How *Not* To Design A Webpage!
So you're new to the Web. You've heard about this
"designing a webpage" idea, and it sounds like
fun. Your Internet-geek friend told you that it was
"dead simple" to design webpages. So you
thought "Sure, I can do it".
And you're right, you can... but here are a few
"design faults" that most beginners make (I
know I did). Your pages will look ten times more
professional if you avoid all of these pitfalls...
1: No "under construction" signs.
Yes, I had one of these on my first-ever page back when
the Internet was in the equivalent of the Stone Age.
And, yes, I thought it looked great! It even had a
little figure digging inside a yellow triangle similar
to a road sign.
This one image will single you out as an
Internet-newbie. Why? Well, to put it bluntly, *all*
pages on the Web are "under construction".
Some may be nearer completion than others, and some will
only be adding some regular updates, but if the page is
never updated it is *dead*.
There's nothing worse than seeing "200 visitors
since April 1997", you wonder why on Earth the page
is still there! So, lose the "under
construction" sign, it's simply a "given"
on the Internet.
2: No broken images. If you check your pages
before submitting to the Search Engines or Award Sites
then you will be able to see that your images work
properly. But *don't* believe what you see!
It is possible that you are seeing images in your
"cache" (the area of your hard drive where
recently-downloaded Internet images are stored for quick
retrieval). Ask a friend to take a look and check that
all the images are OK. If you can, check for yourself
from another computer, preferrably one running a
different Operating System (Mac vs Windows vs Linux) and
Browsers (Netscape vs Microsoft Internet Explorer vs
Opera). It's amazing how different webpages can look
through another computer!
3: Don't put everything in "one big
table". I made this mistake, big time. I
thought it was the best way to control page layout and I
am still stuck with the "one big table"
problem because I have such a big site, changing every
page is a huge undertaking and I simply don't have the
time to do it! So, if you are just starting to build a
page or a site, you have the advantage of starting from
scratch.
Don't use one big table because, guess what, the
friendly browser will not show any part of the page
until it had loaded *everything* and closed that one big
table! Your friendly surfer is sitting there thinking
"Why am I looking at this blank screen for
days!" and will promptly hit the back button and
find somewhere else to go!
Try designing your pages using several smaller tables
or, if you're already stuck, like me, put another table
above your "one big table" with a few words
which describe your site. At least then your visitor has
something to read whilst the rest of the page loads.
4: Don't link "out" unless you *want*
your visitors to leave! I remember doing this just
because I thought that creating links was
"cool". I had as many as I could find to
anyone who asked (or even if they didn't!). I just had
links everywhere! All this does is gives your visitors
many, many chances to leave.
Maybe this isn't important if you don't want to sell
them anything, or don't want them to see all your other
useful pages. But if you want them to stay, then be very
careful who you link to.
For instance, people put "best viewed with
{Netscape or MSIE or both}" with a link and a nice
animated logo. Why? Do you think Microsoft or Netscape
need the exposure? Do you think Netscape or Microsoft
will return the favour? These kinds of external
links soon disappear from all but the amateur pages on
the Net. See the next reason for removing them too...
5: Keep your load time down! This is important
because a page that doesn't load in under 10 seconds is
running the risk of the visitor giving up and going
elsewhere. Until everyone has high speed connections to
the Internet, keeping your page load time to a minimum
is one of the best things you can do to keep your
visitor happy. This extends to keeping all of your
graphics optimised for small size.
See the tool at http://www.netmechanic.com
for help with this.
Also, if you have hundreds of banners, lose them!
They only increase download time and frustrate the
visitors you are aiming to please! Another good reason,
which relates to number 4 is that unless you have all
the graphics on your server you have to make a
connection to another server to retrieve the graphic.
For example, with the "best viewed with {Netscape
or MSIE or both}" situation not only is it a point
where your visitor can leave, it is also a connection to
another server to retrieve a graphic.
Each connection to another server adds approximately
two seconds to the download time (this is not counting
the actual graphic size). You think two seconds isn't
much? How about ten such graphics per page, or a total
of 20 seconds? When you consider Yahoo loads in about 8
seconds, you are talking a lot of extra time for each
link to another server. Be aggressive in asking yourself
"Do I *need* this graphic?" and, if yes,
"How can I minimise the file size?"
6: Awards. Unless these are top-of-the-line,
high-caliber awards such as "Lycos Top 5%" or
"Starting Point Site of the Day" then *no-one
cares*. All you are doing is adding yet another link to
someone else and another server connection to download
the graphic.
Awards are basically self-serving anyway, all they do
is add another link to the award-giving page and
increase their traffic. If you do have to put up an
award, make sure it really is prestigious, make sure the
site giving the award links back to you and copy the
graphic to your server space to avoid the additional
"server call".
7:Animation. Yes, it catches the eye. It also
annoys if your eyes are constantly distracted by it!
Most people *will* see the animation and if it's also a
link out of your site, that's bad news for you...there
goes another visitor!
If the visitor wants to stay, and there's no way to
turn off the animation you will annoy them by having it
on the page. Either way, you, and your visitor lose.
Keep animation to very small, discrete movements if you
have to have it at all. This also applies to the
"blink" tag in webpages. If used sparingly it
can be effective, but if you go overboard you will
alienate your vistors.
8: Hit counters. Simply, *no one* cares if
you've had 16 hits. Most of them were you anyway, right!
Find a way to analyse your "hits" which is
invisible to your visitor, it's much more professional
(I use http://www.stattrax.com).
You don't see IBM displaying a hit counter do you?
And at all costs, do not use a counter which requires
you to display a banner for them in exchange, you will
just increase your download time, create another server
call and potentially lose the visitor who just added one
to your counter!
9: Spelling errors. Yes, it's just sloppy. If
you can't be bothered to proof read your site and check
for errors, why should your visitor read it? Check your
site several times, yourself. Spell checkers are not
foolproof.
In this document I wrote "hot counters",
guess how many spellcheckers would have thought
"hot, that's OK"! Ask a friend too, because it
is very easy to overlook an error if you wrote it
because you know what you *meant* to write!
10: Guestbooks. In the dim and distant history
of the Internet (1997 I think it was) people signed
guestbooks just because they were there. Now people
don't. They don't have the time, they don't want to be
spammed and they *just* don't have the time! If people
want to reach you, let them use a feedback form. It's
much more professional and you're much more likely to
read it!
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This article was written by Neil Shearing,
webmaster at http://www.scamfreezone.com/
Home Business Opportunities + Resources for
Entrepreneurs!
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