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> Get Articles > Web Site Design > Planning Before Designing
Planning Before Designing
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Jason Olson
jasonultimatewebdesigning.com
Ultimate Web Designing
http://www.ultimatewebdesigning.com
Planning Before Designing
By Jason Olson - Ultimate Web Designing
Four key questions need to be answered before any designing can
begin:
*Q1. Who is your target audience? Start by being as specific as
possible and describe your target audience. “Self-employed
professional women” is better than "women." If you’re hoping
to attract this particular type of woman to your site, then you
don’t want to design your site to make it attractive to women
working on an assembly line or worse yet, teenage boys. After
you have this specific target audience selected, try to identify
some common characteristics within this group. Do they all have
a certain level of education? Hobbies? Career goals? Family
goals? Now, from what you have discovered about your target
audience, create your web site as if you are designing it
specifically for her. Try to imagine what would make her want
to visit your site, and what would make her want to come back.
*Q2. Why is your web site needed? Summarize the main purpose
of your site. Perhaps the site is to increase sales. Maybe
it’s to let people know you exist. It might be to promote a
product or service you offer. It could also be to gather
visitor information or obtain feedback. Whatever the purpose,
make it clear to the audience. Don’t let them feel that they’re
wasting their time by visiting your site.
*Q3. What will you be placing on your site? Make a list of what
you will need to place on your site in order to meet the purpose
of the site as you answered in Question #2. Some sites need to
contain graphics to convey the message, others might need video
clips, and some might need an order form. At this time you
should also determine if, when, and how this material will be
updated.
*Q4. Where will the pieces of information be placed? You must
now determine how the pieces of information will be arranged
on your site. The number of pages, how the pages are linked,
and the navigational structure of the site can have major
impacts on how long visitors will stay at your site and also
if they’ll come back. Avoid slow downloading pages by breaking
up the information and spreading it out over multiple-interlinked
pages.
Another key thing to remember is…be consistent. Make your
visitors know that they are still on the same site. Place
navigational buttons at the same place on each page, use the
same color pattern throughout the entire site, make your
contact information easy to access, etc.
With search engines and other web sites sending you traffic,
not every visitor will start with your home page. So, make
sure that each page has a link to at least your home page
preferably all pages) and that each page tells the visitor
where they’re at and what you have to offer.
Proper planning before you begin designing your web site will
save you time in the end.
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Jason Olson (mailto:jasonultimatewebdesigning.com) is the owner
of Ultimate Web Designing (http://www.ultimatewebdesigning.com)
which offers web designing, web hosting, search engine strategies,
and search engine submission. To make searching for the search
engines easier, visit our 100 Search Engines page (http://www.ultimatewebdesigning.com/100searchengines.html).
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