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			<title><![CDATA[Website Designer in Montclair Provides ‘Commercial Website Do’s and Don’ts’ for New Internet Marketers]]></title>
			<description><![CDATA[<div class="p12">                                                                               <span class="p14"><strong>Website Designer in Montclair Provides ‘Commercial Website Do’s and Don’ts’ for New Internet Marketers</strong></span><br />
<div style="padding-top: 20px "> As most people with a computer are well aware, we are being invaded by websites. Most are friendly. Some aren’t.
<p>More businesses and organizations than ever before now have websites to provide marketing and promotion of goods and services and to open the lines of communication to a virtual 24/7 reality. <br />
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Throughout New Jersey there are thousands of commercial ventures that have sites on the worldwide web, even though their marketing reach may be decidedly less than worldwide. Many operate within just their own counties or even towns.
<p>A growing number of individuals and creative artists are also now using the web. The New York Times ran an article late last year about homeowners who supplement the efforts of real estate agents by building their own websites to show off their homes with even more visual detail and personal descriptions.</p>
<p>Website design is big business. Hundreds of firms in the Garden State are dedicated to the burgeoning field. Many of today’s commercial websites do a good job attracting new clients, though some have designs that are the internet equivalent of finger painting and navigation that makes a tax return look like a birthday card. </p>
<p>Designing an effective website takes special planning and considerations. A graduate of Carnegie Mellon University, Loew, who has also taught at the New Jersey Institute of New Jersey, founded LForm a few years ago and now has a client list representing an incredibly wide range of commercial ventures, from interior designers, law offices and dance studios, to architects, pharmaceutical firms and houses of worship.</p>
<p>Loew based the creation of his “Do’s &amp   Don’ts” list on the fact that businesspeople have so many different (and sometimes differing) notions and ideas about what it takes to build an effective website. </p>
<p><strong>DO’s</strong></p>
<p>• Keep the homepage simple. Avoid placing dozens of items on that all-important opening page. Remember: in web design people do judge a book by its cover, and they have every right to. A homepage does not mean that everything in the home (the home being your company) has to be there. What it means is that you simply want to invite people to come in. </p>
<p>• Keep the domain name (the website address) simple, too. It does not have to duplicate the name of your company or organization word for word, especially if the name is very long. It has to be easy to remember, easy to share with others, and easy to write down. If you have to shorten it, shorten it to something that really says what the company or organization is all about.</p>
<p>• Keep the navigation structure of the website consistent. In other words, if the navigation bar is at the top of the homepage, it should remain there on all interior pages. This is crucial. Also, the text of the navigation bar must be easy to understand. A long string or phrase will be confusing, and visitors to the site may not want to hang around long enough to figure out what it means. </p>
<p><br />
<strong> DON’Ts</strong></p>
<p>• Don’t use stock photography. You need the real deal. Spend money on a professional photographer or, if you insist on doing it yourself, a high-quality digital camera. Nothing beats originality. Stock photography tells many people that you’ve taken the cheaper and easier way out—and they may think that’s the way you run your business, as well.</p>
<p>• Don’t accept an eccentric or convoluted logo or corporate icon for your company. Just because it means something to you doesn’t guarantee it will mean anything to other people. Logos and icons should be bold, simple, instantly recognizable—and they should make sense as they relate to the name and the function of your company. Think of classics like the CBS eye and the Westinghouse W.</p>
<p>• Don’t allow bad or mediocre text (called web copy) on your website. Even a gorgeous website, graphically speaking, will never make up for text that rambles, uses poor grammar or tries to be cute and quirky. Many customers are easily turned off by that. Many company owners think they can compose their own effective text, but it really requires the skills of a communication professional.</p>
<p>Source by NjBiz.com<br />
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			<category><![CDATA[Uncategorized]]></category>
			<link>http://webdesign.blogfreehere.com/website-designer-in-montclair-provi.html</link>
			<author>krina_khatri@yahoo.co.in</author>
			<guid>http://webdesign.blogfreehere.com/website-designer-in-montclair-provi.html</guid>
			<pubDate>Tue, 19 Feb 2008 01:16:49 +1100</pubDate>
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