| Article
Written by Esther Schindler
Becoming Clueful: What You
Should Know Before You Redo Your Web Site
Five tips on what businesses should expect from their
web designers and developers
Your company's Web site may
be its most visible face to the world, so you want to
make sure the job is done right. But you may not know
how to get the most out of the professionals you choose.
Before you embark on a new web development project,
then, it behooves you to learn a bit about the process.
I asked several web designers and developers about the
most common misperceptions that their clients share.
If they could have a single wish come true: that their
clients would understand one thing, just one thing,
before the client picked up the phone to call, what
would it be? Their answers serve as a useful overview
of "the least you need to know" about a Web
development project.
Understand
What You Want
The more clear you are about
what you want your Web site to do, the better your chance
of getting what you envisioned. That sounds obvious,
but web designers report that an inability to articulate
the desired result is among their biggest problems.
For many web professionals, the most frustating part
of the job can be educating the client on how much is
involved in transforming the statement, "I need
a web site" into an attractive and functional site
that conveys the client's message to the client's target
audience in a way that speaks to those site visitors.
Naomi Niles, owner of Intuitive
Designs, stresses web designers are not mind readers.
"Many clients don't know how to explain what they
want, so they use the common phrase, 'I'll know it when
I see it.' Would you ask the waiter in a restaurant
to keep bringing out different dishes for tasting until
you find what you like?"
However, you can't design a site by pointing out something
a competitor did, and saying, "Give me one just
like that." Clients often ask for solutions they
have read or seen, says Layne Polzin, CEO of BluSun
Media in Gilbert, Arizona. "For example, their
host may offer sites included in their solution. But
the customer does not understand that thousands of other
businesses have used the exact same look for their business,
limiting the branding and unique representation,"
Polzin says.
It's fine to bring along examples of what you like,
of course. That all helps. Just don't ask for a clone
of Amazon or MySpace. "Surf the web, find things
you like. Bookmark them. Whether it's the color palette,
the layout, a special way something is done -- be prepared
to show us what you like and tell us why. If you can't
do that, prepare some keywords and phrases that will
convey to us the look or feeling you want your web site
to have," suggests Stephanie Sullivan, Community
MX Partner and co-author of Macromedia Dreamweaver MX
2004 Magic.
Niles emphasizes the value of saying what you want,
rather than what you don't want. She says, "Some
clients don't know exactly what they want, so they provide
the designers with a long list of the numerous things
they don't, expecting the designer to know what they
want by elimination. This process is not very practical
and it can take forever."
If you have a clear vision,
you can save time and money because the site designer
doesn't have to start from scratch. But you should expect
the designer to spend some time with you, getting you
to articulate your goals. (And you should expect to
pay for the time this part of the process takes.) Says
Polzin, "Our initial meeting with the client has
now evolved into an explanation and learning seminar."
Polzin's sales team explains that, while the client
can buy software off the shelf and some of its development
is easy to implement, those tools might not be the right
answer for the business or the people who will visit
its site.
It
Costs More and Takes Longer than You Think
"Clients seem to think
that web development is like getting your car fixed
in one of the quickfix garages: You agree a fixed price,
bring it in, and pick it up after a certain amount of
time," says Chris Heilmann, a web developer in
London. "In reality, a good web product needs buy-in
and dedication from both the development agency and
the client."
A serious business web site isn't likely to be cheap.
Nor are the experts who have spent years learning both
techniques and tools. "Have an idea of how much
web sites cost" before you go into the meeting,
suggests Riva Portman, web designer at Star Quality
Designs in Cleveland, Ohio. Portman says she has had
a client ask, "'How much do I owe you? $50?' It
is always unpleasant when you have to correct that in
a big way."
One misconception is that designing and programming
web sites is easy, and shouldn't cost very much. "I
don't know how many times I've heard, 'Can you build
me something quick -- it can't be that hard!' Another
one is 'Once you have everything programmed, will I
be able to make all the changes to it?' Sure you can,
but you don't even understand how to use an FTP site,
let alone any HTML programming," says Todd Richards,
a freelance web developer in Omaha, Nebraska.
"When it comes to the Web, people think applications
and designs can be turned around in a matter of minutes,
and for little cost," says Mike Maddaloni, president
of Dunkirk Systems in Chicago. He surmises that it's
because of the proliferation of "free" services
available on the Web. "It's similar to the desktop
publishing 'movement' -- if someone had Microsoft Publisher,
they thought they were a designer. And it showed!"
adds Maddaloni.
Just because you can slap up a site in a few minutes
with an off-the-shelf package doesn't mean it's the
right solution for your business.
For Keli Etscorn-Dillon, a specialist in design, search
engine optimization (SEO), and e-commerce development,
the "it shouldn't be so hard" claim is especially
irritating. "Nothing is hard to me; it's a matter
of time it takes to do a task. I get miffed when clients,
who don't know anything about what we do, tell me how
hard a task is. Would you tell your doctor, "It
shouldn't be that hard to put a cast on my arm"?
... I'm not sure what it is about Web design that makes
people assume difficulty level/costs involved with certain
tasks."
Dominick Cancilla, senior
consultant at Buck Consultants, an ACS Company in
Los Angeles, wishes his clients appreciated how much
goes into creating an inviting, useful, efficient
Web site. He says, "Good design isn't, 'Make me
one that looks like Amazon.' It isn't, 'Wouldn't it
be easier just to do everything in Word?' And it definitely
isn't, 'But I just saw a banner ad for a company that
said they could do my site for $100."
Sometimes, the time and expense is in your hands. Let's
say you and the developer set a site completion deadline
for two months from now. According to David Robinson,
from sypher design in Wales, UK, it's common for clients
to fail to see that, "if they miss meetings in
which information for the site is shared, and I won't
see them for another week, it pushes back the completion
deadline a week."
A Web
Site Has Several Pieces. Don't Cut Corners.
There are phases in the
development of any web site, no matter its size, and
you shouldn't skimp on any of them.
Explains Margie Matteson at Marisa Design, "Following
the information gathering, where client input is critical,
there is the design phase, followed by the development
phase, with client approvals at every milestone. At
some point, content must be written, either by the client
or by a copy writer, and incorporated into the site.
For complex sites with extra features, a specialized
developer might be needed. Other sites will need the
services of a search engine specialist or an internet
marketing specialist." Sometimes you can get the
skills at the level you need from a single provider,
but experts in various areas can work together. Matteson
is a member of the Women Designers Group; she says,
"I network with over 200 other women who have widely
ranging levels of expertise in these areas and more."
You should understand the distinction between the various
pieces of a site. You don't have to be an expert on
each of these, but it will help your blood pressure
(not to mention the ability to get the site of your
dreams) if you recognize the difference between the
site content (that is, the words and images), the management
of that content (the tools that manage how information
is updated and added), the site infrastructure (which
encompasses everything from the hardware and operating
system of your server to the quality of its connection
to the Internet) -- and so on.
Understanding the basic distinctions can help you
get the right sort of help, later on. "Customers
don't discern between the roles an ISP/webhost, designer,
and webmaster provide," complains Karl Moeller,
a network consultant in Tucson. "They glaze over
when I try to explain, and subsequently inevitably confuse
the respective duties... holding the webhost responsible
for making changes to the site... grousing at the designer
when the site is unavailable, etc."
Each of those components has its own requirements and
limitations, some of which you won't necessarily be
aware of -- but the web designer should. One example
is accessibility: making the site readable by any user.
Kyle Lamson, an Accessible Web Designer in Michigan,
says, "Not everyone uses [Microsoft Internet Explorer],
is 20 [years old] and has 20/20 vision. Visitors may
be color blind, blind, dyslexic, epileptic, have cognitive
problems, poor reading skills, poor concetration. They
may use IE, Firefox, Opera, Kongueror, Safari... screen
readers, text browsers, cell phones, webTV, PDAs or
even portable game pads and, in the not so far future,
their refrigerator to order food online. Accessibility
should be a must." Some of these requirements and
limitations are in the hands of the web developer; there's
no certification for acceptability in standards, for
example, so don't go demanding it.
Don't try to undercut the value of each part of the
design process. "For some reason, many people have
a hard time seeing the value of well-written content
-- unless they come from a marketing background -- and
it's often a hard sell," says Nancy Riccio, director
of Plateau MediaWorks in Flagstaff, Arizona. "Unfortunately,
even many high-end sites lose credibility because they're
full of heinous grammatical errors and ineffective copy."
While a designer and copywriter may help you develop
the site's content, ultimately your company is responsible
for developing it. "I've had clients who assumed
that creating their logo would be included with the
web-dev part of the project," one person complains.
"Web development is just that... unless specifically
stated, it does not include a logo. Plus, if you expect
me to find pictures, expect me to charge you for them,
since I will likely be charged for them as well."
Defining who will create or supply which piece of content
for the site is an important part of your negotiation
process. Often, it's your company providing the words
and images (who else has your logos? your approved marketing
copy?), but clients sometimes expect the Web designer
or developer to magically develop content for them,
says one, "even though I tell them the next milestone
in the project is for them to give me the text and images
for the pages. I tell clients they know their company
or organization, while I have only just met them, and
have many other companies I deal with. So they must
write and get photos (or pay me to take or buy them)
and be involved in that process to make their web site
their own."
As the client, don't let yourself get sidetracked by
the tools. Let the professional use what he or she feels
is appropriate. As Lamson points out, "Owning a
copy of Dreamweaver and letting it write the code does
not make a person a Web Designer. Dreamweaver does not
guarantee a good site; it is just a tool and is as lousy
as the person using it."
Dave Hecker is the Managing Director of Sagewing Corporation,
a web development firm in Santa Monica, CA. He adds,
"Clients think that their $250k investment in development
tools will make things easier, but really it just makes
their team work better. There isn't anything that can
make software development easy, and for $250k what you
really get is a way to avoid painful iterations, quality
problems, or missed objectives."
Balance
Glitz and Guts
One common issue -- particularly
when it's the marketing department commisioning the
Web site -- is the desire to design a site for visual
appeal rather than usability.
Debbie Campbell, owner of Parallax Web Design LLC in
Colorado, says, "Web sites don't need to be over-the-top
to get results. Some clients will ask for lots of animation
and cool graphics. They want a splash page built in
Flash, and Javascript rollover images for menu items.
They don't understand that (a) these things can turn
off visitors who don't have a fast Internet connection
or up-to-date browsers or extensions; (b) these things
eat up bandwidth; (c) these things make a web site much
less visible to search engines. In short, they rarely
help, and often hurt, the majority of business web sites."
Successful sites balance the flashy stuff with useful,
accessible content, optimized for the expected audience.
Bill Austin, Chief Technology Officer at the Arizona
High Tech Talent Partnership, explains at some length:
At the extreme ends of the
web design continuum there are two kinds of web sites.
Neither of them "work" in the way most companies
want their web sites to work.
On one end is the highly
graphical, flashy, content poor web site with dancing
babies and moving pictures and unbelievable poor navigational
design. On the other extreme is the site with no graphics,
50 words of black text per page on a white background,
loads of content, and text link navigation.
The graphical site will
sell products all day long -- if anyone gets to it.
But no one will ever visit that site unless you send
them there, one at a time, using other promotional mechanisms
(such as TV, radio, print, direct mail, pens, cups,
hats, blimps, billboards).
On the other hand, the simple
text site will get hundreds, thousands, or millions
of visitors who arrive there after searching for your
product or service. Unfortunately, none of them will
buy anything, contact you, or provide their contact
information.
You have to shoot for a
mix between the site which sells but gets no visitors,
and the site which gets lots of visitors and does not
compel action.
In general, though, you
should not assume that your site will (or should) be
heavy on graphical elements. As Lamson points out, Flash
can easily make your site useless to large numbers of
possible customers. "Use it smartly," he advises.
"The 'look' is not as important on the web as in
print. The web is about logic and structure. The structure
should be defined by the content, not the look.... The
'look' is important but only to support the content...
not to control the content."
If
You Build It, They Won't Necessarily Come
Another common misconception
is that, moments after you slap up a web site, millions
of visitors will beat a path to your door. The reality
is far different, say experienced developers, because
building the site is not the same thing as marketing
it.
Once the site is up, clients expect to receive "tons
of business," says Robinson. "Only after informing
them of marketing and search engine optimization services
do they truly realize what goes into the web site."
The Internet is a two way media, points out Heilmann.
"You simply cannot control anything that is on
the other side of your information flow."
Etscorn-Dillon says, "You get clients that think
that once their site is done, they'll be ranking #1
in Google instantly. It simply does not work that way.
Also, putting up a site doesn't mean instant orders
or phone calls. I have to stress that having a Web site
is not a marketing plan, but one of the many pieces
of a sound marketing plan. If they don't know where
to find your site, they won't find you -- period."
Adds Cancilla: "Clients ... want to be #1 on Google
for some term or another and don't understand a) that
you can't guarantee such a thing, and b) that getting
a high search-engine rank can take a lot of time and
work. Perhaps more annoying still is the client who
wants a high rank and thinks they know how to do it
themselves -- by using some method they heard/read about
that will either make the site annoying to readers or
potentially get them banned from Google all together."
Instead, you'll need to spend some money and time.
According to Joshua Strebel, president of obu Web Technologies
Inc., "If someone has $30k to spend, they get a
$10k web site from us, and then we look at putting that
other $20k to use in marketing, either traditional channels
or forms of Internet marketing. It is still all about
location; you have to get people to see the web site.
Yes, more established companies simply need a web site
to support/enhance their current sales and marketing
efforts, yet most new web sites need a significant amount
of push before visitors will ever see it."
Campbell agrees that web sites aren't a magic bullet.
"It's not 'if we build it, they will come, and
throw money at us.' For most businesses, it's more like
'if we build it, and dedicate effort to keeping it fresh
and up to date and interesting, and if we're selling
something people really want to buy, and if we think
of the web site as only a part of our marketing effort,
and if we pay attention to having clean code and optimized
pages and tweak our pay-per-click keywords effectively,
maybe we'll be more successful with a web site than
without.' My clients that assume full, enthusiastic
ownership of their web sites, take advantage of their
capabilities, and use them to really communicate and
have a dialogue with their customers are the ones most
pleased with the results."
Avoid
Bit Decay: The Site Needs Maintenance
There are few things you
can install in your business and then ignore completely.
Unfortunately, that truism isn't grasped by a lot of
business owners, who expect that once a Web site is
"done," it can be ignored thereafter. Heilmann
bemoans the misconception that a web product has a final
date and then it's finished. "Any web site that
is not developed to be maintained is already outdated,"
he cautions.
All web sites require at least some degree of maintenance,
Campbell points out. "If a visitor comes to a site
and sees a 2004 copyright at the bottom, or a class
schedule that's six months outdated, that site and that
company tends to lose credibility. If a site is never
updated, spiders from search engines start visiting
less and less often and rankings in search engine results
pages will drop. I have clients whose sites launched
last year, and they never touched them again. They're
still wondering what went wrong, and why their web site
didn't ever bring them any business."
Justin Crossman, at Fivetwenty Web Services, Inc. in
Chandler, Arizona, suggests, "When making the decision
to create or redesign your web site, think about how
you would like to handle future changes, regular or
otherwise, and make sure your provider is willing and
able to meet those expectations."
Treat
the Web Team as Professionals
Many web developers and
designers are appalled at assumptions that their skills
are commonplace and valueless. Niles says, "Professional
design takes a lot of work, skill, education, and ability.
We don't just input a set of criteria into the computer
machine and pull out the results instantly. Do you think
that a professional chef is a person who puts a bunch
of ingredients that don't match into a big pan and sticks
it in the oven?"
Keep in mind that the reason you brought in an expert
was to rely on their advice. "Listen to me. You
think data, I think usability. Things do not always
work the way you think. The user does not think like
you or me. Work with me for a compromise, not against
me," adds Lamson.
Sullivan says, "My worst experiences have been
when the client didn't trust me to handle all aspects
of the job. Nightmares ensue. I'm a professional. I
know my business. And if I don't personally do that
part of the project, I know another professional to
subcontract it to. Please don't go out looking for other
people to 'help' and try to patch us all together, with
you in charge. It does not work. Ever."
Pragmatically, you should expect to assign one person
from your company to interact with the designers and
developers. Shelly Cole of brassblogs.com advises that,
if you have a committee deciding upon website issues,
choose one person to interact with the designer. "Only
one person. There is nothing that will cause more confusion,
anger and disappointment than the fact that one designer
has 3 or 4 people calling and e-mailing them every 5
minutes -- each person changing what the last person
said."
Etscorn-Dillon wholeheartedly agrees, to the point
of including the one-contact stipulation in her contracts.
"My client is to appoint one person for me to work
with, not a group. When you have a group involved, everyone
is sending you their ideas and thoughts, nothing gets
done, and it's very frustrating."
Another way to mess things up is to bring in an outsider
who isn't a professional designer. That is, don't rely
on your brother-in-law the self-proclaimed expert to
give you conflicting advice about site development.
Polzin says, "Many clients may know a friend, family
member, associate or someone who 'knows the business.'
This is quite frustrating from two aspects. One, they
have a misconception that this is just a simple idea
and that you just need to cut and paste a few graphics
and text to make a web site. And two, they have been
told that you can buy off the shelf solutions to implement
their site, such as e-commerce, affiliate programs,
and refer a friend programs."
Lamson suggests, "High
school students with a cracked copy of Dreamweaver and
PhotoShop cannot build web sites as good as real web
designers, even if [the high school students] will do
it for $250."
Another variation is business owners and IT staff who
mutter, "I could probably just do this myself.
Yes, says Etscorn-Dillon, "And I can probably fly
a jet, fix my sink, and change my brakes. But why would
I want to? I like to hire seasoned professionals to
do what they excel in. I'm sure my clients could take
over their site, but I can't imagine the learning curve
they'd go through and the mistakes they'd make (just
like I did) along the way. Is that the most productive
solution for a business? If you want a professional
look, hire a professional."
Your existing IT staff isn't the right "designer,"
either. Cancilla's primary pet peeve is clients -- particularly
corporate clients -- "who don't understand that
their company Webmaster or IT-support person probably
isn't a Web designer or electronic communications specialist.
I still see far too many Web sites designed by people
who are great at server configuration but have no idea
how to optimize HTML/CSS, or who can code beautifully
but whose design or site-organization skills are lacking.
And to make things worse, many of these people think
they know more than enough to design or set content
policies for a site."
Read the contract. There's a process, and you'll delay
your own project if you keep making changes. Says Cole,
"The client should read before they sign. I don't
know how many clients I've had myself (not to mention
other horror stories I've heard from colleagues) where
the client just signed without really reading or asking
questions. More often than not, it comes back to bite
the client in the behind -- yet the client will threaten
and get angry at the designer for something that, in
all honesty, should have been asked about before the
contract was signed, or the project began."
This is a surprisingly common problem. The contract
is there to record what you and the site developer agreed
upon, but too few people pay attention to the details
-- and that costs money, time, and emotional wear-and-tear.
Once a layout or mockup is approved, points out Etscorn-Dillon,
her company starts to develop it into a real site. "I've
had clients that approve the site and a few weeks later,
want to make huge changes to the design. I have stipulated
in my contracts that all design changes made after the
design was improved will incur additional charges and
hold up development time."
But you're already ahead of the game: after reading
this article, you have a better understanding of what's
expected. As Etscorn-Dillon says, "Educating your
clients not only helps them to understand their online
venture, but makes them more aware of the industry and
therefore becoming involved. ... The more my clients
are involved and educated, the better they do it seems.
As the designer, it's satisfying when one of your clients
gets it."
--
Esther Schindler has been
writing about technology professionally since 1992,
and her byline has appeared in dozens of IT publications.
She's optimized compilers, owned a computer store, taught
corporate training classes, moderated online communities,
run computer user groups, and, in her spare time, written
a few books. You can reach her at esthers@digitalmediaonlineinc.com.
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