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.

Example of the menu (TemplateMonster.com)
I review many sites every week. A confused or non-existent
method of finding the content contained within the site is a clear
indicator of a budget or home-grown site. A well-designed website is a
great equalizer-who would know that your company has only 5 staff when
your website is slick and your customers can find your products with
ease? On the other hand, a site that makes finding the order page a
hunt for buried treasure, will urge the visitor to leave your site and
buy elsewhere. Minimally, it sends a strong signal that your company is
unprofessional, and purchasing from you could be risky.
When considering the best navigation plan for your website,
first make a list of the most important, or highest-level, divisions of
your site's content. For example, if your site promotes your services,
plus sells a product, has helpful information and articles, and
provides a demo of a product or service, you may want to arrange your
menu with these main headings:
Home
Order Products
Consulting Services
Articles
Product Demos
Company
Contact Us
Some of the headings listed above may be further subdivided,
such as a list of articles, or a list of available product demos. There
are many examples of menu systems that drop-down, or cascade, to reveal
more selections within a category.
Your site will, no doubt, have pages that don't really need to
be included in the main navigation scheme, but which must be accessible
nonetheless. This could include your Terms of Agreement, Privacy
Policy, or Additional Links pages. The footer links (the text links
normally included at the bottom of the page) are an excellent location
for web pages that are important, but which might clutter your
website's message.
Additionally, your site may have some nice feature that should
be highlighted and easy to find. Using the example from above, your
site may have a "Search" function that is useful for visitors to find
specific products or information. In this case, put the Search field
and button at the top of the page, perhaps embedded in the banner area.
Make it visible! Don't bury it two thirds down the page, where your
visitor will see it after they've already spent 10 minutes looking for
what they are trying to find.
In a nutshell, your website's navigation should consider the
following: from any page on the site, can a new visitor to the site
easily and intuitively find their way around the site? Will that
visitor feel comfortable moving around on your site? Can they find the
Home page again? Is your contact information readily accessible from
the pages where it is needed the most? Most importantly, can the
visitor quickly and easily locate the product and/or services you are
selling?
If the answer is not "Yes," your website's navigation needs
some redesign. Don't despair-if you have good, relevant content this
may not be a huge project. And reworking the menu and navigation may be
just what your website needs to communicate the professionalism and
quality for which your business should be known.
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