Notes From Mission Control

The Launch blog is about technology and web development. It is a place for us to share tips, tricks, and things we've learned along the way.
Tags >> Metrics
Dec 31
2009

2-1 Evaluating Your Website - Design

Posted by swettling in Visitors , Templates , Social Media , New Ideas , Metrics , Feedback , Design , CSS , Content , Blog , Accessibility

Let’s face it, if your design sucks people won’t stick around. Period. Why would they? You wouldn’t shop in a store with cluttered shelves, carpet on the walls and a crazy person in the back popping up to remind you that you’re the millionth visitor when right next door is a store selling the same goods and services with clean, well organized stock, friendly service and no distractions. People are visiting your website and in their minds your website is a direct reflection of the quality of your business. Crummy website = crummy business. The inverse is also true and something you can and should take advantage of. If you’re a small business with a stellar website you have a great opportunity to put yourself on a level playing field with the big boys.

1. It is immediately apparent to a casual visitor what your company does (have a non-employee do this)?

At first, asking a question like this might sound absurd, but it is If by just scanning your homepage a visitor cannot immediately determine the purpose of your site and your business then you are doing something wrong. Plus, if a real person can’t tell what you do then it’s fairly certain that search engines also will have no clue what you do and therefore will rank your page lower than you would like.

2. Does your logo look professionally made? Be honest.

If you didn’t pay a professional to do your logo and instead used either a pre-packaged one or had a friend or relative do it for free then there is a very good chance that your logo looks like it was done by an amateur… because it was. Remember that done right, your logo will provide you with [good] brand recognition. People often balk at spending a few dollars here, but this logo will affect the design of both your online and your printed materials and if it starts off looking bad then you can expect subsequent marketing materials to follow suit.

3. Is your site at all [handicap] accessible?

The W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) has published guidelines (http://www.w3.org/TR/WCAG10/) to use to ensure that your website can be browsed by individuals limited or no sight, vision and movement. In order for many of these people to browse the web they need the assistance of special tools that either magnify the screen or read the content aloud to them. While it may sound like a daunting task to make your site accessible, the truth is that by at least working toward a base level of accessibility you are helping all of your visitors. The core guidelines basically state to:

Separate structure from presentation. This means don’t make your entire site in Flash, or out of images. This also means use proper underlying tags to format and frame your content.

Provide text and text equivalents. This means that your site should have text (duh) and that any images on your site are tagged with text describing the images. This is good for accessibility as well as to make your site search engine friendly (SEF). Doing this kills two birds with one stone.

Make content understandable and navigable. This means using proper links on the site for navigation, proper headers and limiting your use of non-traditional navigation, linking and page orientation.

By following these guidelines when developing your site you are opening it up to a greater number of visitors as well as using proper techniques to make your site more understandable and usable for everyone.

4. Did you purchase images and graphics for your website?

If your website has clip art from your Microsoft Word, or images that you just found online and saved or simply contains no images then this is a red flag. As we mentioned earlier, your visitors can tell the difference between quality and junk and if you’re using clip art then you are leaning toward the latter. Secondly, if you just borrowed some images from other websites then you are stealing and breaking the law. Also not good. Purchasing images can be extremely cheap ($1-$10 each in many cases) and make your site look far more professional (probably because the images are done by professionals). Please note that when I say images, I do not mean only photos. This includes backgrounds, illustrations, etc.

5. Does your site have a consistent look and feel on every page?

If your site has five different sections, one for each line of products you sell and every section has different fonts, backgrounds and branding just so your visitors understand that they’re in a different section then you are not only insulting the intelligence of your visitors, but you have made a lot more work for yourself come time to update the site. Or, if you have simply hand-coded every single page and are not using any consistent template or formatting across any pages then you’re in real trouble when you want to add new content or change a layout.

The key here is to choose a format that works for what your objectives are and run with it. You can customize each page a bit with images and text, but being consistent is critical from a search engine optimization (SEO) standpoint as well as from a visitor sanity standpoint. If Sony can sell DVDs, computers, service plans and digital book readers (www.sonystyle.com) using the same formatting then your business can offer service X and widget Y using consistent formatting and styling.

  1. Design
  2. Navigation
  3. Technical Attributes
  4. Content & Updates
  5. Tracking, Metrics, Feedback

Next: Navigation

Dec 16
2009

My website sucks, but you still trust me, don't you?

Posted by swettling in Tracking , Targeted Landing Pages , Metrics , Design , Customers , Conversion , Content , CMS

Before we start

Our goal here is to help you think critically about your website and quite possibly think about your site in ways you never imagined. We will discuss such topics as SEF, SEO, analytics, information architecture and more, but none of these technologies or techniques matters if the average user (you) navigates to a website and your first gut reaction about the site is negative. So, the first step will be for you to open a new browser window, clear the cache (this is important) and enter the address for your company. After exactly five seconds have passed, close the window and record a number on a scale from one to ten regarding your overall impression of your website. Ten being the best site you’ve ever seen and one being the World’s Worst Website. This is also a good exercise to do with a neutral third party.

Your Score ______

Step 1: The Evaluation

I will suggest going through this process with someone else’s website first. You don’t have to write does your answers, but just read through this list while examining someone else’s site. This will get you thinking critically about design and data. We’ll get to yours soon enough. This is by no means a totally comprehensive list of questions you should be asking, but just some to get you headed in the right direction and to figure out if your site needs help, or if things are just fine.

In our next post we will begin to examine each of these topics and the importance of each relating to your website.

Design

  1. It is immediately apparent to a casual visitor what your company does (have a non-employee do this)?
  2. Does your logo look professionally made? Be honest.
  3. Is your site at all [handicap] accessible?
  4. Did you purchase images for your website?
  5. Does your site have a consistent look and feel on every page?

Navigation

  1. Does your navigation scheme make sense to someone that knows nothing about your company or products?
  2. How many clicks does it take you to get from the homepage to critical information?
  3. Do you have to manually update HTML or other code in order to add a menu item?
  4. Do you have any broken links, or Under Construction pages on your site?
  5. Did you perform any usability testing on your navigation scheme before launching your site?

Technical Attributes

  1. Does any page on your site take more than four seconds to load?
  2. Does your site force people do download plugins to work properly?
  3. Are you using Microsoft FrontPage or Word to create web pages?
  4. Are you using any kind of content management system to manage your website? If so, what?
  5. Did you know what your website looks like in browsers other than Internet Explorer?

Content & Updates

  1. Is your content searchable?
  2. How often do you update your website?
  3. How do you let people know about the updates?
  4. Was your content ported from your company’s printed marketing materials to the web?
  5. Are you advertising other people’s stuff on your website (i.e. do you have banner or other ads on your site)?

Tracking, Metrics, Feedback

  1. How many people visited your site last month?
  2. What is the most popular content on your website?
  3. Are you collecting user information on your site (name/email at least)?
  4. Do users have the ability to respond to, or rate any of your content?


Stay tuned for next week when I discuss each of these items in more depth and how each can help or hider your success online.

Next: Part 2 - Evaluate Your Website

 

This is part 1 of our 4 part series on evaluating and managing change on your webiste.

  1. My Website Sucks?  Initial Evaluation
  2. Evaluate Your Website
  3. Ten Things a Modern Website Should Do
  4. To Repair or Rebuild?