» Five Common Web Design Mistakes
by
Lisa Calhoun of MCP Media, Inc.
These days, everyone's a Web designer. With relatively simply Web design packages readily available, lots of people are doffing their new, shiny Web design hats and taking a stab at bringing their business online. But is this wise, or is it giving them a headache?
If you have the time, the flair, and the vision for your organization's website, you will no doubt save some dough in designing yourself. But are you leveraging technology or bastardizing it? There are two schools of thought on this issue. Whichever school is your alma mater, we can all agree that there are some basic mistakes many website designers make, and these are best avoided. Let's take a look at these "common" mistakes with an eye toward making them less common.
1- Overly Wordy Web Designs
Well, maybe this isn't
completely about design after all. But when you look at a page
and there
are too many words, there's a perception problem, a comprehension
problem, and a design problem. Good design is clean and concise.
If your text is making your momma yawn, you know you've typed
too too far. How to slice it down? Spin doctors say everything
can be boiled down to three main things. That may not be true
- -of course your business model and offerings are paragons of
complexity
and obscurity that must be explained in 10,000 Arabian nights
of detailed prose - but what we can agree on is, why give your
secrets away? Be brief. The rule of thumb for Web copy is, unless
you are behind the login of a subscription service where information
is actually for sale, don't give it away. Whet the appetite for
the online visitor to actually call or email you. Drive them
to action. Don't satiate-tempt.
2- Ugly Web Designs
You probably thought I'd find a nice word for it, didn't you?
Let's face it, lots of sites are plain ugly. What does ugly mean?
Like beauty, you know it when you see it. In poor Web design, "ugly" often
takes the form of pixilated graphics that weren't sized for the
screen, a lack of integrated design, and the use of stock (free)
clip art instead of artwork designed specifically for your pages.
And my favorite - jumpy animated graphics and scrolling banners
that have less artistic merit than a line of ants tracing cookie
crumbs in your kitchen.
How can you avoid ugly? There are only two methods
that I've seen work - have someone with artistic talent and aesthetic
design your site, or, simplify your site to the point of pure
text and basic buttons. (And if you do that, make sure all your
text is the same font and all your buttons are the same size.
Preferably black on white.)
3- Your Website is Useless
Dare I say that? That there
are actually useless websites out there? Thousands of them. If
your
website
doesn't have a point to make, a raison d'être, a mission statement
of its very own, it's a design flaw your visitors will perceive
- and leave. How do you know this has occurred? When you view
your
Web log or your report of website visitors, 90% of them come
to the home page and run, never digging any deeper. This means
all your Web visitors can think of, when they see you, is something
else. Counteract this by making sure your website is relevant
to more than just your ego (unless, of course, your ego IS the
reason you have a website). That way, your target demographic
- your target customer - should see something they like and stay.
4- Lack of Traffic Flow Planning
Similar to useless, but less
harsh, a lack of an overall traffic plan is a common flaw in
Web design, especially amateur design. A good website is tooled
for its user. The Web design and development team literally imagines
that ideal customer coming, and designs the perfect path for
them. It's like when your girlfriend is coming over, and you
plant a rose by the door, a trail of rose petals to the . . .
um, kitchen . . . (this is posted on the Internet after all!)
and there you are twirling a glass of Chianti. Think she'll stay
for desert? Absolutely! And that's the way great Web design does
it . . . First, there's some thought to the demographic analysis
of the potential customer or visitor to the site. The top three
or five reasons someone may visit the site are well considered,
and actual "information paths" are created for those situations.
At the end of the path, the visitor is invited to more action
than click-throughs, and has an opportunity to whip out their
credit card, send an email, or download something fascinating.
(You of course, know this works because you track your customers.)
Which brings me to Flaw #5
5- Lack of Tracking
You may have the most beautisimous (kidding) website on Krypton,
but how do you know it does what you want it to do without tracking
features? At a bare minimum, you want to know the monthly visits
to each page and where those visitors are coming from (in the
form of referring URLs). You also want to know which pages you've
created that are "sticky" - the pages that tend to keep people
involved for a while. These metrics are important because they
should directly lead you back to your customer. Did you succeed
in creating paths for your visitors they want to follow, or do
you need to re-tweak or re-write some of the copy? Your tracking
program is the only way you'll be able to measure whether or
not your website is meeting its mission.
As you, savvy reader, have by now deduced, these common mistakes
all point to a lack of forethought on the part of the would-be
web designer. People, especially results-oriented entrepreneurial
types, tend to want to "dig in" to an application, push the buttons,
and create something. But good Web design takes forethought.
That's why so many people outsource it - time is not one of their
luxuries. The best professional Web design firms will not throw
a suite of pages up for you. They will talk you through the demographics
of your visitor, the mission of your website, and the "critical
paths" of visitation. It's boring, but it works. If you want
Web presence that gets results, you can't skip these initial
steps. If you think through your customer's needs, and create
a site to meet them, you'll
avoid all the most common mistakes in Web design.
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