Stage 1 - Style over substance
The first stage is to design a site that the chief executive
officer, venture capitalists, and ad agencies like to see. There are all types of "bells and whistles" in this
design. An entire site might be a Flash animated site. Or there might be some beautiful JavaScript mouse over
effects or drop-down menus in the design. It's always a pretty design, but the message is clear - style over
substance.
Stage 2 - Designing for online
visibility
In Stage 2, the reality of an ineffective web design begins
to hit, usually around 3-6 months after the initial launch. A site will typically get rejected by many of the
major directories, not be indexed by the major search engines, or not get the traffic or sales that were
projected based on the various types of marketing strategies used. Typically, that's when companies decide that
they will try to hire a professional online marketer to promote the site. Doorway page companies, in some way,
shape or form, rear their ugly heads. Unfortunately, many web site owners fall for a doorway page company's
pitch because the beautifully designed site couldn't possibly be the problem with low site traffic. But in no
way would many ad agencies or doorway page companies want to tell potential clients the truth -- they simply did
not design and write an effective web site -- because it would mean losing thousands of pounds in business
Stage 3 - Designing for your audience
By Stage 3, after spending an exorbitant amount of money on
pretty web site designs and various marketing strategies, web site owners generally figure out that they did not
design or write an effective Web site for their target audience. Typically, web site owners will bring in a
usability expert to analyse potential problems and present various solutions. Bringing in a search engine
marketing expert to help with search-engine friendly web designs &templates early in the design phase can
save a company thousands of pounds in online marketing costs.
Stage 4 - Site redesign
After careful usability and search engine visibility
analyses, web site owners finally have an effective web site. A site that is written, coded, and designed for
user friendliness and search engine visibility generally gets the most traffic and resulting sales because it
was written, programmed, and designed for end users.
Conclusion
Web sites should always be designed with your target audience
in mind, not your own personal preferences. Colours have meaning. Professional designers understand the
psychology of colour and the use of white space to best project the image your audience wishes to see. (For
example, try not to use the colour red on a financial site.) Understanding the products/services/information
your target audience is searching for is paramount to designing and maintaining an effective web site. When you
launch a site, you might have to make an educated guess as to what your target audience wants. After that, tools
such as site statistics software and reporting from site searches tell you exactly what your visitors are
looking for. Then content and marketing strategies can be adjusted accordingly. Unless the advanced technology
clearly benefits end users, do not use it on your site. If your venture capitalists or CEO's or lawyers like the
site, ask if they are going to spend the thousands or millions of pounds to keep you in business.
They're not. It is your target audience who will ultimately
determine the success or failure of your site.
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