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Archive for the ‘Web Design’ Category

Web Writing: A Short Series on Effective Planning and Execution – Part III

Adding the Graphics

The content for your Web site is written and laid out. Now what?

It’s important, now, to create a site that appeals to your visitors with meaningful, dazzling visual impact. This is accomplished easily, with content-appropriate graphics. Done well, the visual impact will draw in your readers, and hold their interest—long enough for them to read your message, and want to learn more.

First, identify what your business, service, or offering is trying to convey. Who is your target audience? Do you want to portray stable and secure, or modern and cutting edge? Professional and corporate, or fun and lively? Intended for children or teens, or for senior citizens?

Next, decide what colors you want to base your design on, and limit the color family to three or four. Choose colors, designs, and images that portray who you are, and who you want to appeal to. For instance, a children’s site might be visually enhanced with primary colors and geometrical shapes. A real estate consulting service may be done in more subdued colors, and portray images of business-attired professionals poring over blueprints. In general, consider the emotions and impressions that you want to leave your reader with—and which colors evoke them (for instance, red = passion or danger; yellow = happiness, summer, and lightness; green = young, the environment, spring. For more information, check out http://www.infoplease.com/spot/colors1.html.

As you begin to add your graphical enhancements, start with your landing page heading. As the adage goes, a book IS often judged by its cover. So it is with your Web page. In this age of information glut and split-second surfing, your site has to catch a reader’s eye—quickly. If possible, and for best results, use a graphics software such as Adobe PhotoShop or Fireworks (http://www.adobe.com).

Finally, take the extra step and ensure your Web pages are reader friendly. Compress your graphics, to speed up the loading time. Web graphics are usually 72 dpi resolution, and most commonly in JPEG, GIF, or PNG format for easy compressing by Web browsers.

Once you’ve finished laying out your landing page, move to your internal pages. Tie your pages together with repeating and associated designs and colors that help to convey your message, tell your story, and keep your reader interested and informed. A well-planned and laid out Web site, with copy and graphics that complement each other, will not only serve you well—it will be a pleasure to visit!

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Web Writing: A Short Series on Effective Web Writing and Layout – Part Two

Part Two: Laying it all Out

As you start to put your chunks, headings, and subheads together into a cohesive flow, remember these four key points:

  1. Web writing is best laid out in an inverted pyramid style. This is accomplished by starting with your conclusion or main point, and ending with the finer points and details of your topic.
  2. A successful site is written for many different levels of interest. It’s a tough concept, but the best sites are written from the viewpoints of “there is no interest in my topic,” to “my reader is thirsting for more info.” How do we do this?
  3. Avoid promotional, boastful, or subjective writing, or exaggerated claims
  4. Keep your paragraphs concise. What’s more, using high quality graphics will help get your key points across quickly, and without belaboring the point with unnecessary text.

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Web Writing: A Short Series on Effective Web Writing and Layout- Part One

In this three-part series on Web writing you’ll get tips help you create copy—and then lay it out in a way that encourages readers to peruse the site, and come back again and again.

Part One: Creating the Content

Web writing is not your typical prose. Why? Because Web visitors typically are looking to zip in and out of a site, scanning and getting their information quickly. In fact, Web readers typically read in an “F” pattern; therefore, you’d do best to create your content in two horizontal bars across your page, followed by a vertical scan down the left side.

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The What, Why, and How of Blogging.

You’ve heard about blogging. In fact, you’re reading a blog entry right now. Still not sure what blogging is all about?

For starters, the word blog comes from Weblog. A blog is typically a series of entries on a Website, and often a commentary on something important to the author and/or the author’s customers (if the blog is associated with a business). Blogs can cover any and every type of subject including: information on a specific topic, market, product, service, or group of people; a daily diary of someone’s life; the progress of a project; the blogger’s stream of consciousness; a commentary on social, political, or other issues or viewpoints; or any other manner of topic. (more…)

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Find Out Who’s Visiting Your Site with Google Analytics!

We’ve all used Google, the high-powered, effective search engine with the cute holiday-friendly graphics. But why stop there? With all that power, Google has captured far more than just lnternet lookups. In fact, as a business owner with a Web site, Google has become one of our best allies.

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Intuitive Navigation: Steps to Keep it Simple

Good Web site navigation—it should be simple, clear, and with a purpose. Because if it isn’t, your audience will end up wandering through the site like Hansel and Gretel in the forest…lost, and looking for breadcrumbs to find their way out.

Incorporating a few basic navigation rules into your Web site will make it easier for your visitors can get around… and the better their experience, the more likely they’ll come back. A few key pointers will keep them on the trail and heading in the right direction.

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Brand Identity: A Three-Part Approach to Successful e-presence— Part 1

Brand identity—we all have a basic idea of what it is, and which companies and products have an identity that works. In this three-part blog series we’ll define what brand identity is, discuss how to determine your own brand identity distinction, and perhaps most importantly—how to promote it.

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Fresh Content for Discerning Palates

Web visitors and search engines are like your average diner—they prefer to visit sites that have fresh, new, rotating content (not offerings that are stale or scant), and sites with content that feeds their need for information. So, as proud Web site owners, we need to please our visitors. After all, the average reader, in conjunction with most Web search engines, are pretty smart. They look for the signs that a site is dynamic—and that is largely governed by how often your content is updated.

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Cyber Social Networking—The Web Way of Business Introductions

As a business owner, you need to be connected through powerful and targeted networking. It’s a vital and viable process for the business world. Not only does it help you keep in touch with members of your profession, it keeps the lines of communication open. In fact, networking puts all of us in touch with like-minded individuals and companies, as well as those who may benefit us—or from us—to supplement and augment what we do professionally.

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How Can YouTube Help Your Business?

YouTube. We’ve all heard of it. Teens and Tweens live by it. Even savvy corporate marketing folks have gotten into the game, posting advertorials and videos. So what the heck IS YouTube, anyway—and how can it help your business?

Consider that if a picture is worth a thousand words, how much would a streaming video be worth to your message? Recent pundits claim that half of all Web readers will tend to click on a video before reading text. That being said, your Web site video could begin garnering “hits” for you in a short amount of time, and like never before. At any rate, be sure to create a video that you’re comfortable with and that meets your prime objective:

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