There are 5 elements
that every page of every Web site must have. They are
standard, and expected by Web users. When one of them is
missing, it screams to a viewer that it’s an amateur site. If
a few or all of them are missing, don’t expect anyone to
linger for very long.
These 5 elements make site
visitors’ life easier and saves them time, two extremely
important characteristics of an effective Web site.
1)
Consistent colors, fonts, and look & feel.
This is
a basic tenant of Web design. If you ran a traditional ad
campaign that used three different creative ads, would each
one look totally different? The answer is ‘no’. Using the same
fonts, the same colors and keeping the general look & feel
consistent is fundamental to presenting a unified, dependable,
and congruent image. If your look & feel is all over the
place, your potential customers may think you are all over the
place.
Try for one main font throughout and maybe a
secondary font. Two primary colors are best with a third as a
secondary color. A shade of one of the two primary colors
works well for the secondary color.
2) Consistent
navigation and a ‘Home’ link.
If you present a
navigational scheme on your homepage, then your users
immediately start to learn where to find all the ways to
locate elements of your site the minute they arrive. If you
then place the same links in different spots on other pages
you are making it unnecessarily difficult for your viewers. It
is unconsciously annoying to users, and gives the impression
once again that you and your company are inconsistent and
undependable. Don’t make users work harder than they have to
get information from your site.
Also, provide a way for
a user to get back to your home page on every page of your
site. Often this is the page a user is most familiar with so
they may want to go back. If someone emails an associate a
link to an inner page in your site and they click on it, it is
a good idea to provide a way for that new user to get to your
home page.
3) A search function.
This is
another one of those standard features that most people expect
now. If there is a specific bit of information that a person
wants to find, don’t make them wade through every page of your
site. Implementing a search function is easy and free. You can
get one at http://www.atomz.com/search/trial_account.htm. This
truly makes a site user’s life a lot easier.
4) Text,
not just images, and text links, not just
buttons.
Advertising agencies who also make Web sites
have a tendency to use too many graphics, often at the expense
of text. A good rule of thumb is that if you have words in an
image, take it out and replace it with html text. This is good
for a number of reasons; including making the site more search
engine friendly and loading faster. Search engines can only
key off text, not words found in images. Also,
graphic-intensive site take longer to load.
If you
don’t include text versions of your links, and only use
buttons (which are images) then a number of popular search
engines can’t index your site because they can’t read links
embedded in images. So it’s important always to include text
links as well as buttons.
5) Phone number, logo, tag
line.
Don’t make your Web site an obstacle or wall for
your prospects and customers by leaving off your phone number.
Every page should have your phone number listed. It is very
frustrating to go to a company’s site and have no way to reach
them except through a form or email.
Always include
your logo and tag line on every page as well. If you don’t
have a tag line, start thinking about creating one, your site
is a great place to repeatedly get your message
out.
All of the above mentioned elements can be
included on an html template that is used for every page in
your site. Templates make it easy to include all of these and
quickly update or change them too. Templates are for another
discussion, but keep in mind they are very useful.
Most
importantly, make sure every page of your site incorporates
these top five elements; they are a very necessary foundation
for any effective Web site.
Article by Jason O'Connor
© 2003
Jason OConnor is President of Oak Web Works
- The synthesis of Web design, technology and
marketing.
Jason is an expert at Web design and
programming, e-strategy, and
e-marketing
http://www.oakwebworks.com
mailto:jason@oakwebworks.com
Author Name: Jason
OConnorAuthor Email: joconnor888@hotmail.comAuthor Website:
http://www.oakwebworks.com