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Designing Professional Web Pages
If your Web site doesn't project a professional and polished image to your visitors, your credibility and that of your products and services will suffer. Image is everything--especially online where your competitor is only one mouse click away! ...
Good Web Design: The Importance of Navigation
A well-designed website has many facets: gorgeous graphics, cool animations, drop-down menus, and of course, relevant content. Another important feature, often overlooked, is a good, solid navigation scheme. I review many sites every week. A...
Weave Your Own Web
Many elementary school children know the miracle of Charlotte's Web. Weaving the words "Some Pig" into the center of her web, Charlotte keeps Wilbur from the frying pan. E.B. White's story provides some fascinating guidelines for web spinning....
Web Source Web Design Tips - Open a Web Page in a New Window
When you link to outside web pages, you may not want to completely lose your visitor. By creating a link to other web sites that opens in a new window, your web page will remain open as well. To open a web page in a new window, add the following...
Website Design, Website Development & flash design Services.
Contact Us for Website design & development, design services flash outsourcing, development, icons outsourced projects from Europe,US,UK About the Author
Website design & development, design services flash outsourcing, development, icons...
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Ten Basic Steps for Building a Web Site that Works
Assemble a Web site development plan that is integrated with your overall marketing processes. The content should be consistent with offline materials; the graphics/images don't have to be identical with traditional media, but should be consistent with your overall branding, style guide, usage of colors, etc.
Hire a Web site design firm that understands your market position. Find one that won't get "geek crazy" – meaning they are so in love with their own design capabilities, your site gets bogged down with graphics, plug ins, GIF garbage, etc. But, conversely, check your ego at the door when you work with your design firm – we've see so many good Web site designs ruined by clients who can't or won't listen to sound advice.
Pay attention to "load times," how long it takes a Web site to load on an industry-average 56 KBPS modem. If it's more than 12-18 seconds you may experience the "click of death" – the site doesn't load quickly and the surfer is gone. Of course, if you're targeting broadband customers who are reaching your site via ISDN or DSL, then you can build a site that incorporates multimedia-ready content that may include streaming audio or video, or Shockwave or Flash capabilities. Go ahead and let those digital geeks get carried away with cutting edge content presentation.
Keep it simple – make your site easy to move around in. Build a menu structure that is consistent with industry standards: local menus (for a page or section) on the left and global menus (overall site navigation) at the top and/or bottom of each page. Keep as much information "above the fold" (above the cutoff point at the bottom of a monitor); don't make people use horizontal scroll bars unless absolutely necessary.
Inculcate "digital speed" into your overall site design. Your clients/customers should be able to get to their desired area of your site within one or two mouse clicks; they will quickly get frustrated if they have to click through multiple menus to find information they are seeking.
Develop content that is Web enabled. People don't read Web site content like they do offline media. Keep your paragraphs short (no more than two to three sentences), build in white space with your content, and include links in your pages. Don't try to tell your whole marketing story on your site – get
people to call you (hello the telephone still works!), e-mail you, or fill out a profile form.
Make your site permission-based marketing ready. We recommend Seth Godin's "Permission Marketing" book http://www.permission.com/. He champions building a long term-relationship with a customer by asking permission to continue to market to that customer and incorporating value/information in all marcom processes.
Ensure your site is optimized for search engines. Identify eight-12 keywords that people will use to find your site. Incorporate these keywords into your site content (to drive relevancy with search engine spiders/bots) and then manually submit your site to the top ten search engines. We don't recommend most of the free or $19.99 specials available; yes, all will get your site registered with the search engines, but getting listed on page 75 of 350 pages (for example) won't really drive qualified traffic to your site. You need page 1-3 listings on the top ten engines to really drive qualified traffic.
Delve into your log server files to uncover "digital tracks" made through your Web site. Your log files are raw files that show how and from where (in most cases) people accessed your Web site, where they went on your site, how long they stayed, etc.
Think global in your overall site design. The greatest Internet growth is occurring outside North America, so it is essential to build a site that can be accessed easily by people around the world. What issues do you need to look at? 1) Load times are very important.
2) Develop content that avoids colloquialisms that may not be understood by others who may not speak the same language. 3) You may want to make your site's content available in diverse languages (there are a number of emerging applications that will facilitate this process), ensuring your e-commerce capabilities can be utilized by all.
About the Author
Lee Traupel has 20 plus years of marketing experience He is the co- founder of a Northern California and Brussels Belgium based, privately held, Marketing Services and Software Company, Intelective Communications, Inc. http://www.intelective.com Intelective focuses exclusively on providing strategic and tactical marketing services to small to medium sized companies. He can be reached at Lee@intelective.com
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Web Development |
This web summarizes the complete life cycle methodology for web development: planning, analysis, design, implementation, promotion, and innovation. |
www.december.com |
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Web Development |
Professional Web site design, graphic design, and Internet development services. |
webdevelopment.com |
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Web Developer's Virtual Library: Web Development Tutorials and ... |
News, tutorials, and reference material focusing on technical web development topics. |
www.wdvl.com |
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Open Source Web Development Tutorials - Dev Shed |
Open Source web development tutorials, forums, and tools. Topics covered include PHP, Apache, mySQL, Zope, Roxen, Jserv, Zend, XML, DHTML, and Javascript. |
www.devshed.com |
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WebDeveloper.com |
Hello all, I am new to web development. I have an understanding of website development, but no scripting experience. I have heard of JavaScript, PHP, ... |
www.webdeveloper.com |
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LevelTen Web Design | Professional Website, Flash & Graphic ... |
Offers logos, web sites, multimedia presentations, and custom media. Quote form. Based in Dallas, Texas. [Requires Flash] |
www.leveltendesign.com |
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Web development - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
For larger businesses and organizations, Web development teams can consist of ... Since the mid-1990's, Web development has been one of the fastest growing ... |
en.wikipedia.org |
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Web Design - HTML XML - Web Development - Web Site Design |
Web Design and HTML are all about creating a great Web site. Use Web development and Web site design to build Web sites that customers return to over and ... |
webdesign.about.com |
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Agile Web Development with Rails—Second Edition |
Dave Thomas, Mike Clark, David Heinemeier Hansson, Leon Breedt, Thomas Fuchs, Andrea Schwarz; Pragmatic Bookshelf, 2006, ISBN 0977616630. |
www.pragmaticprogrammer.com |
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CYGAD's WebDevelopment - Welcome to CYGAD’s WebDevelopment! - The ... |
CYGAD's WebDevelopment - The finest Resources for WEB-Design, WEB-Master and WEB-Developer! |
www.webdev.cygad.net |
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Web Development Bookmarklets |
Includes tools for viewing and testing CSS styles, viewing scripts and variables, and showing the structure of a document. |
www.squarefree.com |
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SGI - Freeware - Web Development |
Links to freeware web development tools, browsers, software, etc. |
www.sgi.com |
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Webmonkey: The Web Developer's Resource |
Resources for web site developers including how-to guides, code libararies, server technologies and authoring resources. |
www.webmonkey.com |
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Web Development Tools - Web Developer's Journal |
Tips on Web page design and development, HTML, graphics, scripting, favicon, development tools, Java, sql basics, building web sites, and much more for ... |
www.webdevelopersjournal.com |
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Web Developer's Handbook | CSS, Web Development, Color Tools, SEO ... |
Web Developer's Handbook is a list of essential web-sites, which make the life of web developers easier. Compiled and updated by Vitaly Friedman. |
www.alvit.de |
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Ceonex Web Development & Web Design - Full Service Digital ... |
Web design, web development, online branding, application development and other full service business solutions focused on prospect conversion and customer ... |
www.ceonex.com |
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Cayenne Web Development - web design agency, Oxfordshire, UK |
Specialist web design agency based nr Banbury, Oxfordshire, offering a complete website design and development service. |
www.cayenne.co.uk |
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Web development mistakes | 456 Berea Street |
When I visit a website, especially if it’s the site of a competitor or a prospective client, I like viewing… |
www.456bereastreet.com |
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Web development mistakes | 456 Berea Street |
Articles and news on web standards, accessibility, usability, and other things related to web development and web design. |
www.456bereastreet.com |
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Anil Dash: Web Development Trends for 2006 |
Here, then, is a random assortment of new web development trends to be ready ... Web Development trends 2006: Überblogger Anil Dash maakte (een paar weken ... |
www.dashes.com |
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