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10
Essentials for Building a Solid Web Site: Planning
It
seems everyone wants a web presence these days. Can
you blame them? Technology companies are at the core
of financial news today. Everyone wants to know
what's going on with the Technology stocks. People
are using the Internet as a shopping and resource
tool more every day. Internet revenues seem to be
growing at an exponential rate. An Internet presence
costs less than maintaining a physical location, and
employs less people. A web-based business appears to
be a win-win for everyone.
So why are there so many poorly designed, poorly
implemented pages out there? Why are so many people
(95%) losing money on the net? Our opinion is that
they forgot the essentials for building a solid
site.
What are the essentials?
1. Planning
A site has to be well-planned. If a site appears to
be thrown together, then most likely it was. Users
can tell.
First, prepare a mission statement. It doesn't have
to be long. A sentence or two should be plenty. In
that mission statement, try to summarize exactly
what you are trying to accomplish with the site.
Once you've done that, the rest of the planning will
come easier. The rest of the planning will simply
become a means toward arriving at your mission
statement. If you begin to lose sight of your
mission statement, then write it on the top of all
your outlines. Or better yet, use your mission
statement as the title of your template pages.
Now to the hard-core planning. We've found the best
way to be with a notepad and a pen (or a pencil with
a good eraser). First, lay out a site map in a flow
chart style. Stick to that flow chart religiously.
Once you deviate from your planned site map, you
create almost twice the workload for yourself.
Once you have your site map drawn out, outline your
home page on pen and paper. Draw out your tables and
the file names you'll be linking to. Sketch your
graphics out and position them accordingly. Note
where you want to place any scripts or animations.
Even if you aren't the world's greatest artist or
your handwriting is tough to decipher, you're well
on your way to painting that picture in your head.
Now, outline each individual page you link to from
your home page. As you begin with each page, ask
yourself 'what is the purpose of this page?'
Sometimes you'll find there is little purpose in a
page, and you'll delete it from the site map. All
the better. It's best to find your flaws before
you're too deep into the project.
Now you start the coding/designing process. With a
strong outline to guide you, not only will you work
faster, but you'll eliminate future mistakes and
changes.
Your vision will probably change to some degree
during the creation process, forcing you to either
re-map or redesign some of the pages.. When that
happens, get the same notepad and pen out, and
modify from there. Trust me, laying out a site on
paper is much faster than laying it out in code.
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