NAVSPAN.com
Toll Free 1-800-521-9061
Sales & Support Email Live Sales & Support Chat
RI MA CT NH Web Design
|
Web sites are a great way to showcase your business for potential and existing customers. They are also a great way to present important information that just won't fit in a phone book listing or newspaper ad. NAVSPAN gives you the tools you need to create an outstanding Web site.
How do I figure out what I want? An easy way to answer this question is to look at other business Web sites — both in your specific industry and in your business category, such as retail sales, manufacturing, or services. As you view these sites, ask yourself:
What Web site pages do I need?
Make a list of the information you want to present. Be general and be specific. Listing broad categories in addition to specific information helps you determine how to organize your site. Such organization also helps you name your pages and think about how visitors find those pages.
Present one idea per page. Statistics show that site visitors spend less than 10 seconds looking for specific information before they go somewhere else. The idea can be a large category of information, with links to more specific information, or one specific set of information. For example, a manufacturing company has a Products page on their Web site, which gives a general overview of all the types of products that they manufacture. Descriptions of each product type are located on subsequent pages. Users reach these pages by clicking links on the Products page. The main purpose of these pages is to give a more detailed description of the individual products.
Make your page names easily identifiable. When you create new pages, you give them both a page title and a name. The page title appears in the browser's title bar, and the page name is appended to your Web address. The page title can be changed at any time, but the page name cannot. It is recommended that you use a page name that reflects the content of the page.
What should my Web site look like?
Create a meaningful header. The content that you put in your header appears throughout your entire site, not just on your home page. Think about all of the pages you are creating, and ask yourself, “does my header make sense for each page?” The header can include just your company name, or it can include your company slogan or a description of your business. You can also add a logo.
Less is more. Too many colors, too many font changes, or too much content will confuse visitors to your Web site. If there are too many design elements competing for attention, nothing stands out.
Be consistent. Stick with one heading style, font, and layout, if possible. If you change the look on every page, your visitors may not associate what they see on the site with your business.
How will visitors get around on my Web site?
Create a useful navigation bar. The same navigation bar appears on every page on your Web site. The links on this bar are always available to your visitors. A good rule of thumb is to have no more than six main links in your top-level (or parent) navigation, and then a similar number of subcategory (or child) links under any parent link.
Include all of the pertinent pages under the main category. As noted earlier, you may find that one page really belongs in several different categories. Go ahead and include that link under each link for the category to which it applies. For example, for a site that advertises apparel, a page that contains a sizing chart may be pertinent to the Men, Women, and Children main categories, and also to each product subcategory. You can include the page link for the sizing chart in each of those categories.
Use links in your content. Inline links can be some of the most effective ways to drive traffic to other pages on your Web site. These links are used in context, so users know exactly what they will find. You can use both text links (links that are embedded in the written portion of your page) or picture links (pictures that, when clicked, open a new page).
Use your footer to link to other pages. Because the footer is used on every page on your Web site, it is a great way to send your visitors to useful content. Typically, footer links go to pages that visitors use frequently but may be buried in the page navigation. You can, for example, link to a careers page, the site map page, a business hours and location information page, and a Contact Us page.
What about my content?
Use pictures. A photo or other graphic can communicate lots of information quickly. The picture should be immediately recognizable and convey your message at the same time. And don't hesitate to use the picture as a link to more information. For information about adding pictures to your Web site, see the following demo.
Speak the language of your customers. Don't let industry jargon or highly technical terms that your visitors may not understand appear in your content.
Answer your visitors' questions. Make sure that the content on each page addresses the information your Web site visitors expect to see discussed. For example, a Contact Us page should have all of the ways a person can find you: phone numbers, e-mail addresses, street address, driving directions, and when you are available.
Redundant links are okay. If content is pertinent to several areas of your Web site, be sure that visitors can access it. Include links to the information, either on the navigation bar or through an inline link. Your goal is to make sure visitors can find what they need, when they need it. That could mean, for example, having multiple links to the same page from different areas on a single page (a navigation bar link and an inline link).
What's next?
|
Help, Tips & Advice
It might go against your instincts, but starting a business in a bad economy has advantages. Along with lower prices in advertising and marketing, there's also less competition. See more small business tips |
NAVSPAN is a web design service providing professional and affordable websites. Offering the best RI and MA web site design packages, getting your business website online has never been easier. Our services include RI Web Design Firms, Rhode Island Web Design, Rhode Island Web Designers, RI Web Hosting, RI Design, RI Web Design Company, RI Internet Marketing, RI SEO, RI Graphic Design, RI Web Designer, RI Web Design, Rhode Island Web Site Design. Products & services available in AK, AL, AR, AZ, California, CA, CO, Connecticut, CT, DC, DE, FL, GA, HI, IA, ID, IL, IN, KS, KY, LA, Massachusetts, MA, MD, ME, MI, MN, MO, MS, MT, NC, ND, NE, New Hampshire, NH, NJ, NM, NV, New York, NY, OH, OK, OR, PA, Rhode Island, RI, SC, SD, TN, TX, UT, VA, VI, Vermont, VT, WA, WI, WV, WY, and Canada.
Copyright © 2009 NAVSPAN.com. All Rights Reserved. *Please contact NAVSPAN.com for details. All prices listed are subject to change without notice to you. All other copyright and registered trademarks mentioned or displayed are owned by their respective owners. Please read our website
Terms of service, Terms of use, Privacy policy before accessing, viewing or paying for any services offered within NAVSPAN.com. Information and pricing contained herein is deemed accurate, but no warranty is expressed nor implied. Visit us at itswebrelated.com and Providence, RI Design Firms.