Web Design and Authoring
Download
Report
Transcript Web Design and Authoring
Web Design Fundementals
What to do ?
why to do it on
the web?
Before we get started…
Determine site goals
Identify your target audience
Analyze the “cometition”
Know your abilities and resources
What is the content ?
Map the current site
Visual Design
Design your new site
Have a goal for your web site
review your mission statement
Why are you creating this site?
What does the site owner hope to achieve
with this site?
What action does the site owner want the
audience to take as a result of visiting?
What restrictions or guidelines must be
followed when designing the site?
Audience Analysis
Who are they?
Age
Language and Culture
Level of education
Access to the web(H.Speed , Dial-in)
What are they looking for?
Information
Services
Community
How to find out about the
audience?
Ask the site owners
Look at current site
Talk to people who “fit the bill”
Build feedback capability into your site
Analyze the “competition”
Look for sites with similar
contents,purpose
Universities
Organizations
What are the trendes?
Where do they excel or fall short?
Know Resources & Abilities
What technical knowledge does your team have?
What tools and resources does your team have access
to?
TIME
Software
Web authoring tools
Image editing tools
Animation tools
Hardware
Camera
Other People
The content......
Identify information you already provide
your audience.
Identify information that you haven’t, but
would like to provide your audience.
Identify the sources of information you
want to provide through your Web site.
Prepare that information for the web by
collecting it and converting it.
What’s the content?
Course materials, media assets (e.g. image,
sound, video, etc)
Communication (e.g. instructor-student,
student-student)
Assessment (e.g. assignments, quiz, exams,
project work)
Site Map
All the pages and all the links of the
current site
Boxes for pages, lines for links
Shows how “deep” your site is
Once again, consider your audience and
content
Site Map
Sponsors
Build
Home
Members
2004
Media Day
2005
Competition
Album
Schedule
Develop a vision for your Web site and
storyboard it before construction begins.
Share your vision and storyboard with
your colleagues and your bosses.
Design(or redesign)the site
Review audience needs/wants with site owner
Determine the site structure(site map)
Gather content(visuals, information)
Moke up a visual design
Build the site in a “test”mode
Perform(user)testing and make changes
Put the site into production
Maintain and update the site
Visual Design
What looks good?
Consistency
is a good goal for any design
Elements of Visual Design
Composition
White Space
Avoid “information overload” syndrome
Helps readers scan/find info quickly
Balance
Color
Make websites easy on the eyes.
(Warm/Cool-Cultural aspects-Light backgrounds with dark text or vice versa?)
Fonts
Use common fonts
Limit number of fonts per page and per site
Use the same fonts consistently throughout the site
Readability
Motion
Bandwidth/download time
Using Graphics and Pictures
Make your site more attractive
Keep picture file size small to keep page
loading time short
Use file types of .jpg and .gif
“Top 10 mistakes in Web
design
Using frames
Gratuitous use of Bleeding-edge technology
Scrolling text, constantly running animation
Complex URLs
Orphan pages
Long scrolling pages
Lack of navigation support
Non-standard link colors
Outdated information
Long loading time
Publish your web site
Arts server
CNS
GPU or WebCT
Upload
download
You create a Web
site on a computer.
Students access the site
Test the web pages locally
Upload the files to a Web server: publish
your web site
Check site online to make sure it looks
and works the way you want it to
Get user feedback
Replan, redesign and revise the site
Maintain it
Dates need to be correct
Services need to be up-to-date
Hours must be correct
People’s names, email addresses & phone
numbers need to be correct
Characteristics of a
good web site
Well-organized
Easy to navigate
Attractive
Useful
Up-to-date
Make your site well-organized
Decide how you want to organize your
information based on your users and
what you know about them
Ways to organize your site:
by department or organizational chart
by audience type
by subject
Organized by department
Organized by audience type
Organized by subject
Make your site easy to navigate
A well-organized generally drives the ease
of navigation.
Keep scrolling down to a minimum by
keeping individual Web pages short.
Always have links back to your home or
major sections.
Use color to identify for users where they
are in your site.
No scrolling necessary to
start navigating.
Standard tool bars and a brief
menu for easy navigation.
Make your site attractive
Choose simple colors that compliment
each other & work on most web browsers.
Keep graphics less than 20,000 Bytes
(20 kilobytes) to make them download
reasonably on a home modem.
Keep animated gifs to a minimum.
Use graphics that compliment your image.
Avoid backgrounds that wash
out your text.
Make your site useful
If you are unique, you’re already useful!
If you are not unique, how do you differ from
similar Web sites?
Is your content unique?
Is your approach unique?
Is your audience unique?
Are you more up to date?
Are you better organized?
Are you more comprehensive?
Keep your site up-to-date
In an organization, make this part of
someone’s job. Pay them to do it. It’s
worth it.
If a person is currently the
“documentation person” or the “filer
person,” consider that person to be your
Webmaster.
General Things to Remember
& Consider
Don’t link to something that is going to exist in
the future.
Avoid having more than one spinning, whirling,
clicking, moving icon or graphic on a page.
Make hyperlinks intuitive so as to avoid the click
here text.
Don’t advertise other products or companies
unless it meets your goal, generates revenue or
helps your audience.
Do not!
Don’t post an “under
construction” graphic after
you’ve published your
URL. In the words of
Nike… Just Do It!
General Things to Remember
& Consider
Provide templates to multiple Web developers to
maintain a consistent look.
Develop standards for your Web site. Limit fonts
and headings on each Web page.
Attempt to use HTML tags that have layout
built-in to ensure a layout, such as a hierarchical
listing.
If you are familiar with hard-copy page layout
principles, use them in Web design.
General Things to Remember
& Consider
Provide white space for easy readability
Limit font usage and typeface usage
Limit text column width
Balance graphics and text on a page
Use complimentary colors with contrast
Standardize on a heading font and text font
Balance the page layout with top/bottom and
right/left margins
General Things to Remember
& Consider
Clearly and Consistently
Identify your site
Banner graphics
Signature icons
Links to local home pages
Essential Elements for
Every Page
Organization or institution
Author or person to contact
Link to local home page
Date created or revised
Copyright statement
Any Question…..