4 Tips For Building A Website In A Hurry

Written by Lisa M. Cope


Continued from page 1

All in all working with templates isrepparttar fastest way to getrepparttar 132752 job done yourself. Although it may cost you a little more.

3. You can hire a designer.

Hiring someone to design your site is an alternative. There are many fantastic designers out there. One of my favorites is Linda Caroll from multimediajungle.com.

Of course if your on a budget you should defiantly shop around. Take your time and know exactly what your getting.

Ask questions like:

Will you have exclusive rights torepparttar 132753 design? Will you be able to maintainrepparttar 132754 site yourself? How many pages are included? Will there be any extra fees for special scripting?

This option will most likely berepparttar 132755 more expensive way to go. But if you want quality and you have a big enough budget it's one ofrepparttar 132756 easiest routes you can take.

4. Buy a site already done!

Definitelyrepparttar 132757 fastest way to go. Look around, search inrepparttar 132758 engines. You will find places that sell turnkey websites, all ready for you to upload and start promoting. Look in your local classified ads for businesses and websites for sale. I'm sure you will find a few.

Did you know that you can even bid on websites on Ebay. Go figure! I was just thererepparttar 132759 other day and I was pleasantly surprised to find some really great sites. I browsed through and of course I found several sites that weren't all they were cracked up to be but, I also found a select few that were really a great deal.

Just keep your eyes open and make sure you read over allrepparttar 132760 fine print before you make your final selection.

When you set out to build your website just take in to consideration these simple things and you will be more ready to make an informed choice.

Lisa M. Cope - Flipidy.com - Feed Your Business with the knowledge it needs to grow and watch it flourish! Create Your Own Webpage in a Flash for as little as $2.00.

http://www.flipidy.com/indextemplate.htm


Pitfalls of Web Redesign

Written by Eileen "Turtle" Parzek


Continued from page 1

Not allowing for a thorough planning phase

My experience has been that any site, new or redesign, should have a planning phase that involves approximately 30% ofrepparttar entire project -- from first thought to launch. There are entire books and much longer articles written about how to plan web design projects, but some ofrepparttar 132750 questions and issues to answer would be:

* What is your goal in doing this redesign? * What is your budget? What can you afford now, and what can (or must) you wait for inrepparttar 132751 next redesign? * What are your constraints -- speed, browser ceiling, technologies, color palette, page size -- based on what you know of your audience? * What will berepparttar 132752 content? What changes, what stays, what will be new, and what goes outrepparttar 132753 window?

Everyone who will be involved inrepparttar 132754 site's development should be involved in this planning. There is nothing worse than having an entire site planned around one or more impossible targets, so propose ideas for functionality and ASKrepparttar 132755 people who will actually have to implement it, for their input about feasibility, budget, and time.

Of course,repparttar 132756 goal ofrepparttar 132757 planning phase should be to have a fully planned out blueprint beforerepparttar 132758 first new line of code is written. This blueprint can make huge difference inrepparttar 132759 time spent gettingrepparttar 132760 site put together, by providing a clearly defined architecture and design plan. The client or boss will have a clear understanding what they are paying for and what to expect inrepparttar 132761 end. The designers will have architecture to create around and will understand what they are responsible for designing. The programmers and/or database developers and coders will love you for providing them with a clear plan and a goal to drive towards menu

Endless tweaking

One pit that many re-designers fall into is that they never 'finish' a redesign -- they continuously fiddle with it forever afterrepparttar 132762 testing phase andrepparttar 132763 public launch. Obviously, it's necessary to fix glaring problems you discover, but letrepparttar 132764 users begin to get comfortable withrepparttar 132765 new site. Trust that if you did your homework, plannedrepparttar 132766 site carefully, designed it withinrepparttar 132767 constraints you set for yourself and tested it thoroughly, it's okay to let it be for a while. Continue to gather feedback, and observe traffic patterns and statistics, and even plan forrepparttar 132768 next redesign if you must, but resistrepparttar 132769 urge to tweak. Letrepparttar 132770 new site mature. Rest assured, you will redesign again. And again.menu

Not documenting as you go

The first time your site was created, odds are it was kludged together onrepparttar 132771 fly, without a lot of planning. Now is your chance to plan, and while you plan, document. Imagine how much easier future tweaks will be if you have it all laid out clearly and document how things were put together. Think how much smoother everything will go if standards forrepparttar 132772 site are documented. Wouldn't it be nice to not have to dig around later to figure out what font was used inrepparttar 132773 graphics you inherited? If your site is ofrepparttar 132774 web-application variety, keep copious notes duringrepparttar 132775 entire process, which can formrepparttar 132776 foundation ofrepparttar 132777 user documentation that will be written for your new site. Comment, comment, comment your code -- for your own sanity, for your team members to follow, and for future revisions. And of course, there isrepparttar 132778 C.Y.A. rule to consider -- save your correspondence, take notes, and document allrepparttar 132779 way through, and you will be closer to staying within scope and havingrepparttar 132780 info you need to explain what you are doing alongrepparttar 132781 way. Don't miss this opportunity to make everyone involved in a site have a less stressful life!

Unlikerepparttar 132782 early days of web design,repparttar 132783 industry now has matured and grown up to a point where there are standards and processes in place for much of what we are inrepparttar 132784 business of doing. As overall size and complexity ofrepparttar 132785 web sites and applications we build, grows,repparttar 132786 best way to stay in control of them is to organize, anticipate, learn and listen. By tapping our peer's learning experiences, we can avoid many ofrepparttar 132787 pitfalls alongrepparttar 132788 way and hopefully only have to contend withrepparttar 132789 new ones that our rapidly changing industry tosses our way!



Eileen Parzek, better known on the web as "Turtle", is the owner of SOHO It Goes! a virtual business supporting entrepreneurs and small business through design, communications and technology.


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