Enhance The Usability Of Your Homepage Design

The homepage of your website is the face of your online presence. It is what makes the first impression on online audiences about your company and business. When people type in the URL of your website, they reach your homepage. The homepage, should therefore present a brief introduction about the website and lure visitors to browse further within. The homepage is perhaps the most important page of the website and thus you need to take adequate measures to enhance its usability. Here are some tips to ensure the same.

Include a Crisp and Catchy Tagline

Draft a tagline for your website homepage that informs about the company and business in a simple sentence. When visitors enter the homepage, they should know what the website and the company is all about just by reading the tagline. In fact, by drafting a catchy tagline you can catch the attention of your visitors and make sure they don't forget you.

Draft a Meaningful Title Tag

The title tag of your homepage should have your company name followed by a very brief description of the website. Avoid using words like 'Welcome' or 'The' that just populate the space and do no value addition. Instead, try to include your relevant keywords and phrases in the title tags.

Cluster All Corporate Information

Website visitors generally don't bother reading about the company. However, there are times when they decide to do business with you only after they are convinced about the company. In such scenarios it is important to have good corporate information on the website. Create an About Us page on your website that is dedicated towards informing visitors all about your company and business and provide a link to it from the homepage.

Focus on Key Tasks of the Website

The homepage of your website should act as a guide for visitors and help them find a browsing route. It should provide a clear starting point to do what they want to do i.e. there should be clear links to the main areas of the website where visitors might be interested in going.

Include a Search Box

The search box is indispensable for any website. Internet users are an impatient lot and they love anything that cuts short the action steps. Search boxes enable visitors to search for the exact information that they need by just entering a query instead of browsing through categories to fins what they need. Make sure your search box is at least 25 characters wide so that it accommodates multiple queries.

Offer Snapshots of Inlying Content

The homepage of the website is where you can showcase things and lure visitors to further explore the website. A good idea is to place snapshots or post the topics of important content within your website. Whether it is a recent article or a report that you have on a certain web page, offer a preview on the homepage.

Use Meaningful Design Elements

The homepage of a website is important and should welcome visitors. However, that doesn't mean you can load the page with useless design elements and flash animations that offer no value but only increase the file sizes.

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Tips To Create A Successful Online Presence

Creating a successful online presence on the world wide web is not an easy task. And it is much more that creating an attractive design and building a strong website structure. Even before the website design & development process, you need to get involved in some strategic website planning activities to decide the course of your online presence.

Here are some key website planning considerations you should take care of before starting off the design and development process.

Efficient Keyword Research

One of the most important questions to ask yourself before creating a website is 'What is the purpose of the website?' Based on that along with the knowledge of what your industry audiences may search for on search engines to find the services/products your business offers. You need to research appropriate keywords and phrases for your website. There are plenty of free keyword research tools available on the Internet that can help you choose the right keywords for your business. Selecting relevant keywords and optimizing your website for the same will ensure quality web traffic and great rankings on the search engines.

Competition Analysis

First of all, enter your relevant keywords in the search engines and make a note of companies that fare well for the same. These are your competitors whom you will compete with in online market. Use the free backlinks checkers on the Internet and analyze the performance of your competitors on the search engines. Backlinks are what makes a website stronger, so if your competitor has a large number of backlinks, you would have to work really hard to push your website on the top slots. Also, take a note of the number of web pages that your competitors have. Because they have been in the industry earlier than you have, chances are they have hundreds of pages on their website. And your 10 page website will be no match for them. Therefore, you would need to build a website large enough to compete with them.

Tweak your USP

To get noticed on the world wide web and to ensure long term online success, you need to offer something different and better than your competitors to your audiences. Plan out a USP (Unique Selling Point) for your business and market it effectively. It could be anything like special offers for limited periods, better information, easier navigation, free stuff and so on. You could also analyze your competition and look for mistakes they are making and make sure you don't commit the same on your website. This goes a great deal in diverting traffic as well.

Quality Content

Content is the king and will remain so! People search for solutions on the Internet be it finding a product, finding some information, finding service providers and so on. If you are able to satiate their requirements and help them with relevant and informative content about the same, you have made it well.

Plan Your Marketing

Creating a website and placing it on the world wide web doesn't attract visitors. In fact, for your website to get noticed and become popular in cyberspace, you need to market it well. It is very important to optimize your website for search engine so that it fares well on the search engine results pages (SERPs) When your website ranks on the top positions of the search engine results, more visitors will come to your website. Its a vicious circle altogether!

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5 Point Checklist Before You Make The Website Live!

So, you are finally done with the design and development process and waiting for the grand launch of your website. Its finally time that cyberspace sees the result of your creative excellence and technical expertise and months (or even days) of hard work. Just everything is ready and raring to go. Or is it? It often happens that you get so excited about completing the project that you tend to forget little things here and there. Here is a 5-point checklist that you need to refer to before launching your website formally in order to make sure it is complete in all respects.

1. Title Tags and Meta Data

Often, designers forget to include the title tags for web pages or end up using a particular title for all the pages of the website. This deprives the website of valuable SEO benefits. Title tags are actually the 'title' of web pages. They inform the search engine crawlers about what the web page is about and also help website visitors about the contents before they even have to read through the page. And same is the case with Meta tags and descriptions. Make sure you specify unique titles and descriptions for every page of your website.

2. Cross Browser Compatibility

Your website may look absolutely perfect on IE but when you open it in Firefox it could be an utter mess. Often, designers forget to check their designs across multiple browsers and thus they don't have a hint if it doesn't work well on some. This leads to loss of precious web traffic. Make sure your perform a cross browser compatibility check and ensure that the website functions well across major browsers like IE 6,7 and 8, Firefox 3, Safari 3, Chrome, Opera and the iPhone.

3. Grammatically Correct and Error Free Content

All it takes is one grammatical/spelling mistake in your website content to make visitors realize how serious and professional you are in your business. It is extremely important that you thoroughly check your website contents and make sure there are no errors or inconsistencies in the text. Read all the pages of your website yourself and also make someone else read it. You would be surprised to note the mistakes that you yourself would have missed.

4. Broken Links

There is nothing that frustrates visitors more than broken links. Scan your website from start to end and click through on all the links to check if they work and point to the right direction. The logo should always link to your homepage. Also, make sure that all the links on the web page stand out very clearly. Change the color and underline the links. Also, the visited links should be presented in a different color.

5. 404 Error Page

404 error page is the oft-forgotten design element in the website design process. This is the page that gets displayed when the user requests for a page that doesn't exist. It is very important to communicate with your users on the 404 error page and guide them back to the website. Explain to them what the problem is and why they have arrived on the 404 error page and provide a link back to the homepage or previous page from where they can start their browsing journey again.

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How to Avoid Client Chaos With Effective Screenshots

Some days, it seems like clients are just trying to be impossible. You ask them to click a screen shot image to see it at full size, and they continue talking about how the font in the thumbnail is too small to read. Or, you explain to them that the color calibration on their monitor is clearly off if they’re seeing everything in black and white, and they continue to ask you to add some color to the site.

But, the truth is (save a few, very rare exceptions), clients aren’t stupid. It’s just that this process of working with a web designer is one that they’re not used to. And because it’s what you do all day, it can be easy to lose sight of the way they approach the process.

Fortunately, there are some really easy ways to approach the design process that will smooth things over for both you and them. Here’s how you can handle screen shots so that clients are better able to imagine their new website.

Don’t Email Screen Shots to Your Client.

Working with a lawyer on a site design, he asked if I could email the designs to his assistant instead of posting them to our client area. He thought it would be more secure, and I figured there’d be no harm.

But, when all was said and done, it turned out the client was looking at the designs I sent at 200% zoom instead of at full size, so there were parts of the finished product that were “way too small.” (Turned out, they wanted the body text at 20px, not the much-more-normal-looking 10px.)

You never have complete control over what the client is looking at on their monitor. From color to resolution, to buggy IE vs Firefox differences, there’s a lot that’s beyond your control. But, you can exercise a bit more control by doing two things:

  1. Asking what the clients’ resolution is before beginning work. It’s a big time saver to always make sure your screen shots will fit well within the boundaries of the client’s monitor. and;
  2. Never uploading an image bigger than their monitor. That way, IE won’t shrink the image down without their knowledge; and;
  3. Sticking with your client area to show them designs.

Don’t do Anything Fancy.

I’d seen another designer deliver screen shots with “fancy” effects about five years ago (in this case, a drop shadow and one pixel border). I thought it looked nice and made the site seem more real.

In fact, it simply confused the client who called me on the phone and spent fifteen minutes explaining that her boss hated drop shadows and could I please, please, please remove it before he saw it.

Stay away from fancy. Just keep ‘em plain. In your portfolio, sure, decorate away. But, when you’re showing it to the client, anything extraneous will only distract.

fancy

Set the Background Color.

I used to always display screen shots on a white background and just explain to the client that the background would extend.

They never quite understood, and when I’d post the final code, they’d say, “But we thought it was going to have that white border all around it. We liked the white border.”

This one’s not the end of the world, certainly. You can always add a “white border” to the finished product. But, it’s far better to simply set the graphic on a background that’s the right color so that there’s no room for confusion.

If you’re displaying multiple design options, crop them into thumbnails, don’t shrink them into thumbnails.

I like to give clients a full page where they can see everything we’ve done so far so they can scroll back. But, I used to simply shrink the full size mockups down into smaller-sized images.

Don’t do it that way. Even though I told clients to click on an image to see it full size, they would still talk about how the shrunken image was too small. So, instead, crop it so that it is an unmistakable thumbnail, and your clients will understand that they need to click to see the full size version.

thumbnails

Ask lots of questions before making changes.

Sometimes, clients really do say things that are nonessential. (Like the client who wanted the logo to be “the only thing people saw when they arrived at the site.”) But, more often than not, they’re just not explaining themselves in the way you’d explain the same thing.

So, if the client says, “The flow’s all wrong” instead of assuming they mean the flow of the body text, ask more questions to pinpoint what they mean. It’s always okay to say, “I’m not sure I understand, can you tell me more?” or even a simple, “Tell me what you mean by that.”

As long as you’re open to their input, clients will be happy to elaborate. They want you to understand, so let them explain it in a different way.

Conclusion

By following these guidelines for screen shots, you’ll smooth the way to a much more productive, easy design process with your clients.

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Logo Design Questionnaire

Our designers need a starting point. After purchase, please email us at sanjeevemails@gmail.com with your design requirements. A brief response to each of these questions is all that we required to get started...

1. Full company, club, sports team or website name?

2. Where is it located?

3. What is your main product line or services?

4. What will the logo be used for? (company, product, etc...)

5. Where will the logo appear? (storefront, business cards, website, letterhead, team jersey, etc...)

6. What style logo are you looking for (modern, business professional, conservative, etc...)

7. How many colors should this logo be? Which colors? Can this logo have mixed colors (i.e. gradients) or should none of the colors overlap (better for business cards)?

8. What symbols or items should we create and integrate into your logo?

9. What should your logo represent? What feelings should it invoke?

10. What symbols or items should not be integrated or included in your logo?

11. What wording should be included in your logo (if any)?

12. Are there any nuances of spelling that the graphic designer should take into account with the wording ? (i.e. all capitol letters, or if an abbreviation, should periods be included after each letter, etc...)

13. Do you have any preferred fonts? May any font type be used? May any not be used?

14. Do you need the logo in vector format specifically (i.e. .eps and .ai files in Adobe Illustrator), or can artists also submit high-resolution raster files instead (i.e. jpeg/gif files in Adobe Photoshop)?

15. Is there any other criteria you personally have that's not in this list? If so, please add it!
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The most powerful military of the World

.... Never been defeated and got what she want in her life







…WHO THE HELL WANTS TO FIGHT WITH THEM…
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