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Website Makers » Web-design-and-development » The Elements of a Good Website


The Elements of a Good Website

Author: Guest Total views: 79 Word Count: 546

Almost everyone enjoys surfing a well designed website. But what is the difference between a poor site and a good one? Here are some elements that make surfing easy for users and straightforward for developers.



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Almost everyone enjoys surfing a well designed website. But what is the difference between a poor site and a good one? Here are some elements that make surfing easy for users and straightforward for developers.

Can people tell what your site is about from the title or URL? Your page title may not seem that important, but remember if people only see the URL to your site and if it's not clear they may not visit at all. Some examples of effective titles include, "Cents of Style", "Personalization Mall", or "Pharmacy.com". Each of these names is specific and descriptive. "People come to web sites for information." Does your site offer useful and relevant information? Even online stores can have compelling content such as reviews or how-to articles. If your site is only interesting to your friends and family, it will serve you fine as a blog, but it won't help a business.

Visitors will be very frustrated if they visit your site and have no way of contacting you. Feedback from readers is an important opportunity to improve your page not to mention alert you to any problems visitors are having. Not including any contact information also makes you look less credible and more like a scam to many people. Visitors also look for a "last updated" indication usually at the bottom of a webpage. This helps them to know how current the information is and whether your website is somewhere they should return. Spelling and grammar errors can be extremely damaging to a site. Not only do they destroy your credibility, they also drive visitors away from the sheer difficulty of trying to read through typos.

The length of your page is another element to consider. It is frustrating to visit a site, only to continually scroll and scroll because it is too long to easily scan. Or for the site to offer so little content it seems to just take up space. Remember, people come to web sites for entertainment and information. If your page is too long or short, the content is damaged. "Good things come in small packages" and images are no exception. Design experts suggest graphics no larger than 12kb. This way, no matter what browser your reader uses, the image won't look to large or small. If you want to offer larger images, use a resized copy of the graphic as a thumbnail and offer the original picture as a download.

If you have images on your webpage, why are they there? Do they have a purpose or are they just "filler"? Your graphics should be an integral part of the design of your page. They should emphasize the message or help highlight the product or service you are offering. However, they will only be effective if they have all the necessary HTML code to make them appear correctly. If they are links, they should be evidently links to any visitor to your site. It is a good idea to "have image maps with text links elsewhere on the page" in addition.



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