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The Top 20 Web Mistakes Small Businesses
Make
by: Karl Groves
My parents
made a monster. Little did they know 30
years ago that they would get exactly what
they wished for. Like W.W. Jacobs' tale of
"The Monkey's Paw", they got what they
wanted, for better and maybe even for worse.
See, my father
is a virtuous man. Never cursing, never
doing drugs, always honest and hard working,
he is of the fiber that idealists say
America is built upon. He taught me many
things - some of which have yet to sink in,
and others, although my teenage
rebelliousness attempted to distract me,
have become ingrained into my very being.
"If it is worth doing, it is worth doing
right" he would say (ad nauseum, I might
add).
When I began
working in music in 1996 I had what I now
feel was a personal foresight into the power
of the Internet and the ways in which it
could be used to help me generate public
awareness for the live music events I was
promoting and the artists I represented as a
talent agent.
Some people
seem to think that the Internet has been
around forever, but in 1996 it was in its
infancy compared to the Internet of today.
Web pages in 1996 generally revolved around
mostly educational sites and vanity pages.
Then, the Internet more resembled an
Information Superhighway in that most of its
content was informative. Heck, I remember
downloading whole Philosophy books back
then.
At that time,
I decided that I could utilize the
Internet's power to help me advertise the
events I promoted by keeping a diligent
schedule online and also by using the power
of e-mail, chat, and IM in order to
communicate to fans and bands and make
things more efficient and less expensive
than using the telephone and postage stamps.
The problem I
was faced with was a simple one - I had
absolutely no idea what I was doing.
Regardless, I made an extremely simplistic
and unattractive website and put it up on
the web. Over the next few years, I had the
privilege of getting to know a small handful
of knowledgeable people who were eager to
help me by making my websites. In the end, a
variety of factors both external and
internal made reliance on others simply
something I did not feel comfortable with
doing.
Like a lot of
people, I decided to go back to doing it
myself. Like before though, I was faced with
not knowing what I was doing. My father's
words "If its worth doing, its worth doing
right" kept ringing in my head. So I decided
that what I really needed to do was learn
how to do it right. As you now know, I've
progressed to the point of being a CIW
Certified Professional Site Designer. But,
it didn't come overnight.
I've prepared
this list, 'The Top 20 Mistakes That Small
Businesses Make', from my own experiences in
making my websites, as well as from my
observations while learning web design and
studying for my certifications. By no means
complete, these 20 Mistakes relate mostly to
websites by small businesses (less than 50
employees) because they're typically
organizations that outsource their web
services. The list is further separated into
"Design Mistakes" being the mistakes that
are made in the design of the site itself,
and "Purchasing Mistakes" being the mistakes
businesses make as customers of web design
companies. First, we need to get on with it
by covering the first mistake:
1. Designing/
allowing the site to be designed by a person
who does not know what they're doing -
I've written
and rewritten this paragraph a dozen times
so that it doesn't sound offensive to anyone
but the message is still the same. Just
because someone has a stethoscope doesn't
make him or her a Doctor. Similarly, just
because someone has a copy of FrontPage/
NetFusion/ Composer/ GoLive/ Dreamweaver, it
doesn't make them a Web Designer.
Your business'
brand awareness is greatly affected by the
image you give off to everyone - even the
visitors to your website. If your website
looks bad, does not work right, or is
unpredictable across a variety of potential
platforms and potential visitors, your very
credibility will be harmed. I find this
especially important for Real Estate
Brokers/ Agents, musicians, and other
businesses in niche markets - especially
those who have younger clientele. Hire a
professional designer who can supply you
examples of their work and make sure that
their work is good.
Design
Mistakes
2. Annoying
The Visitor -
Do not ever
use things like cursor trailers or midi
music on your site. People really really
hate that. It surprises me how often I still
encounter these things on sites when I've
never met anyone who enjoys having an 8-mile
trail of stars/ dots/ whatever following
their cursor across the screen or some song
they never liked in its real version much
less in midi form invading their speakers.
Ask anyone with these features about their
website's statistics and I guarantee that no
matter how many "Hits" they get to their
site, their "Sessions" are extremely low.
Everyone I know has the same thing to say
about these features "whenever someone has
that on their site, I leave".
3. "Use of any
design element meant for one type of browser
only without an alternative" says David,
Webmaster of
http://www.rubmybuddha.com. Have you
ever seen the little notices at the bottom
of websites that say "Optimized for use by
Internet Explorer and 800x600 resolution"?
What it should really say is "Unpredictable
results when used by other browsers and
resolutions". A good website will be made so
that it looks and performs the same no
matter who is visiting. In the real world,
browsers render web pages with at least some
subtle differences, but a good web designer
will make every effort to avoid using
features that will alienate visitors and
will avoid using design elements that result
in unpredictable results. Internet Explorer
may be the most widely distributed browser
on earth right now, but even if they owned
99% market share (they don't), there would
still be millions of potential visitors who
are alienated by a website that produces
unpredictable results in other browsers. The
correct way to make a site is to design it
to work properly regardless of browser,
operating system, or resolution.
4. Use of poor
navigation (i.e. obscure labeling,
ridiculously long lists, etc.)
Effective
navigation means getting your visitor to the
content they came for, easily, painlessly
and enjoyably enough to induce repeat
visits. Brainstorming the navigation of
large sites with a lot of content can be as
difficult as coming up with the content
itself. A good navigational setup should be
intuitive to the visitor and not dependent
upon their efforts to decipher where they
should go to find what they're looking for.
Avoid using
obscure images for labeling your links
unless they're joined with text. Visitors
tend to look for familiar clues in
navigation such as little pictures of houses
for "Home" or mailboxes for "Mail". You
don't have to use these images for
navigation, but at the same time you
shouldn't confuse them with obscurity.
Avoid using
very long lists of links to your sub pages.
Try to categorize items into main content
areas and keep the list of those main
content areas to as few as possible while
still keeping things easy to find. Users can
then navigate to the more specific content
instead of searching through one huge list.
5. Use of bad
colors (i.e. colors that hurt the eyes)
Heck, I'm colorblind and I know this. Would
you wear a bright orange shirt with bright
green pants? Then please, don't put bright
green text on a bright orange background.
Again, you'll surely be chasing away
visitors.
6. Not making
it easy for people to contact you from your
site (and not following up when they do)
No matter how
comprehensive the information is on your
website, customers are often too lazy/ in
too much of a hurry to find the information
they're looking for and will want to contact
you. Not making it easy to contact you will
mean that you could potentially lose
business because rather than hunt for your
contact info, these lazy/ hurried customers
will just go somewhere else. It is my
opinion that you should supplement your
contact page with some form of well-labeled
e-mail link on every page.
Once the
customer has contacted you, you absolutely
must respond as soon as you possibly can.
Typically, customers expect a response
within 24 hours. Want to win a customer for
life? Respond to their e-mails promptly and
completely. Want to chase them away forever?
Take two weeks to respond. - Unfortunately,
you're more assured to chase a customer away
with your failure to respond than you are to
keep them by responding.
7.
Over-reliance on graphics
This is one of
the greatest paradoxes of web design.
Studies show that an attractive website will
give off a greater impression of
"credibility" than an unattractive site,
regardless of the real accuracy of the
information contained on the site. However,
like many things in life, you can have too
much of a good thing.
If you're
lucky like me, and connect to the Internet
with a cable modem or some other broadband
service, it's easy to take for granted the
speed with which you can download data. I'm
downloading MP3s, programs, all kinds of
stuff at breakneck speeds. But you must
remember that a vast majority of people are
not connecting with broadband access,
they're connecting with regular old
telephone lines and modems.
Your website
should be easy to access for all visitors.
While people on dialup may be used to
"coping" with long download times, a better
approach for you would be to consider these
people into your design. Let them be
alienated by your competitor's site, while
they quickly and efficiently get the
information they need from yours.
8. Embedding
text within images
Often, people
"new" to making websites will embed text
within images. I've found that this is often
due to their ignorance in knowing how to
layout a page so that everything is
positioned where they want it - their
solution is to make all (or a large part) of
their webpage one big picture. The problem
with this approach is twofold. First, it
makes the webpage "heavy" through an
over-reliance on graphics (see #7 above).
Second, it makes the website invisible to
search engines.
Search engine
methodology has changed recently, mostly due
to the trickery used by pornographic and MLM
sites to attract higher search engine
positioning. No longer can you be reliably
indexed simply because of the "Keywords" and
"Description" META tags. Nowadays, the
biggest search engines rely more on the
actual text content of your website.
Embedding text within an image may render
readable words onscreen, but to a search
engine, an image is an image, and text is
text. You should limit text-within-images to
only logos and icons.
9. Failure to
market your website
Amazingly,
people will put forth all their time and
effort to build and maintain a website, yet
will fail to make it part of their marketing
plan. Your website's address should be
emblazoned upon every single piece of
promotional material, advertising, and every
business card by every employee. Your
website's address should be mentioned in
every TV and radio advertisement and placed
on your signage. You should diligently
submit it to search engines and link
indexes.
Your website
is more than an advertisement. It is a sales
tool, a branding tool, and a sales
prospecting tool. Unlike your employees who
are only on duty 40 hours a week, your
website is there 168 hours a week. 128 of
those, it is by itself! Put it to work by
driving traffic to it.
10. Not
keeping your website up to date
As you surf
the web, you've no doubt seen the little
blurb "this page last updated on _________"
on some sites. Or maybe you've clicked on
links that say "News". How often are those
dates actually recent to your visit?
It is a bad
idea to include either of these two features
on your site unless you plan to diligently
update the site. Having a site that says
"last updated June 1998" is only going to
give off the impression that you don't care
about your website (and therefore your
site's visitors). You should either make
sure you keep the site up to date, or omit
any features with date-relevant information
(i.e. news, sales, limited offers, etc.)
Purchasing
Mistakes
14. Expecting
a $5,000 site for $300 When I was in
college, I worked for a tattoo shop,
basically as the guy the customers would
talk to and set appointments with. Time and
again a customer would raise his sleeve to
expose a terribly ugly tattoo and brag: "See
this? I got this for $40!!!" It was always
so hard not to respond with "Yeah, and it
shows".
For the most
part, you get what you pay for. I don't want
to place too much emphasis on this statement
- because you can also spend too much and
get too little in this business - but I
would rather place the emphasis on the
underlying meaning of the statement. Very
advanced designing and programming requires
the knowledge and experience of a person
qualified to do the work. This goes
especially for database design/ integration
or Flash. Above and beyond the knowledge
needed, these features require a ton of time
to create. If you want to drive home a BMW,
don't bring the dealer a cashier's check for
a used Pinto.
15. Hosting
your site with Angelfire/ Tripod/ Geocities/
other free service
Webhosting is
such a competitive market these days that
you do yourself a severe disservice by using
a free webhost. Free hosting services lack
some of the really useful features that even
budget webhosts offer and at the same time,
they litter your site with banners and
popups that are guaranteed to annoy your
visitors and make you look bad. Any
advertisement on your site gives off the
image that you endorse the product
advertised. With free webhosts, you have no
control over what ad pops up.
Another reason
to avoid free hosts is their long site
addresses. These days, your website's
address is tied directly to your "Brand".
While there are ways to work around the long
address problem, it just isn't worth it when
you can spend a few bucks and get your own
name and quality, feature rich hosting.
16. Expecting
your web designer to be your on-call tech
support
Do you call
the mortgage officer who wrote your home
loan and ask him to come over to balance
your checkbook? Then you shouldn't call the
guy who made your website and ask him why
your computer is crashing.
When
soliciting suggestions from my peers
regarding what to include in this article,
they all mentioned this issue. Some have
found it to be such a problem, that they now
have a provision in their contracts that
states that any "tech support" calls will be
treated like any other charge. i.e. if your
designer charges $150 an hour for changes
and updates, then you will be charged $150
an hour for him to address your non-website
related technical issue.
Above and
beyond that, this issue is a bad management
practice anyway. I've found that a good
manager will manage personnel based on each
person's strengths - you wouldn't put the
best salesman in the company behind a desk
to answer phones would you? A web designer
may not be the best person to address
non-website related problems and you would
likely be better off finding a more
qualified person to address your problem.
For "remedial"
concerns, your best solution is education.
These days most community colleges offer
continuing education classes in a wide range
of computer topics ranging from basic
computer usage to application-specific
classes, database management, and advanced
programming. You'll be better off to empower
yourself or a dedicated employee with the
knowledge than to sacrifice your company's
efficiency by waiting on someone else to fix
a remedial technical problem.
17. Allowing
the designer to own the domain name.
Time and again
I hear complaints from people who hate their
web designer but who are afraid to move
because a) the designer "owns" the name
and/or b) the designer is holding the site
hostage. The truth is, the designer does not
own the name!!!
Domain names
are "registered" with a company who has the
authority to make the registration. During
the process, the contact information for
"Registrant", "Administrative Contact" and
"Technical Contact" are entered. What often
(unfortunately) happens is that the web
designer's information is placed in every
field. I am of the opinion that this is not
an ethical business practice. At the very
least, the owner of the business (i.e.
purchaser of the website design service, aka
"you") should be listed as "Registrant".
You can avoid
this problem from the very beginning by
being the person who registers the domain
name or by explicitly instructing the
designer to name you as "Registrant" when
they sign up for the domain. To do it
yourself, go to
http://www.buydomains.com - a service I
personally use which offers several added
services such as parking, redirects, and DNS
service (basically, pointing the address to
the right place whenever you want).
If you're ever
in a situation where the designer *owns* the
domain name, please be assured that a short
letter from a lawyer should solve this
problem for you. United States Trademark Law
is well established in this matter and you
can fix this problem very easily and
quickly.
18. Expecting
the web designer to teach you web design
Lets face it,
this is business. If your web designer
teaches you web design, you become his
competitor. You don't give your customers
the prices you actually pay for your
product, do you? If you're a real estate
agent, you don't tell potential homebuyers
how low you're willing to sell your listing
for, do you? Like #16, about tech support,
I'm sure you could offer to pay your
designer his hourly fee to teach you...
19. Getting
sucked into "Scope Creep"
"Scope Creep"
is like the lure of a Mermaid upon a lonely
sailor. It is something that happens to
nearly every project and must be controlled
for the sake of your bank account, your site
as a whole, and the sanity of your web
designer. "Scope creep is the pejorative
name we give to the natural process by which
clients discover what they really want,"
Says designer Hal Helms (http://www.alistapart.com/stories/scopecreep/)
First you
start off with a simple 5 page site with
"Home", "Services", "Products", "Contact",
"Links". Then, you get excited about having
a page and all the cool stuff you can do.
Now you want a messageboard, different
sections for different product categories,
and some killer Flash animation on its own
intro page. Now, your site has grown to 5
times the size, time, and money you
initially planned for. Prepare yourself for
this natural phenomenon by doing extensive
brainstorming and cost-benefit analysis with
your web designer before even one line of
code is written.
20. Not
insisting on total satisfaction
As a customer,
you are handing over your hard earned cash
or the hard earned cash of your company.
Your level satisfaction is just as much your
responsibility as it is the responsibility
of the designer. Your part comes in simply
by making sure you communicate your wishes
with the designer and NOT accepting anything
less than total satisfaction. Obviously your
satisfaction may be limited by your budget,
but if you have a request (for example the
look and feel of the site) that is within
the budget, then make sure you get absolute
satisfaction by telling them about your
idea. In the end, the site represents you,
not the designer.
Notes, Helpful
links, and Sources Used
With exception
of the first link below, all of the other
links in this section come from usability
guru Jakob Nielsen's biweekly "Alertbox"
Newsletter. What I'd like to point out that
may not be so obvious as you click to these
links is the date of these articles I am
linking to. As with many things in the
history of man, we just don't seem to be
learning from our mistakes. Nielsen's first
"Top Ten Mistakes" was created in 1996 when,
to most people, the web was still young.
Now, seven years later, the Internet has
exploded in size and use, yet people still
don't seem able to wrap their heads around
many of the usability concepts that can make
or break the success of a website.
-
Web
Credibility Project
-
Top Ten
Web-Design Mistakes of 2002
-
The Top Ten
"New" Mistakes of Web Design (1999)
-
Who Commits
The Top Ten Mistakes of Web Design?
-
Top Ten
Mistakes Revisited Three Years Later
-
Top Ten
Mistakes of Web Management
-
(The
Original) Top Ten Mistakes in Web Design
About The Author
Karl Groves is a freelance
web designer who has done production
work on such sites as National Cancer
Institute, Aerospace Medical
Association, and Network For Good
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