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Small Business Web Design
Is your business ready to be part of the internet? In need of a quality web site, but need to find a web designer to fit your budget? Your web site will become your new online store for others to see. When It comes to the internet appearance is...

The Best Web Design Programs
Who doesn't own a webpage nowadays? If you're thinking about spicing up your webpage or (heaven forbid) move your webpage off that blogging host, consider some of these web design programs that will make mastering the art of html a breeze (well, not...

Web Design for Newbies... Content Sells... and Sells Again!
Web design! Before a few weeks ago, when I heard those words, they went into my "other" category! "Other" people, with "other" educations, with "other" minds -- brilliant minds, unlike mine (!) -- were the designers of webpages. Certainly...

Web Design Planning
When designing or redesigning a website the most important part of the project happens before any graphics or code are created. Start by determining the primary goals of your website. Are you using it to sell your products or services? Maybe it's...

Web Site Design and Better Traffic
spent the time and money necessary to set up a website, it is key that there is a sizeable ROI (return on investment) in order to make it worthwhile. Every part of the website design should be considered and chosen carefully with the potential...

 
Website designers and designing

How many times have you gone to a site someone recommended, only to have it
take "forever" to load? You had been told it was a great site. But how long are you
going to wait for fancy backgrounds, 300 dpi jpegs, or animated gifs to load onto
your browser?

Web designers are sometimes entranced by the bells and whistles. "Add sound
[animations, photos, you name it] to your site" sounds nice, but the wav. files and
large filesizes are tedious to load, and the consumer is in a hurry to find what he or
she is looking for. Fancy pictures don't matter in the long run unless it's a "you have
to see it to decide whether to buy" issue, and banners (although nice) take longer to
load than text links.

Two banners per page is the maximum I'd recommend. If you must have photos (one
of my sites must) then two or three photos per page are all that most people's
browsers can handle without slowing down page loading. Frames slow it down even
more. Besides, some people have "disabled" frames on their browser preferences
because they take too long to load.

My philosophy is this: if you have a lot of material on your web pages, even though
your business is great and you have a great product/service, you'll drive customers
away rather than attract them. The internet set is very impatient. They'll go on to the
next selection on the search engine results. You'll be left by the phone or your
computer screen wondering why someone hasn't called or emailed.

If you are looking for a web designer, choose one that offers simple graphics and
backgrounds and recommends small file sizes, is up front about cost and time
involved, and suits your website to the needs you have. For example: if you are
looking to have someone design a personal site, then it's fine to have a few photos, a
guestbook, perhaps an e-card service on your site. But if you want to sell something
- it makes more sense to give your potential customers the information they want as
quickly as possible, without all the extraneous trappings I've already mentioned.

If you think you have the time to learn how to design your own website, I have good
news for you. Forgive me "plugging" someone else's business, but I've never
regretted the time I've spent on this site: http://www.victoriaring.com . Check it out
for some really great FREE tutorials on web design. Victoria teaches with Netscape
Composer (part of Communicator 4.7 and downloadable free), but if you want to
use another type of web design interface (such as FrontPage by Microsoft, or even
Adobe) she has suggestions on her site as to where you can find good tutorials on
creating websites with these applications as well. There's even a section where you
can download some free backgrounds and gifs for your site.

If you already have a web site up and running, please do yourself a favor and visit it
once in a while. Pretend you're a customer looking for a certain type of product. Try
every single one of the links to make sure they work. Can you get to the homepage
from every page? Can you get to the order form, from anywhere on your site? Do
you have a section on shipping and handling charges (if any apply)? Does your cgi --
if you used interactive forms -- work? (i.e., can you submit a sample order to
yourself from the site and have it go through to your email?). Can customers email
you with questions?

These are but a few considerations when either choosing a web designer OR
designing your own site. There are any number of other considerations. For now,
I've just looked at the option of either designing your own site, or finding a website
designer to do it for you.

Thanks for reading my short opinion/article. I hope it's been helpful. Next time I
might explore the issue of merchant accounts and shipping and handling charges.


About the Author
Judy Gillis
Web Design should be simple, but it takes time. If you can't do it yourself, visit sites
I've designed! http://synapse6000.virtualave.net/ http://designurl4u.faithweb.com/

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