Posts Tagged ‘business web’
Essential Design Checklist for Your Business Site
In business, even seemingly tiny details can make a big difference. Your business’s website design is a public presentation of yourself to the world. Here are five urgent guidelines to check to assure that your business website will perform in the way that it should.
1) Avoid splash pages
Splash pages are the first pages you see when you arrive at a website. They normally have a very beautiful image with words like “welcome” or “click here to enter”. In fact, they are just that — pretty vases with no real purpose. Do not let your visitors have a reason to click on the “back” button! Give them the value of your site up front without the splash page.
2) Do not use excessive banner advertisements
Eye tracking studies indicate that, while such banners might distract visitors to a website, modern visitors are accomplished at not noticing the content that the banners contain. Unless your business plan is advertising, the last thing you want to do with your visitors’ time on your site is to direct their attention away from your content (and the action that the content is designed to achieve).
3) Have a simple and clear navigation
You have to provide a simple and very straightforward navigation menu so that even a young child will know how to use it. Stay away from complicated Flash based menus or multi-tiered dropdown menus. If your visitors don’t know how to navigate, they will leave your site.
4) Let your visitors see where they are on the site
If your site is well designed, users will easily flow from one page to another. However, along the way, they may feel like returning to a previously visited page to read it more carefully, to remind themselves of details or to compare one set of features to another. Provide a way for them to retrace their steps or to know how to get from “point g” back to “point c.” Using a breadcrumb trail serves this purpose very nicely.
5) Use audio only for clear purposes
If you are determined to have sound automatically load, be sure that it a) makes a genuine contribution toward meeting your objectives, b) allows the site’s visitors to control and volume levels and c) is not on a page on which all of their attention needs to be focused upon reading the exquisite copy. If your audio does not meet all of these criteria, play it safe and disable it.