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Showing posts with label GBBO. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GBBO. Show all posts

Saturday, 2 October 2010

How to Design Perfect Websites

The four essential elements for creating captivating websites

The four principles of design are balance, rhythm, emphasis and unity. Each one of them is essential for bringing together the different visual elements that are necessary to achieving a strong design, which, in turn, is imperative for a website to succeed on any level. What follows is an examination of each principle, with insights about how to incorporate them into your own Web design for optimal results. 
Balance — Balancing all colours, different shapes with sizes can create different degrees of what Netbods call “visual interest” on your Web page. It is important that pages are designed to hold a site visitor’s interest without overwhelming them or causing distraction away from the elements most important to conversion goals. As such, distribution of this interest needs to be controlled and balanced by considering each element in a layout and its “visual weight” — determined by its size, shade and thickness of lines. 


Balance we achieve by placing elements in the design evenly. If you place a large, heavy element on the right side, you will have a matching heavy element on the left. Centering is the easiest way to get a symmetrically balanced page. And then you must be-careful, as it can be difficult to create a centred design that doesn’t look flat. For symmetrically balanced design, it is better to create the balance with different elements — an image on the left and a large block of text to the right of it, for example.

Asymmetrical balance is an arrangement of unlike objects of equal weight on each side of the page.

Colours, values, sizes, shapes and textures are all used for balancing elements. However, asymmetrically balanced pages can be more challenging to design, as elements are not matched across the centre (line) of the design.

For example, you might have a large element placed very close to the centerline of the design. To balance it asymmetrically, you could place a small element farther away from the centerline. If you think of your design as being on a
teeter-totter or seesaw, a lighter element can balance a heavier one by being further away from the center of gravity. You can also use color or texture to balance an asymmetrical design.

Sometimes the purpose of the website itself makes an off-balance design the right choice.
Designs that are off-balance suggest motion and action. They make people uncomfortable or uneasy. If the content of your design is also intended to be uncomfortable or make people think, a discordantly balanced design can work well. 



Repetition —  Spaced repetition — is a pattern created by repeating elements that are varied, allowing your designs to develop an internal consistency that makes it easier for your site visitors to understand. Once the brain gets the pattern in the rhythm it will relax and absorb the whole design.

Spaced repetition (repeating similar elements within a consistent manner) and variation (a change in the form, size or position of the elements) are the keys to success. Placing elements in a layout at regular intervals creates a smooth, even rhythm and calm, relaxing mood. Sudden changes in the size and spacing of elements creates a fast, lively rhythm and an exciting mood.

Gestalt is a general description for concepts that make unity and variety possible in design. The mind has the ability to see unified “wholes” from the sum of complex visual parts. Some principles of gestalt are proximity, similarity, continuance, closure, uniform connectedness and 1+1=3 effects. 



Dominance — Dominance comes with showing an emphasis in design to provide a focal point for the piece, enabling the most important design element to stand out. To draw the reader to the important part of the piece, every layout needs a focal point.

Generally, a focal point is created when one element is different from the rest. However, to maximise emphasis, it is necessary to avoid too many focal points, so as not to dilute the dominant effect. When all elements are given equal emphasis, it can make the piece appear busy, at best, or even boring and unappealing.

Emphasis can be achieved in the following ways:

• Using semantic markup to provide some emphasis, even without styles.
• Changing the size of fonts or images to emphasize or de-emphasize them in the design.
• Using bold, black type for headings and subheads and much lighter text for all other content. Placing a large picture next to a small bit of text.
• Using contrasting colors. For example, using a series of evenly spaced, square photographs next to an outlined photograph with an unusual shape.
• Placing an important piece of text on a curve or an angle while keeping all of the other type in straight columns.
• Using colored type or an unusual font for the most important information. 



Proximity — Proximity helps all the elements look like they belong together. Readers need visual cues to let them know an article is one unit — the text, headline, photographs, graphic images and captions all go together. Elements that are positioned close to one another are related while elements that are farther apart are less so.

Unity can be accomplished through the following methods:

• Being consistent with the
type font, sizes and styles for headings, subheads, captions, headers and footers throughout the website.
• Positioning elements so that those close to one another are related, while elements that are farther apart have less of a relationship.
• Using only one or two type styles and various size or weight for contrast throughout the site.
• Repeating a color, shape or texture in different areas throughout.
• Choosing visuals that share a similar color, theme or shape.

Web users rely heavily on visual clues when making decisions about a website — whether to click and explore, consider a purchase or sign up for a service. This is even more pronounced for first-time visitors when the decision to stay on-site or abandon is made in just a few seconds. Follow these four design principles and you can be sure that your users and new visitors will stay engaged with your website. 






Thursday, 12 August 2010

Get Online and Get British Business Online 2010 Incentive By Netbods

business,accounts,accountant,office,boss,manag...Image via Wikipedia


Our offer runs September and October




We want to make new business success to help Great Britain out of the slump!


The current offer to a new business owner is aimed out effort for both GBBO and the Martha Lane Fox backed Get online week (18 - 24 October) the largest digital inclusion event to date helping 80,000 people to get online.


As partners promoting Doing Business Online, supported by Getting British Business Online which  is a nationwide campaign developed by Google, BT, e-skills UK and Enterprise UK.


During 2010 we aim to get 100,000 small businesses online with their first website and advise others how to make the most of the web and our first meetings are for free.


The questions we ask:
Is your business ready to improve its online marketing?
Do you want to know which techniques are right for your business?
Or are you feeling overwhelmed by all the options?


We will take you through a proven formula for online marketing success.


Our free client discovery session will provide a business owner with all the information they need to:
Make the right choices when improving a website
Generate substantial traffic to a website
Take advantage of the advertising and communications tools available.




This advice is free
We provide practical examples and business winning information, a proposal will also be delivered in easy-to-understand bite sized affordable chunks.


Should a client decide to use our services for this advice it is entirely their choice and comes without obligation.


We would also pay you a referral fee on completed business during this period


How Would a Client Book a Discovery Session


Please visit the Netbods website http://www.netbods.co.uk fill in the form
  and use the reply with two date options and we will book a free Web Discovery session with an Internet business consultant at their premises or over the telephone/Internet and if we cannot add value to a business within 30 minutes we will give away a micro website free of charge.


Our aim is providing useful hints and tips on what key things a business will need to do to make sure your website is a success. We will discuss the importance of design and online marketing tools to demonstrate how you can successfully market your website.


Alternatively take the next step
Complete the form on our website and we http://www.netbods.co.uk/web/talk_to_us.asp to book a Discovery session and we will get a visit arranged for an Internet Business Consultant to your place of business at the earliest opportunity.


Places are strictly limited, on a first come first served basis and we are now accepting bookings for dates between 13 September  October


Start-ups will benefit from a personalised Twitter page, several hundred followers, customised blog, a strategy for traffic driving and a PPC campaign set up with a credit on the account.


We expect a client will need £1000 minimum order value, and a budget of £2000-£4000 would almost certainly see actual business being completed and the start of a self funding web business.


We make robust commercial online money machines, as you will realise a website and a web business are entirely different things.


Any questions are welcome and we will also buy a PC for those who cannot afford one with order placed in advance of Get online week (18 - 24 October).


Thank you for


In anticipation


Kind regards
Richard
0845 056 9325


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