How
to Make Your Homepage Flow
By Candice Pardue
How to design a
homepage
Creative Web Design
Designing your homepage
In today's world, it seems that almost
any topic is open for debate. While I was gathering facts
for this article about designing a homepage, I was quite
surprised to find some of the issues I thought were settled
are actually still being openly discussed.
Tip!
Be mindful of visitors when designing your website. Your
website's design should NOT interfere with a visitor's
surfing, but should encourage more of it!I explained in a
previous article how to test your site's navigation
abilities. Put simply -- how long your visitors will stay
and surf throughout your site before clicking out.
Believe me, you want your visitors to
stay as long as possible. This is the only way your site is
going to succeed. Your site must be interesting, persuading,
and easy to navigate.
First let me tell you a couple of
misconceptions about how to design websites.
1. Many people assume that
because the internet is so "big" and covers such a vast
amount of areas around the world, their website has to be
everything to everybody.
They design their website for
"everybody" in the world and never have a distinct purpose.
No purpose and no direction results in no sales! That's a
profound statement but so true.
How many websites have you visited
that had no purpose, no direction, and no real valuable
information that you stayed and surfed around the site a
while?
You click to that site only to find
twenty links that are all non-related to the site's
description nor to each other.
A link to the left takes you to a
computer store online while a link to the right takes you to
a sports website.
Five banners straight down the middle
of the homepage all going in five different directions. No
direction or purpose whatsoever.
Even if that company did offer what
you were looking for, you probably would not consider that
company as an expert or even trustworthy after one glance at
the website, would you?
2. The second misconception is
that selling on the web is different or easier than selling
offline. I know from experience that sales is sales is
sales.
Even if your business is on the web,
you still must take the same steps to gain a customer's
trust as you do offline. Your product will not sell itself,
just like your website will not promote itself. You must
take the necessary steps to promote your site as well as
give a persuading presentation once the visitor
arrives.
Now that you know a couple of the most
common misconceptions on the web, you can move forward with
designing your website with these in mind.
Don't worry, if you've already
designed your website for "everybody", it's not too late to
focus in on your sole purpose. It's far less painful to
design your website with your one purpose in mind from the
beginning -- and less costly.
3 important steps you can take while
designing your website to insure navigation ease for your
visitors
The more authentic information about
designing a homepage you know, the more likely people are to
consider you a designing a homepage expert. Read on for even
more homepage design facts that you can share with other
webmasters.
1. Place your "appealing
headline" below any banner or
logo at the top of the page. This is the headline that
persuades your visitor to continue reading your homepage --
to spark their interest in your product or service. Write
your headline to your target customer.
Your visitor should have no doubt
about what kind of website he/she just entered.
If your purpose is to sell books,
your headline should say something
about books or a particular book
that's very popular. This will insure your "targeted"
potential customers that they are at the right site for
what they are searching for.
Visitors who aren't looking for
books really aren't your
customers, are they? You're letting them know
up front that they're in the wrong website.
The reason for placing your
headline below your logo or banner
is because people tend to look at the "picture" first and
then begin reading below the photo.
2. Place a side bar or
navigation bar at the right hand or left
hand side of your homepage (or top
to bottom depending on the layout of your
page).
A general rule of thumb is to
place your navigational bar on the
left hand side if your website is
information-based and you offer just one to three products.
Place your navigational bar on the right hand side
if your website is set up like a catalog
offering many different products.
The navigation bar provides
your visitor with options to move
around within your website without
crowding the homepage. Your homepage should be an
introduction to your website or your
product or service, not your entire website.
The information should be intriging
to your "target" visitor and lead
the visitor to the next page or to
your desired response at the bottom of the
homepage.
3. Continue your
homepage. Write to your visitor in
a way that he/she can't wait to go to
the next page and continue.
But don't stop there -- when
your visitor gets to the bottom,
be sure to say "Go to the Next Page
Here..." or "Continue to Next Page...", something to
persuade your visitor to go the next
page. The ... always leaves a sense of continuance also!
Implement these three methods
while designing your homepage to
insure navigation ability for your
visitors.
Remember, your visitors can only
turn into paying customers if you
get a chance to make your presentation.
It never hurts to be
well-informed with the latest tips
on designing a homepage. Compare what you've
learned here to future articles so that you can stay
alert to changes in the area of homepage
design.
---
Article written by Candice Pardue,
marketing
content writing and
founder of Webmaster Course. Go here to learn web design
from start to finish. This one's for beginners...
How
to Design and Market a Website
Learn
Web Design from Scratch
Disclaimer: Even though
we have made every effort to provide solid and accurate
information with web design ideas on these pages, Online
Success for Internet Business accepts no responsibility or
does not insure or imply any degree of success in a web
based business or website design career by reading the
material listed on this website. Degrees of web or Internet
success varies greatly dependent upon the attitudes,
attributes and ambition of each individual designer. Please
thoroughly check out any information you find on this site
before indulging in a web design business or presenting
yourself as a webmaster. Now that you know more about
homepage design get to work on designing your own killer
website.
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