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> Get Articles > Site Stickiness - Getting Repeat Visitors > Fix Your Web Site or Say "Good-Bye" To Sales!

Fix Your Web Site or Say "Good-Bye" To Sales!


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Milana Leshinsky
milanahelpingfoot.com

First Business Web Site
http://www.firstbusinesswebsite.com


I have a confession to make.



There is no way will I ever buy anything from a web site that has

missing images or broken links. I mean, if this webmaster

doesn't care about his web site, he probably could care less

about his customers.



Getting your web site to look good can sometimes be a

hair-pulling experience. Even for me, and I have been making web

sites for over 5 years. I can only imagine how frustrated many

newbies can get.



Let me share with you some of the common problems in designing a

well-functioning web site. If you haven't made these mistakes

yet - trust me: you will! Keep this troubleshooting guide handy

for when you need it (and save some of your hair, too!)



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

1. MISSING IMAGES ON THE PAGE

2. IMAGE LOADS VERY SLOWLY

3. IMAGE LOOKS DISTORTED

4. BROKEN LINKS

5. TEXT IS MISSING ON THE PAGE

6. VISITORS CAN'T SEE YOUR FANCY FONTS

7. TOO MUCH HORIZONTAL SCROLLING REQUIRED

8. THE TABLE IS WIDER THAN SPECIFIED

9. WEB PAGE DISPLAYS OLD LINKS AND IMAGES

10. BACKGROUND DOESN'T SHOW

11. CAN'T ACCESS YOUR HOME PAGE

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~





PROBLEM: MISSING IMAGES ON THE PAGE

-------------------------------------



SOLUTION: there are three things that might cause this problem.

You have either forgotten to upload the image to your web server,

didn't link to it correctly, or the graphic is in invalid format.



1) Remember, you need to upload all the graphics that you are

using on your web page, just like any other file. So if you have

a "services.html" page that contains "staff.jpg" graphic, you

need to upload both "services.html" and "staff.jpg" to your web

server.



2) You also need to reference that image correctly. For this, you

need to understand a little bit about files, folders, and

directories. Basically, a file is a document. A folder (or a

directory) is a collection of files.



You might have a directory on your web site called "images".

Inside it you might have the "staff.jpg", "logo.jpg", and other

files.



Now, here is the trick: if your HTML file is located in the same

folder with the graphic it contains, then here is how you refer

to that image:



img src="graphic.jpg"



*Please, note that I am leaving the tag brackets out so you could

see the HTML code.



So far, simple, right?



But let's say that your HTML file is located in the main

directory, while the graphic file is located in the

sub-directory. For example, "services.html" is located in the

root directory of your web site so that if you type

www.yoursite.com/services.html in your browser location bar, you

will see it.



And let's say that you placed a graphic used on that page into a

sub-directory called "images", so that when you type

www.yoursite.com/images/graphic.jpg into your browser location

bar, you will see that image.



So how do you refer to that graphic from your "services.html"

page? Here is how:



img src="images/graphic.jpg"



All I did was put the sub-directory (or folder) name followed by

a forward slash before the graphic name.



Finally, what if you put an HTML page into a sub-directory, but

leave the image in the main (root) directory? For example, your

"services.html" is located in a sub-directory called "pages".

And the graphic used on it, "staff.jpg", is placed in the main

directory, so that when you type this address into your browser

location bar, you will see it:



www.yoursite.com/staff.jpg



How do you refer to this graphic on your "services.html" page?

You use the "previous directory" notation like this:



img src="../staff.jpg"



The browser will then know, that in order to find that graphic it

needs to look in one directory below.



If you are having trouble understanding the above notation, use

absolute image references. For example:



img src="http://www.yoursite.com/staff.jpg"



Make sure you know where you placed your graphic (which folder)

and refer to it as if you were accessing it from your web

browser. That's it!



3) And finally, if you are not using graphics with the "JPG" or

"GIF" extension, they will not appear on your web page. Use

PaintShop Pro or any other graphic editor download.com) to convert

your graphic from any format to "JPG" or "GIF".



Broken images may also happen even if they have the right

extension. That's because they have been created in a

not-for-web format. When a graphic artist designs your logo,

remind her to save it as "RGB" (which stands for

"red-green-blue") or "Indexed Color" and not any other color mode

(such as "CMYK").



For more information, see "Choosing the right format for your

images" at http://tech.irt.org/articles/js206/index.htm







PROBLEM: IMAGE LOADS VERY SLOWLY

---------------------------------



SOLUTION: you must do your best to reduce the graphic to its

minimum good-looking format. Use GIFBot to do this:

http://www.netmechanic.com/GIFBot/optimize-graphic.htm



Some new webmasters use a large graphic and specify a smaller

size in the HTML code. That is absolutely unnecessary and will

slow down your web page three times or more!



For example, if you have a graphic that is 200x200 in size

(pixels), and insert it into your web page like this:



img src="graphic.jpg" width=100 height=100



...you are actually doing yourself disservice. Why not reduce the

graphic in your image editor first, then place it on your web

site? Doing this will speed up your site and will not distort

your graphic.







PROBLEM: IMAGE LOOKS DISTORTED

--------------------------------



SOLUTION: you probably specified incorrect size of this graphic

on your web page. To find out the correct size of a graphic,

right-click on it and choose "Properties" from the menu. You

should see the image size (something like 110 x 200) then put the

same numbers in the IMG tag:



img src="graphic.jpg" width=110 height=200







PROBLEM: BROKEN LINK

--------------------



SOLUTION: you must fix your link so it takes your visitors to a

page that exists. Links can be relative or absolute. Here is an

example of a relative link (remember, I am omitting the tag

brackets so you could see the actual code):



a href="welcome.html"



This link refers to a page that is located on YOUR web site, and

not someone else's. Now, here is an example of an absolute link:



a href="http://www.yoursite.com/welcome.html"



Notice that this link will take you to the exact same page that

the first one will. This is just a different way to build your

links.



You can also link to someone else's web site using absolute

links:



a href="http://www.yourfriendsite.com/hello.html"



Can you use relative links to refer to an outside web site? No.

Only absolute links can do that. And remember to use the

"http://" in each absolute link tag.







PROBLEM: TEXT IS MISSING ON THE PAGE

-------------------------------------



SOLUTION: this can happen for different reasons, but all of them

have to do with closing tags:



1) When a closing table tag is missing, the entire table content

might be missing, too. So remember to close all your TABLE,

TR and TD tags.



2) You forgot to close a comment and the browser "thinks" that

the rest of the text has also been commented out. Make sure you

close every comment that you open.



3) You forgot to close a quotation mark in a tag. For example,

if you use quotes in a IMG SRC or A HREF tags, you must close

them:



IMG SRC="picture.jpg" width=100 height=300



The above code will cause the page to display incorrectly. Fix it

by adding a closing quotation after the graphic name.



4) If you using TEXTAREA in forms, make sure you close it with a

/TEXTAREA tag.







PROBLEM: VISITORS CAN'T SEE YOUR FANCY FONTS

---------------------------------------------



SOLUTION: do not use your fancy fonts. There are only a handful

of fonts that every computer user has installed. They are:

Verdana, Arial, Courier, & Times New Roman. If you try to use

some other font such as Impact or FreeStyle Script, and your

visitors don't have them installed, they will see your text in

whatever font their browser is set to.



If you REALLY want your visitors to see your handsome fonts, then

turn some of your text into graphics. Your graphics will be

displayed the same on every computer, and your visitors will be

able to see the fonts you meant for them to see.







PROBLEM: TOO MUCH HORIZONTAL SCROLLING REQUIRED

------------------------------------------------



SOLUTION: put your text into a table and make it no more than

85% in width and centered. This way, regardless of how large or

small their monitors are, your visitors will always see your text

centered with no horizontal scrolling necessary.







PROBLEM: THE TABLE IS WIDER THAN SPECIFIED

-------------------------------------------



SOLUTION: sometimes even you specify table width as 500 pixels,

it might still stretch to all 700. There are two reasons for

that.



1) You have a graphic in that table that is wider than the table

itself. Reduce its size and the table will shrink as well.



2) You are using a long URL somewhere in the table text. Shorten

it or remove it and you will see the table shrink to its

specified size.







PROBLEM: WEB PAGE DISPLAYS OLD LINKS AND IMAGES



SOLUTION: refresh (or reload) the page by clicking the button on

the toolbar of your browser. Sometimes the graphics are still

not being refreshed in which case you need to do this:



- right-click on the graphic

- choose "view image" or "open image"

- click "Refresh" when the graphic is displayed by itself



Now come back to your web page and press "refresh" button one

more time. You should now see the updated images.



Also, if you are using an FTP program to upload your files, remember

to click "Refresh" in the FTP window before uploading new

files. Otherwise, you will simply upload the old versions.







PROBLEM: BACKGROUND DOESN'T SHOW

---------------------------------



SOLUTION: make sure to upload your background image along with

the other files. Also, make sure you upload it into the right

directory (see "missing image on the page" above for more

information)







PROBLEM: CAN'T ACCESS YOUR HOME PAGE

-------------------------------------



SOLUTION: if you get an "access denied" error or a list of files

when you are trying to access your web site, make sure you named

your home page correctly.



Every hosting company has it set up so that the very first page

of your site must be named "index.html". Sometimes, though, they

will require your first file to be called "welcome.html",

"default.html", "home.html", or "default.htm".



There is only one way to find out: ask them! Or visit their web

site to see if they specify the default file name in their tech

support section.



Notice that "default.html" and "default.htm" are two different

files. You can name your files either way, but only one of them

will be accepted as a default one.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Milana Leshinsky is a full time web developer

and the author of the "65 Instant Web Design Answers".

http://www.instantwebanswers.com

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Receive $100 worth Search Engine Submission

Software with your order!

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



WORD COUNT: 1,771



PUBLISHING: May be published free with the

resource box intact. Courtesy e-mail will

be greatly appreciated.





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