Thursday, January 31, 2013
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Survey Paragraph
Jesse Quinones 1/28/13
Mr. Mohammed Per. 2 Web
Design
The overall
purpose of a website is to be short and sweet. It should be easy and still work
and be effective. Many websites use color in order to grab an audience
attention. Google and Bing are just two main examples of websites that use
bright colors and has useful information and links to find information that you
need and are looking for. Many people that are designing websites or have made
websites believe that creativity is the key to a successful website. I agree
with the article in the fact that creativity is not the main factor in a
website. The key role of the website is to generate business demonstrating creativity is only a
small part of what converts a visitor into a prospect. To much creativity in a
website might not be a good thing in a website due to the fact that if it is
hard to search and view the website then someone might just go to another
website because it is hard to find things you need to search on a specific website.
If your website is not as creative you might not lose any visitors. If you do
not have a creative website but good reliable information then you still will
have visitors that might not care about creativity just good information. A
spectator or someone visiting your website must be able to find exactly what
they are looking for so your website should have labeled sections visible to
anyone and links bringing them straight to the pages they are searching for.
“Your site needs to capture people when they are trolling around the web doing
research on things they might hire you for eventually.”(O’Brien).
“The more accurately the site
describes your firm’s expertise across different media (imagery, text, video,
etc.), and the more intuitive the navigation is between those descriptions, the
more successful the site will be. Your portfolio will certainly be part of the
tour visitors take, but it is not the only thing they want to know
about.”(O’Brien).
Thursday, January 17, 2013
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