Posts Tagged ‘resolution’

How to Keep Your Web Site Resolutions

December 31st, 2009

New Year's Web Site ResolutionsIt’s that time of year when everyone’s talking about resolutions. Eat better; Exercise more; Be more productive! And if you’re a business owner you may have “Re-do my Web site!” near the top of the list. But, like a goal of “eating better”, the goal of “improving a web site” is equally vague and hard to follow through on.

To actually see results you need a more specific goal, a clear motive for doing it, and steps to follow along the way.

I hear many people say they want to “re-do” their web site. And often times there are problems on multiple levels, but defining those different areas can help you put together a plan to address them.

Content

Frequently-updated, compelling content will drive traffic to your site. You look at your site and see that you have out-of-date content, and no systems in place to update content easily.

Ask yourself why it’s not up-to-date? Are you sending updates to your Web developer, or do you do them in-house? Do you have an easy-to-use and affordable system? If it’s too expensive to make updates (ie you go through your development firm) it’s probably better to sink some upfront costs into a Content Management System (CMS) that will pay for itself in the long term. If it doesn’t get done because it’s “nobody’s job” you need to assign the task to someone (with a deadline) or hire a Virtual Assistant to help.

Professional help: A professional Web developer can create a system that allows you to update and add content easily. It’s not necessary that all content be refreshed quickly, because information like your contact information probably doesn’t change too frequently. Therefore, you could either build a CMS to run your entire site, or you could have certain areas that are updateable such as a blog, news area, articles library, etc.

Help yourself: As much as we may all wish it to be so… a CMS does not magically update itself. Someone needs to generate content, and it then needs to be added to the site. Whether you use a CMS or send updates to your Web development firm, you need to build a schedule to keep on top of this. You may want to write out an editorial calendar with ideas for blog posts. You may want to assign different team members to keep up-to-date with different content on the site. You may find paying a writer is marketing money well-spent.

Design

Your Web site needs a compelling design, branded to match your corporate identity. If you have been relying on a design or template that does not reflect your identity, you are confusing your customers and diluting your brand. And a poorly designed site projects an unprofessional image.

Why is it so poorly designed? Some sites start out poorly designed: you used your neighbor’s highschooler to design the site; or you built a site with a clumsy-looking template. Other times, as content balloons the design no longer holds the information well. You need to reorganize information and redesign the navigational elements. For example, there are sites that I was once very proud of, that now look horrible because of all the jerry-rigging we’ve done to add in new content and elements.

Professional help: It’s probably time to pull in a professional for this problem. Don’t be afraid to go back to your original designer and ask them to upgrade the design. Or if it was a DIY job the first time, find a professional Web designer. Together you can work on parameters for the redesign. It may be mostly reorganizing content into different navigational buckets, or it may be a larger scale redesign to accommodate changes in your business.

Help yourself: Take a critical look at all the new content you’ve added. Yes, adding content is good (see above); but it needs to be organized. Also, inform your designer or developer about ideas for future content. If you’re going to do a redesign, make sure it will house not-yet-created content too.

Make Your Web Site a Work Horse

A well-designed site should work for your company. It could be making sales with an e-commerce site; showing off your capabilities with your portfolio; building trust and credibility with a blog; etc. Even a business that is primarily referral based (my own business for example) will benefit from a highly functional web site.

Why is it not working? Many times a web site is not working optimally on more than one level. Maybe you dislike the design and it’s hard to update. Or, you are ready to add a blog and you want to better highlight your client testimonials. Maybe you love the design, but need to develop landing pages for click-through advertising. Maybe you’re not having good search results and you have no idea why.

Professional help: After you identify your problems, it may be clear the type of help you need: a web designer, a CMS-builder, a Google Adwords specialist, etc. But if you have multiple problems, you may need an expert’s help to sort it out and help you prioritize. If that is the case, you’ll probably want to arrange a meeting with more than one Web development company. Many companies will sit down with you to assess your site’s weaknesses and to propose and estimate on a solution. However, you may want to take some extra time with one firm, (or two) and pay them for a more full assessment of your site. Spending some more time upfront, will make sure you’re using your time and money wisely as you start a redesign. Your Web design team can create a plan to prioritize the redesign based on your goals and your budget.

Help yourself: Figure out a budget for your Web site redesign; this will help you prioritize the steps in the project. Be realistic about what you want to take on. If you know you won’t keep up with a blog, find another person to write for you, or don’t bother adding one to your site. If you want your Web development firm to handle updates, work out a schedule and payment plan together.

Just like so many resolutions out there, redoing the Web Site can be tackled, but you’re more likely to succeed if you replace your vague goal with something more concrete (ie Redesign the navigation to incorporate the content we’ve added over the past 18 months).

And here’s the great thing… Have you ever thought: “If only I had a professional chef, I’d eat better.” You can hire your personal chef (ie developer/designer) to get your Web site working for you. It will still need your help to keep it looking good and up-to-date, but with the right tools and systems in place, it will be much more manageable for you.

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Image Resolution Explained

June 17th, 2009

Running a design studio means that I receive frequent requests for images. Usually it is a client requesting a jpg image. It could be a jpg image of a photo that was used within a web site design or it could be a jpg file of a completed book cover design.

How are you going to use the image?

I nearly always find myself replying to the request by asking for more information. I am not trying to be annoying, I just need to know how an image is to be used so that I can provide the best image possible for your usage.

Let me briefly state that jpgs, gifs and tifs do not resize very well (the reason is content for another blog post, but just take my word). Therefore, I need to know the following:

  • What size will the image will be? Is this going to be a thumbnail photo of the book cover design, or will it be a poster using the same photo that is on the home page of your web site?
  • How is it being produced? Is this for a web site, for desktop/digital printing or for offset printing? Images for the web only need to be 72 dpi whereas offset printing requires 300 dpi or greater.

Resolution is based on total data: the size and density of information

An image’s final resolution is a combination of size and resolution. When you have an image there is a certain, finite amount of data that makes up the image. As you increase the resolution you will have to decrease the size. An image that is 2″ x 2″ at 72 dpi will be forced to shrink to .48″ x .48″ if you increase the resolution to 300 dpi. The size of the actual file (in kB) is the same, as there is no increase or decrease in the amount of data.

The image is 2" x 2" at 72dpi. Note the image size is 60.8k

The image is 2" x 2" at 72 dpi. Note the file size is 60.8k

The image shrinks to .48" x .48" when the resolution increases to 300dpi. Note the image size is the same, 60.8k

The image shrinks to .48" x .48" when the resolution increases to 300 dpi. Note the file size is the same, 60.8k

What this looks like

Why can’t you just increase the resolution to 300 and force the file size to increase? You know, somehow make it a high resolution file? Photoshop will let you do this, but there is no more data there to improve the image. You’ve just falsely increased the resolution. This will get ugly fast as your image looks digitized or mushy/blurry.

A corner of a web image that 2" x 2" at 72dpi

A corner of a web image that is 2" x 2" at 72 dpi

The resolution is increased to 300, but the quality has not improved.

The resolution is increased to 300, but the quality has not improved

This is why you really can’t pull an image from a web site and try to resize it larger, and why you definitely cannot put it into a printed document that requires 300 dpi images. Therefore, when I provide a jpg image I need to know the final size and how it is being reproduced.

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