Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Choosing the Right Web Designer
Title: "Choosing the Right Web Designer" Copyright (c) 2002 Author: Andy Quick Contact Author: mailto:andy@findmyhosting.com Website: findmyhosting-webhostingsearch (http://www.findmyhosting.com) Publishing Guidelines: You have permission to publish...

How designing a "helpful" website can kill product sales!
Think you need an "interesting" website, with lots of valuable content, interactivity, and frequent updates -- to keep visitors returning? Think again! Enticing visitors with lots of free content and hoping for an impulse sale is a quick way to...

Make Your Website Stand Out With an Icon Design
They may look like a standard image file, but to design an icon, one needs special icon design software capable of creating and saving an image in ICO format. There are many web design icon sites that, with a price, help you design your own...

Using Graphic Design on Your Website
Copyright 2005 Andrew Eaton Almost everything is available on the web. products, services, e-books, software, audios, videos, membership sites, or newsletters. Regardless of what you're promoting, there's a never-ending supply of prospects and...

Web Source Web Design Tips - Using An Image To Create A Line
You can use an image to create a vertical or horizontal line in a web page. Create a 2 pixel by 2 pixel image in the color of your choice. This single image can be used to create a vertical or horizontal line on your web page simply by changing...

 
Effective Website Design For Massive Traffic




STEP 1:Do your homework


Plan and think about your content. Think big, have a vision of at least a 100 page site. The pages should have "real content", as opposed to link pages, resource pages, about/copyright... etc pages.


STEP 2:Buy Domain name:


Invest in an easily brandable domain. You may want "google.com" and not "mykeyword.com". Keyword domains will go no where, whereas branding and name recognition are the in thing. The value of keywords in a domain name have never been less to Search Engines. Get them


STEP 3:Site Design:


As a rule of the thumb: develop for MS Internet Explorer. As for text content, it should out weigh the html content. Spiders are not to the point they really like eating html 4.0 and the mess that it can bring.


Use less of these heavy stuff: flash, dom, java, java script. Go external with scripting languages if you must have them - there is little reason to have them that I can see - they will rarely help a site and stand to hurt it greatly due to many factors most people don't appreciate (search engines distaste for javascripts is just one of them).


Arrange the site in a logical manner with directory names hitting the top keywords you wish to hit.


Don't clutter and don't spam your site with frivolous links like "best viewed" or other counter like junk. Keep it clean and professional to the best of your ability.


Visit Google.com and learn from them. Simple is retro cool - simple is what surfers want.


Your site should respond almost instantly to a request. If you get into even 3-4 seconds delay until "something happens" in the browser, you are in long term trouble. That 3-4 seconds response time may vary for site destined to live in other countries than your native one. The site should respond locally within 3-4 seconds (max) to any request.


If you need help, visit http://www.xcelweb.com for the latest web design packages.


STEP 4:Check Page Size:


The smaller the better. Keep it under 15k if you can. The smaller the better. Keep it under 12k if you can. The smaller the better. Keep it under 10k if you can.


STEP 5:Build Content:


Build one page of content and put online per day at 200-500 words. If you aren't sure what you need for content, start with the Overture.com's keyword suggestor and find the core set of keywords for your topic area. Those are your subject starters.


STEP 6:Check Keywords' placing


Use the keyword once in title, once in description tag, once in a heading, once in the url, once in bold, once in italic, once high on the page, and hit the density between 5 and 20% (don't fret about it). Use good sentences and spell check it. Spell checking is becoming important as search engines are moving to auto correction during searches.


STEP 7:Cross links:


Link to on topic quality content across your site. If a page is about food, then make sure it links it to the apples and veggies page. Specifically with Google, on topic cross linking is very important for sharing your Page Rating (PR) value across your site. You do NOT want an "all star" page that out performs the rest of your site. You want 50 pages that produce 1 referral each a day and do NOT want 1 page that produces 50 referrals a day. If you do find one page that drastically out produces the rest of the site with Google, you need to off load some of that pr value to other pages by cross linking heavily.


STEP 8:Put it Online:


Make sure the site is "crawlable" by a spider. All pages should be linked to more than one other page on your site, and not more than 2 levels deep from root. Link the topic vertically as much as possible back to root. A menu that is present on every page should link to your sites main "topic index" pages (the doorways and logical navigation system down into real content).


Don't put it online before you have a quality site to put online. It's worse to put a "nothing" site online, than no site at all. Go for a listing in the ODP. If you have the budget, then submit to Looksmart and Yahoo. If you don't have the budget, then try for a freebie on Yahoo.






Brian Daniels (sales@xcelweb.com) is the founder of www.xcelweb.com, a company dedicated to online Internet Marketing and Web Design. He has just released a new Ebook dedicated to Internet Marketing.




Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.