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>> Website Design - Identifying your goals
It's time for your company
to go live. Live on the Internet, that is. The first step
to building your presence on the Internet is to design
a website that customers will want to visit - and come
back to. Getting customers to stay long enough to explore
your website is like getting them to stay at a store.
Like a store, your website should be attractive and professional
looking.
Most important: Whatever your business offers - whether
it's a product, a service, or information - it should be
easy to access on your site.
Whether you're building a site from scratch
or updating your existing site, you've got a few options.
Your goals for the site determine the options you should
go with, so make sure you've got those nailed down first.
Ask yourself: What do you want to achieve with the site?
Will you use the site to dispense information?
Do you merely want a Web presence so customers
can find you online?
What sections do you want in your site? (e.g.
About your company, company history, product pages, executive
bios)
Do you want your site to act as a virtual
salesperson, performing online transactions?
Will you need to develop any special tools
for users to interact with your site?
Do you already have a logo that your site
designer must incorporate in their design?
About how many pages are you looking to have
designed?
Do you want your site to be structured to
help gather data for marketing purposes?
Depending on your answers to these questions,
you may be looking for a one-stop shop or separate contractors
to address each part of your site. Designing your site
can be as simple - or as complex - as your imagination
and/or budget allows.
And before you can decide the approach
you want to take to accomplish all of your goals, you
should know the difference between web designers and web
developers.
Design vs. Development
You'll probably find the titles "web designer"
and "web developer" used interchangeably, but this isn't
accurate. Designing a website is actually very different
from developing one.
There are two major components to designing a website:
the "front end" and the "back end." While there can be
quite a bit of crossover, for the most part design refers
to the front end, development to the back end.
Front-end and design
The front end is what your customers see:
the "pages" that display the graphics, the images, and
the text on your site.
Web designers concentrate on the front end, choosing appropriate
images and fonts and determining how images and text should
be arranged. A web designer's strength is his or her appreciation
for aesthetics. A designer doesn't have to be a technical
whiz. But one should at least have a strong understanding
of what will work visually on a computer screen and what
the technical limitations are in designing for the Web.
A good web designer will also have experience in collaborating
with a web developer.
Back-end and development
Developers are part of a new breed of Internet
professionals who can help you build your website. Web
developers work on the back end, making a site work. This
side of the process is not visible to visitors, but it
is essential to enhancing the visitor's experience.
Back end functions include making images change or move,
allowing visitors to view different pages or enter data
about them, or performing sales transactions. If you're
hiring a web developer, learn to speak the language.
Make sure the resumes of those you are considering include
the following skills:
HTML for the text and layout framework of
a web page
Web Imaging to create and compress images
for the Web
JavaScript to write programs that run as part
of web pages and to do tasks like validating form fields
before submitting a form
ASP to customize a web page for a particular
user on the server before it is sent down to the user
Java/C++ to write programs that are embedded
within a web page - to do things that web pages alone
cannot do, such as playing a game within a web page
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