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6 do's and do nots of website design

by dbdc 9/23/2008 4:55:00 PM

A few short tips on how web and graphic design services can be best utilised to make your site both graphically attractive while remaining usable -


DO make the site look great

First visual impressions do count

BUT

DO NOT overcomplicate

Technology can easily be abused—excessive, extemporaneous animations confuse usability and bog down users' Web browsers.


DO concentrate on providing great content

Content is the key to a succesful site. Design can only go so far in making a site successful - a great looking site should be a vehicle for great content.

BUT

DO NOT obscure content with excessive advertising/ pop-up windows

Advertisements may be necessary for a site's continued existence, but usability researchers say pop-ups and full-page ads that obscure content hurt functionality—and test a reader's willingness to revisit. 


DO enrich the user experience by making it immersive

Merely looking good is not sufficient. Succesfull sites draw in users with compelling content and functionality. Creating Web sites that can capture and hold users' attention is what matters most.

BUT

DO NOT make the site too visually "busy"

Sites that lack a coherent structure make it impossible to wade through information. Successful sites put information hierarchy at the top of their list of design priorities.

Simple website design

by dbdc 9/10/2008 12:00:00 PM

Overcomplicated and "busy" design hinders people from understanding the message they are meant to receive. This means that the information intended to reach the target audience is often lost in the clutter of messy web pages full of irrelevent banners, ads, navigation bars and excessive graphical elements.

 

Simplicity is often overlooked as websites seek to bombard their visitors with as many options as possible in the hope that they will find something to their liking.

 

In reality - its more likely that the information overload will result in user apathy, and too many options will often lead to frustration and a decision to leave without making any choices at all.

 

After all, we all have better things to do with our time than try to work out exactly what we are being served.

 

 "It’s crucial to have simple web designs to allow the user to quickly find the information they need, especially if you are selling a product. If the page is cluttered with useless text, widgets or unrelated products, the site becomes meaningless.

 

However, it’s become a common practice to do just the opposite. e-commerce sites have taken this “scatter shot” approach of trying to slap the potential buyer with as many options as possible. Instead of making the landing page solely about one product, sites usually clutter the page with unnecessary information, ads and related products. "

 

Glen Stansberry, taken from http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2008/08/26/how-simple-web-design-helps-your-business/

Choosing the right design company Part 1 - Introduction

by S.A 7/21/2008 4:39:00 PM
When you want logo design, web design, annual report design, etc. appointing the right design company to carry out the work will be a big decision.
 
The difference between choosing the right design company and one that falls short in terms of meeting and even exceeding your company’s project objectives may seriously determine whether your business will reach its maximum potential or not. The dire consequences of choosing the wrong company will not only have cost implications but will undoubtedly be an unpleasant and time wasting experience. 

The procedure by which you may search and sift for design companies may seem like a daunting prospect, especially since the company image is at stake. However, this process need not be a troublesome one as long as you approach the task with an open mind and do your research.

In order to achieve your project objectives and effectively communicate this to the designers in question, a little preparation is needed.
 
Over the next few entries I'll be discussing the different factors and considerations that may need to be taken into account when choosing to appoint the right design company for your needs.

Blast from the Past - Understanding Web Design

by dbdc 6/25/2008 5:03:00 PM

 Understanding Web Design 

We get better design when we understand our medium. Yet even at this late cultural hour, many people don’t understand web design. Among them can be found some of our most distinguished business and cultural leaders, including a few who possess a profound grasp of design—except as it relates to the web.

 

Some who don’t understand web design nevertheless have the job of creating websites or supervising web designers and developers. Others who don’t understand web design are nevertheless professionally charged with evaluating it on behalf of the rest of us. Those who understand the least make the most noise. They are the ones leading charges, slamming doors, and throwing money—at all the wrong people and things.

 

If we want better sites, better work, and better-informed clients, the need to educate begins with us.

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Blast from the Past - A Dao of Web Design

by dbdc 6/25/2008 4:57:00 PM
A Dao of Web Design

Same old new medium?

 

“Well established hierarchies are not easily uprooted;
Closely held beliefs are not easily released;
So ritual enthralls generation after generation.”
Tao Te Ching; 38 Ritual

 

If you’ve never watched early television programs, it’s instructive viewing. Television was at that time often referred to as “radio with pictures”, and that’s a pretty accurate description. Much of television followed the format of popular radio at that time. Indeed programs like the Tonight Show, with its variants found on virtually every channel in the world (featuring a band, the talk to the camera host, and seated guests), or the news, with the suited sober news reader, remain as traces of the medium television grew out of. A palimpsest of media past.

 

 Think too of the first music videos (a few of us might be at least that old). Essentially the band miming themselves playing a song. Riveting.

 

When a new medium borrows from an existing one, some of what it borrows makes sense, but much of the borrowing is thoughtless, “ritual”, and often constrains the new medium. Over time, the new medium develops its own conventions, throwing off existing conventions that don’t make sense.

 

If you ever get the chance to watch early television drama you’ll find a strong example of this. Because radio required a voice – over to describe what listeners couldn’t see, early television drama often featured a voice over, describing what viewers could. It’s a simple but striking example of what happens when a new medium develops out of an existing one.

 

The web is a new medium, although it has emerged from the medium of printing, whose skills, design language and conventions strongly influence it. Yet it is often too shaped by that from which it sprang. “Killer Web Sites” are usually those which tame the wildness of the web, constraining pages as if they were made of paper – Desktop Publishing for the Web. This conservatism is natural, “closely held beliefs are not easily released”, but it is time to move on, to embrace the web as its own medium. It’s time to throw out the rituals of the printed page, and to engage the medium of the web and its own nature.

 

This is not for a moment to say we should abandon the wisdom of hundreds of years of printing and thousands of years of writing. But we need to understand which of these lessons are appropriate for the web, and which mere rituals.

 

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