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...webdesign for small business owners
In today's world, a web site is virtually mandatory for any successful small business. But there are web sites that will win you customers, and there
are web sites that will lose you customers. Good web design has a lot to do with which category your web site will fall into.
But what is it that makes good or bad web design? In my personal opinion, a good web site is one that's simple, informative and gives me
a reason to come back frequently. That's what you should get from a good web designer. Bad sites, on the other
hand, are complicated to use, slow loading, confusing or just plain annoying. Here's a list of my personal top 7 turnoffs as far as web site design is concerned:
Slow loading pages
Studies have shown that you have less than ten seconds to grab a visitor's attention. If your web page hasn't finished loading within that (very
short) amount of time, you might as well forget about it.
The main culprit I've found here are huge, slow-loading graphics, especially when they are embedded in tables. If large images are absolutely vital to
presenting your small business, compromise by adding thumbnails to the main page and allow the visitor to click on them to access the main image. Nobody
minds a longer loading time, as long as it's them who can make that choice.
No contact information
One of my pet peeves is a web site that has no contact information accessible from the main page. If I can't get in touch
with a company quickly and easily, chances are that I'll go to the competition.
My advice is to have a whole page dedicated to contact information: address, phone, fax, email, and preferably a map of where you can be found
(remember item #1, though no huge graphics!)
And please, don't use a graphic to display that information in a particularly clever way. I like to copy and paste that information directly from the
web page to my contact management program. If I can't do that, you'll likely never hear from me and all other customers who do the same!
Difficult to navigate
Don't try to be clever with navigational features. Simple text links or, if you prefer, quick-loading graphics
are perfectly good means of allowing a visitor to navigate your site.
Anything that requires interactive navigation, like menus that expand into sub-menus, sub-sub-menus and so on, is more an indication of a wrong information
architecture than of a true need for complicated navigational features.
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Non-HTML features
Don't get me started on this one. I've got a firewall on my computer, and my browser is set to block all those little nasty things that can mess with
my PC. As a result I come across many a site that won't display or function properly, because it relies on features like JavaScript, Cookies, Interactive
Headers or Java Applets.
None of these are necessary to have an effective web site, and unless you want your web site to lose you potential customers, you shouldn't use
them. Or, if you absolutely have to, make sure that they are not integral parts of the web site!
Huge splash page
Another pet peeve of mine. As mentioned earlier, you have less than ten seconds to get your message across. Now guess how many visitors are going to
wait longer than that just to watch a fancy animation? 'Nuff said.
Pop-up ads
A huge turnoff as far as I'm concerned. As a matter of fact, I've got a pop-up blocker installed on my PC, so if your web site tried to tell me something
important via a pop-up window, I'd never even see it.
If you feel that you have to use pop-ups, consider going for the less intrusive (and annoying) pop-under windows instead.
Sideways scrolling
Not everybody has a monitor with the same screen resolution as you, so make sure that your web site displays on monitors with a lower resolution
without forcing your visitor to scroll sideways.
It's a singularly annoying thing, and chances are that you'll lose those visitors very quickly. Or, if you have information in a column on the right
side of your small business web site, it may simply never appear on the screen.
Need online copy that gets results? Frauke Nonnenmacher is a copywriter who specializes in clear, informative and persuasive web copy. For more information,
please visit her web site at:
http://www.creativecats.com
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