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Tips to Brand a Web Site
- Include your logo in all pages. Position it at the top left of each page.
- Complement your logo with a tagline or catchy sentence that summarizes your business purpose
- Create a favicon, small graphic that appears next to the URL in the address bar of Internet Explorer.
- Have a consistent look and feel in all your pages. Use a color scheme and layout that are clearly recognized across your site.
- Have an About Us section, that includes all relevant information about you and your business.
- Include a copyright statement at the bottom of each page.
Tips on Web Site Navigation
- Design your pages to load in less than 10 seconds (50Kb maximum size, including pictures).
- Group your navigational options in relevant categories.
- Use common names for your menu options: Home, About Us,Contact Us, Help, Products. Avoid "clever" or "trendy" alternatives.
- If your site uses Flash, also provide an HTML version for users who prefer a less fancy, faster site.
- Provide simple text navigation links at the bottom of long pages, so users don't need to scroll back up.
- Link your logo to your homepage, except in the homepage itself. Put a link to your homepage on all internal pages.
- Display a "breadcrumb trail"; it is basically the path from the homepage to the page where you are. A breadcrumb trail looks like this: Home > Section > Sub-Section > Page, and facilitates navigation.
- If your site is too big, provide Search capabilities. Include a search box in the upper right corner of your home page, and a link to a Search page from your interior pages.
- Set your search box to search your site, not to search the web.
- 16. Create a custom error page that displays a simple site map with links to the main sections of your site. That way, you will not lose visitors that have followed a bad link or who misspelled your URL.
Tips On Layout and Content Presentation
- Save the top of your page for your most important content. Good content must flow to the top.
- Lay out your page with tables, and set the width in percentage terms instead of a fixed number of pixels. That way, your page will always fit the screen, without the need to scroll horizontally.
- Optimize your page to be viewed best at 800x600 (the most popular resolution at time of writing).
- Use high contrast for the body of your page: black text on white background, or white text on black background work best.
- Don't use too many different fonts in one page. Also, avoid using small serif fonts (like Times Roman): they are difficult to read from a computer screen. Verdana is the most web-friendly font, since it is wide, clean and easy to read.
- Avoid long blocks of text. Use tools that facilitate scanability, like bullets, subtitles, highlighted keywords, hyperlinks, etc.
- Avoid amateurish features like: numeric page counters, wholesale use of exclamation points, all caps, center justified blocks of text, excessive animated gifs, busy backgrounds, etc.
- Don't use pop-up windows. They distract your visitors and are immediately dismissed as ads.
- Test your site so that it looks good in different browsers and resolutions.
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