5 Easy Ways
to Improve Your Website
When designing your website, remember to avoid useless and
confusing features, however cool they may seem
to be. Usually, keeping things simple and consistent
are the best way to go. Here are five easy ways to
improve your website and make it more appealing to your
visitors.
1. Put
your logo on every page of your site, and in the same location.
Usually, the best place to put it is in the upper left corner
of the page. Remember to make your logo clickable,
linking to the main page of your site (an exception is the
logo of the main page itself, since you are already there).
The benefit of doing so is that if your visitors get lost
they can always come back to a familiar location.
2. Don
t use a splash screen. Splash screens are seen in
many websites before they give you access to the main page.
They are usually slow-loading Flash animations that only
delay and frustrate users. Remember, when your users
want animation, they can turn on the TV. When they
go to your website, they usually want information, and they
want it fast. Some sites that use splash screens now
provide a Skip the Introduction link, which
most users click anyway, further validating the uselessness
of flash screens.
3. Avoid
using heavy pictures. They unnecessarily delay the
page upload process. It is OK to use graphics, but
they have to be optimized for the web. Use only .gif
and .jpg formats. If the pictures are too heavy, try
using some of the on-line graphic optimizing tools.
They can reduce the weight of your pictures by more than
50% with no noticeable decrease in quality. Another
thing you can do is to use thumbnails (clickable miniature
versions of a picture). If a user is interested in
the picture, he can click on the thumbnail and wait until
the full size picture is displayed.
4. Try
not to use animated banners or fancy icons. Just because
you can is not a good reason to load up your site with neon-colored,
flashing-and-popping, Vegas-style graphics. They usually
take away from the content of your site and distract users.
Plus, it has been demonstrated that less and less users
click on banners every day.
5. Dont
make your pages too long. People dont like to
read from a screen. Instead, try to use the advantages
of hyperlinks to present a summary of the topic or article,
with a link to the full article in another page (similar
to what newspapers do in their main page, with the added
benefit for web users that it is easier to click on a link
than to turn a page). If what you have to say is too
long, break the discussion in several parts, each of them
with a link to where your visitor can continue reading.
Remember,
the goal is to give your visitors fast access to your information,
through an interface (website) that is visually appealing
and easy to use.
About
The Author
Mario
Sanchez publishes The Internet Digest ( http://www.theinternetdigest.net
), an online collection of web design and Internet
marketing articles and resources. You can freely reprint
his weekly articles in your website, ezine, newsletter
or ebook, just include this resource box.
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