Although I wouldn't call myself a website design guru, I
know what works and what doesn't in creating a successful website. I'm
a super-fast learner, and I want to pass on my knowledge of website
design to you, in only a few short paragraphs. Of course this isn't
meant to be a full-fledged course on website design -- I hope to tell
you the main things that you should be doing to design an effective
website.
First of all, what determines whether or not your website is "effective?" Whether or not your visitors come, are pleased by what
they see, and return! And, whether or not they feel your website is
excellent enough to tell their friends about, write about in their
ezines, or submit to any of the "Best of the Web" awards out there is a
good starting point. Here are the things that your website absolutely
MUST HAVE to be successful in the home business world
1.) An easy-to-understand navigational system.
Can your visitors get around easily, or are they easily lost?
Do you have a link to get back to your home page and/or "table of
contents" on EVERY page or only a select few? What if someone decides
that your website is so great they decide to link to one of your
secondary pages?
Ten times out of eight, other Webmasters WON'T tell you when
they've linked to you. So, if they link to a page that isn't connected
to your home page ... how are they supposed to find it?? It doesn't
occur to most people to take the base of the URL they've visited. 90%
of the time, you've just lost a potential customer.
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2.) Your name and email address listed on your website.
Having an email address is just not enough. Who are your
visitors supposed to address their mail to, and exactly WHAT are you
hiding from?? What's the point of NOT putting your name on your web
pages? Do you just forget, does it not occur to you, or are you afraid
people are going to be able to figure out where you live and come stalk
you just by having access to your first and last name??
Whatever the reasoning, it's absolutely ridiculous. Not
having your full name plainly listed on your website is ruining your
credibility and the credibility of your business. So, let me break it
down for you ...
JUST DO IT! If you don't plan to list your full name and
email address on your website as the BARE MINIMUM, you may as well pack
it up now and call it quits.
3.) A compatible screen size for most, (if not all), browsers.
800x600 pixels is an ideal standard for your web pages. You can
control the width of your website by using tables, and setting the
width of the outer table to the maximum size. So in this case, you'd
set the table width to 600 pixels. If you're using percentages instead
of straight pixel width, set the percentage to no more than about
85-90%.
4.) A reasonable background image and color scheme.
Those orange and green backgrounds with bright red text are
just NOT with it -- no matter what the amateurs say. Stick to a
background/text color combination that's actually READABLE. That makes
sense, right?
If you have to squint just to read the words on your pages,
your background is WAY out of line, and your site needs a major color
scheme makeover! Use BLACK text, or very dark colored text on a WHITE
or very light colored background. Save the white on black backgrounds
for pages that DON'T have a lot of text on them.
But, if you feel that you absolutely MUST have those stars,
triangles, or dinosaurs cluttering up your background, make sure that
you set the image as the background for the page, and put a plain WHITE
table on every page that will contain text. If done right, this can be
a very pleasing addition to any web page.
5.) Use mood colors.
This one isn't mandatory, but it can be helpful when setting
the tone of your website. For example, green is usually referred to as
a "concentration" color. So, on pages that have a lot of text, use a
green background pattern (with your text in a white/light colored
table) or green highlights throughout the page. But, be careful ...
dark green is seen as a money color, while the regular, "standard" green is the concentration color.
You can use color to your advantage in website building, to
make your visitors feel energized, relaxed, focused, more ready to make
a purchase, or almost any other effect. You're only limited by your
imagination! (And, of course ... color blindness.) ;-)
If you follow those five basic website design tips
outlined above, designing your first website (or touching up an
existing one) shouldn't be such a horror! Read all of the website
design articles that you can to get a good working knowledge of design.
Article by Harmony Major, revealing THE TRUTH of how to
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crap" online to improve the profitability of your
website(s) and launch your e-business into a high-response
*full-time* enterprise, come to: BlownCoverMarketing.com.




