptation to say everything you want, or put a list of every
single product you offer all on one page.
I have come to realize
that less is more, and that users really appreciate the
simplicity of a clean, uncluttered look on websites. The
success of Google's web page design is a prime
example.
Look how clean Google's
homepage is compared to its major competitors like Yahoo and
MSN. They have so much white space, they even offered a black
background for the 2008 Earth Day in order to reduce power
consumption on the monitors of their millions of
users.
The simplicity and ease of use
have allowed a single company to capture half of the market
share of the entire search engine industry, and catapult them
to market leaders and innovators in many other areas as
well.
Remember this, give the user
what they want (not what you want), and less is
more.
Part of keeping your
site clean and easy to use is simple, intuitive navigation. Many
times in my online browsing experience I have come across
websites that have a beautiful homepage, and then completely
change the design on their inside pages.
Menu items that were clearly
outlined across the top have now moved to the left hand side,
or have disappeared altogether. I have no idea how I am
supposed to progress through the site, and in fact I can get
lost altogether on some pages.
I have found that a much
better approach is to use clear, consistent navigation. This
means that the links to your various pages should appear in the
same place and in the same order on every page on your
site.
If you have many pages for
your users to navigate, a drop-down menu can be a very
effective tool. Everyone is used to clicking or rolling over a
menu at the top of a program like Microsoft Word and have a
menu drop down from there.
If your website allows them to
navigate in the same way, you keep the experience consistent
and help users to get around your site with ease.
So now that we have
established that your website should be clean,
simple, and easy to navigate, how do we make it
beautiful?
What is going to create that
emotional response that you create when people walk through
your doors into your bricks-and-mortar storefront?
After years of St. Catharines
website design at Future Access, creating hundreds of websites
for our customers, I have come to realize that the use of
high-quality photography really separates a great site from an
average one. The key is to use the right photograph, and not to
overdo it.
A collage of 9 or 10 images a
blurred together on your homepage, many of them
indistinguishable because they are wide shots reduced greatly
in size will not be effective. Instead, a single large,
high-quality close-up photograph that showcases your product or
service can work best.
If you want to use more than
one image, a moderately paced Flash animation can create extra
emotion by having them fade into one another, or by panning
across the picture very slowly.
A photographic technique
called "depth-of-field", where the foreground of an image is in
sharp focus but the distant background is completely blurred
really draws attention to the image. Don't believe me? Check it
out next time you are browsing the web and see for
yourself!
Now you have all the
essential advice you need to create fantastic website.
Great web page design includes a clean uncluttered look that
eliminates unnecessary information.
You need an intuitive
navigation system to help people get around easily. And
finally, you should use great, high-impact photography to
create an emotional response. That's it! Now, go and check your
website to see if it meets these criteria. If not, go to
it!
About the
Author: Bill
Janzen has been doing web page
design since 1995, and owns Future Access,
a St. Catharines website
design company.
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