Dirty Girl
…it’s not what you think
version 1.0
march 2008

8 Highly Effective Habits for Web Design

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Bought my first issue of Dynamic Graphics: Design ideas for the real world (FEB-MAR 2008 V13N1). I must say there is a little more depth than meets the eye. I bought the issue for one of the main articles - 8 Highly Effective Habits for Web Design - from which this post is named. Take some time with this one because is says alot about the user experience and why building relationships with potential customers can be hindered when we turn people off with our designs and desires.

8 Highly Effective Habits for Web Design:

  1. DON’T: Talk about yourself so much.
    DO: Listen to your users. What are they telling you?
  2. DON’T: Send in Flash to do the job of HTML.
    DO: Use Flash to do what HTML can’t.
  3. DON’T: Get in the way of visitors, especially if you’re selling something.
    DO: Mark the path clearly and consistently.
  4. DON’T: Put visitors through a gauntlet of endless registration forms.
    DO: Be generous. Presume the best. Build a relationship.
  5. DON’T: Become too attached.
    DO: Realize that successful sites change, grow and adapt.
  6. DON’T: Copy successful websites.
    DO: Emulate successful websites.
  7. DON’T: Presume that since it looks good on your computer, it’ll be fine.
    DO: Test, test, test and test again, on everything.
  8. DON’T: Make it a monologue.
    DO: Make it a destination.

Enjoy

If the article is missing click here for pdf version

Article by Kerry, posted on April 19, 2008 at 9:28 pm, filed under Design and tagged , . Bookmark the permalink. Follow any comments here with the RSS feed for this post. Post a comment or leave a trackback: Trackback URL.
 

5 Comments

  1. Posted April 20, 2008 at 12:09 pm | Permalink

    This is something designers should read because I constantly preach to my friend about his excessive use of flash on his layouts because when you look at the source code, its just embedded flash. And #7 is something we should all become habitual in, I can’t tell you the amount of times I had to keep fixing things because I didn’t test EVERYTHING possible.

    -Mike

  2. Posted April 20, 2008 at 5:17 pm | Permalink

    @Mike - I know this may make me sound old but #7 was huge back in 1995-98 (I know, practically dinosaur years for the web) even when there were only two main browsers (IE & Netscape - Mac of course had theirs) there were several versions at once and people didn’t upgrade as quickly as they do today. So, IE2,3,4,5 & NN 3,4,5,6,7, they all had to be tested. And they were all major upgrades so there were hugh differences in each release. It was even crazier than it is today if you can believe that. Just having as many browsers installed on your computer as possible didn’t give you the ability to test everything. Today there is one more challenge that wasn’t eminent in 1995 and that is mobile browsers. Each phone has their own implementation. It will never end. Like the article states - “TEST, TEST, TEST” and test some more.

  3. Posted April 20, 2008 at 6:39 pm | Permalink

    back@Kerry- I remember 1995 as the time when I wasn’t allowed on the internet because men in white vans would supposedly kidnap me. Sorry for making you sound old. :D

  4. Posted April 20, 2008 at 8:28 pm | Permalink

    HEHEHE!!! :)

  5. Steward
    Posted August 5, 2009 at 6:49 pm | Permalink

    I wish there’s a reply to commnet function here, then the theme is perfect !

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