Web Design Glasgow

Web Strategy Blog

It is often hard for those needing a website to justify the costs of design. Design is often viewed as a ‘talent’ before a learned skill, and as something that we either have or we don’t, and it naturally follows that if you ‘have it’ should be able to produce it without greart expensive.

Luke Wroblewski gave an excellent presentation at the An Event Apart 2007 conference (Chicago) that helps communicate the complexity and process of design, and the value a strong design can contribute.

Luke’s presentation focuses on the web form, which is any interface that accepts user input - common examples are login/registration, enquiry, and eCommerce checkout forms. It’s clear that many businesses depend upon their customers completing these forms to generate, maintaining and convert leads, and logically follows that the quicker and easier a form is to complete, the more likely those customers will do so.

Luke presents three simple variants of webform design to demonstrate the potential impact on revenue the design of the form can have. Each form input field has a label that tells the customer what information to put in that field. Luke’s variations placed the label above the field, and to the left of the field, either left-aligned or right-aligned. His referenced studies found that customers completing forms with right-aligned labels surprisingly did so twice as quickly as those with left-aligned labels, but that quicker still were those customers completing forms with top-aligned labels.

Clearly, big differences can be made to conversion rates by assessing the quality of your web form. Luke’s presentation is available on his blog, and goes on to discuss the consideration of required/optional fields, primary/secondary actions, contextual grouping and progressive disclosure, tabbing, the path to completion, inline validation and assistance, and feedback mechanisms.

He also provides excellent example of both good and bad web forms in a very accessible presentation that will ensure you know what to expect when commissioning the design of a web form.

del.icio.us:Communicating the ROI of Web Design with Web Forms digg:Communicating the ROI of Web Design with Web Forms spurl:Communicating the ROI of Web Design with Web Forms furl:Communicating the ROI of Web Design with Web Forms reddit:Communicating the ROI of Web Design with Web Forms fark:Communicating the ROI of Web Design with Web Forms Y!:Communicating the ROI of Web Design with Web Forms magnolia:Communicating the ROI of Web Design with Web Forms
  1. Are you using Google Analytics (or require and use an alternative)?

    You can’t gauge success unless you measure performance. Google Analytics is a free and very effective tool for just this. For businesses that depends on local custom, it will qualify the proportion of your visitors that reside nearby and are therefore of value. eCommerce sites can drive sales by adjusting their site layout or structure based on the analysis of search terms used within their site when people can’t find information. The available measures are extensive.

  2. Is every page of your site connected to every other via a site map?

    Page Rank is a measure of how valuable or important Google considers a web page to be. It is based largely on the number, page rank, and relevancy of web pages that link to that page. The pages of a site can also inherit Page Rank from other pages of their website, but the more links to reach those pages, the less page rank is inherited.A site map thus maximises this inheritance by ensuring every page is just one page from every other.

  3. More >>

    del.icio.us:Improve Website Performance - 10 Fundamentals digg:Improve Website Performance - 10 Fundamentals spurl:Improve Website Performance - 10 Fundamentals furl:Improve Website Performance - 10 Fundamentals reddit:Improve Website Performance - 10 Fundamentals fark:Improve Website Performance - 10 Fundamentals Y!:Improve Website Performance - 10 Fundamentals magnolia:Improve Website Performance - 10 Fundamentals

“Web Standards” is like another of these modern-day web buzzwords, like “Web 2.0″ and “The Blogosphere”. But buzzwords become popular for a reason - let me give this one a simple definition, and explain the business benefits of web standards, namely reduced website costs and risks.

Web standards are, quite simply, a set of coding guidelines developed by a consortium of experts to reduce the risks involved in producing a website. The simple principle is that if everybody codes in the same way, the standard way, then everybody is compatible. More >>

del.icio.us:10 Direct Routes to Reduced Website Costs and Risks: That's what web standards are about!? digg:10 Direct Routes to Reduced Website Costs and Risks: That's what web standards are about!? spurl:10 Direct Routes to Reduced Website Costs and Risks: That's what web standards are about!? furl:10 Direct Routes to Reduced Website Costs and Risks: That's what web standards are about!? reddit:10 Direct Routes to Reduced Website Costs and Risks: That's what web standards are about!? fark:10 Direct Routes to Reduced Website Costs and Risks: That's what web standards are about!? Y!:10 Direct Routes to Reduced Website Costs and Risks: That's what web standards are about!? magnolia:10 Direct Routes to Reduced Website Costs and Risks: That's what web standards are about!?
Iain Porter - Glasgow Web Designer, Search Engine Optimiser, and Web Strategy Consultant

Business-Oriented Web Design

Posted by Iain on Mon (5/03/07) at 1:12pm to Web Project Management, Web Design

This presentation by Cameron Moll outlines very effectively how the business-oriented web designer, which I would argue is not the norm, will have a positive impact on your business objectives. The presentation is entitled Nine Skills that separate good and great designers, and is well worth a read if you’re designer developing your skills or a project manager interested in understanding how elements of design can forward your business objectives.

You may also be interested in my post discussing the value of design, specifically web design.

del.icio.us:Business-Oriented Web Design digg:Business-Oriented Web Design spurl:Business-Oriented Web Design furl:Business-Oriented Web Design reddit:Business-Oriented Web Design fark:Business-Oriented Web Design Y!:Business-Oriented Web Design magnolia:Business-Oriented Web Design
Iain Porter - Glasgow Web Designer, Search Engine Optimiser, and Web Strategy Consultant

Webmaster Jam Sessions

Posted by Iain on Thu (22/02/07) at 7:37am to Web Design, Development, Search Engine Optimisation

From the same conference, Andy Budd summarises and presents links to several other presentations from industry spokespeople.

del.icio.us:Webmaster Jam Sessions digg:Webmaster Jam Sessions spurl:Webmaster Jam Sessions furl:Webmaster Jam Sessions reddit:Webmaster Jam Sessions fark:Webmaster Jam Sessions Y!:Webmaster Jam Sessions magnolia:Webmaster Jam Sessions

Categories

Popular

Archive

Add to Technorati Favorites