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> Get Articles > Web Site Design > Does Your Website Induce Seizures?

Does Your Website Induce Seizures?


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Tim Knox
timonlineprofits4u.com

Dropship Wholesale.net
http://www.dropshipwholesale.net


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Does Your Website Induce Seizures?

by

Tim Knox

Small Business Q&A

Copyright 2003

http://www.smallbusinessqa.com



Read it online:

http://www.smallbusinessqa.com/columns/pokemon.asp



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Q: We promote our web site in all our ad campaigns, but according

to my website statistics program, we are getting very few visitors

who click past the first page. The site has a cool Flash intro

page that the designer said would impress visitors, but it doesn't

seem to be working. What can we do to get people to spend more

time on the site?

-- Christopher O.



A: The first thing you should do, Christopher, is find that designer

and beat the living Flash out of him. It won't increase the time

visitors spend on your website, but it will make you feel better

after you've read this column.



What your designer thought would appeal to visitors is probably

the very thing that is driving them away. A Flash introduction

page (Macromedia Flash is a software program used to create

animations for Web pages) may seem "cool" to you, but from a

website visitor's point of view, they can be about as appealing

as sitting in the front row of a Pokemon movie with four hundred

screaming six year olds (and here comes the segue, folks).



In December, 1997, during an episode of Pokemon, the popular

Japanese TV cartoon that has spawned everything from movies to

action figures to lunch boxes, a scene featured a rocket explosion

that flashed red and blue lights in rapid succession. After the

episode, over 600 children were taken to hospitals complaining of

seizures, blurred vision, headaches, dizziness, and nausea. Any

adult who has ever been exposed to Pokemon for more than two

seconds can understand the nausea, but the seizures at first

baffled doctors. Scientists ultimately came to attribute the mass

reaction to "photosensitive seizures," which are brought on by

exposure to certain visual stimuli like rapidly flashing lights

on a TV screen. Remember when your mom told you not to sit so

close to the TV or you'd ruin your eyes? Turns out she knew what

she was talking about. Who knew?



The event caused such concern that Japanese broadcasters and health

officials met to discuss ways to prevent future occurrences of

bad-cartoon induced illnesses. They established guidelines for

the broadcast of flashing images: no image may flicker faster

than three times per second; flashing images should be displayed

for no more than two seconds; and stripes, whorls, and concentric

circles should not take up the largest portion of a TV screen.



It's my humble opinion that these rules should apply to websites

as well. I've been in the Internet design business for nearly a

decade and I have been witness to numerous websites that could

induce photosensitive seizures in blind moles. It sounds like

your website might be suffering from a similar ailment.



If visitor's are not clicking past your fancy Flash intro page,

you don't have to be a genius to figure out that therein lies

your problem. Remove the Flash intro page for a few weeks to

see if your website's click-through rate improves and the number

of page views increase. "Click-through rate" refers to the

number of visitors who click links on your homepage to go deeper

into your site. "Page views" refers to the overall number of

web pages that were viewed by visitors. If click-through and

page view rates improve, you'll know that the Flash intro was

your problem.



Here are a few other things you can do to make sure your site

offers visitors a pleasant - and seizure free - browsing

experience.



Sit In The Visitor's Chair

The best way to make sure your website is as user friendly as it

can be, is to sit down at a computer and approach your site from

a typical visitor's point of view. Try to imagine that you are

seeing the site for the first time. If you are unable to do this,

have a friend who has never seen the site click around and offer

comments while you take notes.



Have your friend assess the following points: Is the site appealing

to the eye? Are the colors pleasing and complimentary? Is the

site easy to navigate? Are the topical categories and subcategories

in logical order? Is it easy to find what you're looking for?

Does the site have a search engine to make finding things easier?

Is every feature of the site less than two or three clicks away?

If the answer to any or all of these points is no, you have some

work to do.



Don't Dictate Technology

One sure fire way to repel web site visitors is to require that

they have special browser plug-ins or 3rd party add-on browser

software installed to view your site. Dictating that the user

download and install software is not your place and users will

resent you (and your business) for it. Visiting your site

should be an effortless pleasure, not a technological chore.



Don't Make Them Wait

If your homepage takes longer than 20 seconds to download (appear

in the visitor's browser) you are losing visitors, period.

Gratuitous animation, large graphics, poorly formatted HTML,

bad page layout, and a number of other factors can increase

download time. You might have the greatest web site in the world,

but if it takes ten minutes to download no one will ever see it.



The lessons to be learned, then, are threefold. One: a website

should be designed to satisfy the visitor's needs, not to pacify

the site designer's ego.



Two: visitors to a business website are not there to be awed and

entertained. They are there looking for information, and unless

you give it to them quickly and effortlessly, they will go

elsewhere to get it.



And Three: for better mental and physical health avoid Pokemon

at all costs.



Here's to your success.



Tim Knox

timonlineprofits4u.com



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Small Business Q&A is written by veteran entrepreneur and

syndicated columnist, Tim Knox. Tim serves as the president and

CEO of three successful technology companies: B2Secure Inc., a

Web-based hiring management software company; Digital Graphiti Inc.,

a software development company; and Sidebar Systems, a company

that creates-cutting edge convergence software for broadcast media

outlets. Tim is also the founder of OnlineProfits4U.com, an

ebusiness dedicated to the success of online entrepreneurs.



Tim is also the Ebusiness Startup and Design Expert for

Entrepreneur.com, the website of the national publication

Entrepreneur Magazine.



Related Links:

-- http://www.smallbusinessqa.com

-- http://www.onlineprofits4u.com



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