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Website design choices range from the boring and mundane
to shiney, gee-wiz java applets that can make the text literally jump
off the page. If you’re just getting into website design, either for
a business or for your own personal site, you’re going to want to
learn the HTML basics, even if you’re using a WYSIWYG editor. Find
a tutorial, there are lots of them out there, and learn how to create boarders,
add text, manipulate photos, and setup links. Once you’ve figured
out how to do these things you can go onto designing your site, either
from a pre-made template or from scratch. There is a lot more to learn,
and it’s to your advantage to keep learning once you get started.
Figure out how to add backgrounds, page dividers, and how to manipulate
the text you’ve entered. However, don’t feel the need to
get too flashy.
One of the biggest mistakes in website design, both by professional programmers
and first-timers, is that programmers try to make their websites too flashy.
They include flashing banners and text and animated images. Big intros
eat up bandwidth before users even get a chance to find the information
they’re looking for. Colored text clashes with colored backgrounds
and shimmering headers. Though all of these extras may show off your design
chops, they’re going to make your website hard to navigate for users.
So, follow the golden rules of website design. Keep your site simple and
easy to navigate. Be sure to link your pages internally; nothing is more
frustrating to a user than having to navigate back to the front page every
time they want to get to another area of your site. Colors are great, but
pick a color scheme and stick with it. Make important content easy to find,
and link every single page back to the home page. Follow these rules of
thumb and you’ll keep your website from looking like a train wreck,
and more people will listen to what you’re trying to tell them.
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