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[F652]Free Flash Website Building
by Godfrey Winner, God

Bringing things into perspective, you actually have 3 main choices when deciding how to get your website built. This is based on the assumption that as a busy person with set business goals you don't really want to re-train as a website designer and learn CSS, HTML, ASP, PHP, graphics, Flash, multimedia, video editing, web site hosting, FTP, SEO etc.

So what choices are available and which is best for you? That depends on your goals, time constraints and financial resources.

You could:

a) Find a website designer or company to design your site, according to your requirements or if you aren't sure what you need, you can thrash out your vision with them until you get exactly what you want.

b) or you could sign up to one of those web hosting packages that include a “build-it- yourself website package. Some are free additions to your paid web hosting subscription; others you pay extra for.

c) otherwise, you could sign up to or buy a Do-it-Yourself software wizard package. With these you build your site step-by-step on the internet and pay the vendor a flat one- time fee or pay a low monthly subscription for as long as you have the site.

The best option for you will depend on who you are, what products you sell or market, the aim of your web site, who you expect to visit your site, how comfortable you are with computers etc.

Let's examine each of these options:

- If you want to produce your website yourself but lack the skills.

- You have little or no money to pay for a package or a designer

- You don't mind hosting adverts on your site to pay for it.

- Your site is just a personal site, forum or blog.

- You don't really need a professional, high quality, cutting edge, or modern design site that will be viewed by business clients.

- Your site doesn't need to include any special tools such as polls, forums, online payments etc.

Then you may want to choose one of the packages that you get for free with web site hosting; but watch out for the small print on the cheap packages, there could be bandwidth limitations (limits on how many people can view your site monthly) or restrictions to the features available to you.

If however,

- You need a professional quality business website and can afford it.
- You have a particular design in mind or want to control exactly how it looks.
- You need to be able to edit, administer or add on new website pages at any anytime
- You wish to include special tools, video, flash, audio loops.
- You require a custom built e-commerce / online shop, community portal or otherwise specialized site.

It might be best for you to contact a website designer or developer who will help you construct a customized website.

Finally, if:

- You are comfortable with using computers and picking up new skills.
- You would prefer to pay a low monthly fee long term to paying a fairly large amount now.
- You can devote the time to build your website.
- You don't require any professional website advice or marketing advice.

Then go with the subscription or fixed cost website building option.

Any of these options will enable you to get your website up and running in a short time. How satisfied you will be with the result will depend on how much you are able to match your skills and resources to the choices available.


All website users have their own reasons and objectives for visiting a site. No matter how targeted any website has to communicate with a wide range of individual users.

To be successful therefore, every site has to give each and every user a thorough but simple presentation of the site's content so that the site achieves your objectives e.g. registrations, leads, sales.

To do this successfully users want:

Simple navigation

Navigation that is clear and consistent.

Probably the worst issue is ?lost visitors? ? those who are in a maze and don't know where they are in the site.

The site should always allow users to easily return to the home page and preferably get to any page with one click.

Studies have shown that users want to find things fast and this means that they prefer menus with intuitive ranking and organizing and multiple choices to many layers of simplified menus. The menu links should be placed in a consistent position on every page.

Clarity

Users do not appreciate an over-designed site.

A website should be consistent and predictable. For maximum clarity, your site design should be built on a consistent pattern of modular units that all share the same basic layout, graphics etc.

Designing websites that meet their objectives

Everything above is pretty simple, but how do you ensure that you can achieve it?

The answer is website architecture ? an approach to the design and content that brings together not just design and hosting but all aspects of function, design, technical solutions and, most importantly, usability.

The distinction may seem academic but imagine trying to publish a magazine using just graphic design and printing whilst ignoring content and editing. It just would not work yet that's what too many people still try to do.

Website architecture

Defining a website using web architecture requires:

- Site maps

- Flow charts

- Wireframes

- Storyboards

- Templates

- Style guide

- Prototypes

This planning saves you (the client) money. The better the site map, flow chart, wireframe, storyboard, templates, style guide and prototype the more time and money you save because it gives the designer who has to do the graphics and the developer who has to do the programming a blueprint.

We are constantly amazed that people who wouldn't think about building a house, car, ship or whatever will still build a website without an architectural plan.

The benefits include:

- Meeting business goals

- Improved usability

- Reducing unnecessary features

- Faster delivery

Site maps

Many people are familiar with site maps on web sites which are generally a cluster of links.

An architectural site map is more of a visual model (blueprint) of the pages of a web site.

The representation helps everyone to understand what the site is about and the links required as well as the different page templates that will be needed.

Flow charts

A flowchart is another pictorial or visual representation to help visualize the content and find flaws in the process from say merchandize selection to final payment.

It's a pictorial summary that shows with symbols and words the steps, sequence, and relationship of the various operations involved and how they are linked so that the flow of visitors and information through the site is optimized.

Wireframes

Wireframes take their name from the skeletal wire structures that underlie a sculpture. Without this foundation, there is no support for the fleshing-out that creates the finished piece.

Wireframes are a basic visual guide to suggest the layout and placement of fundamental design elements on any page. A wireframe shows every click through possibility on your site. It's a ?text only? model to allow for the development of variations before any expensive graphic design and programming but one that also helps to maintain design consistency throughout the site.

Creating wireframes allows everyone at the client and developer to see the site and whether it's ?right? or needs changes without expensive programming. The goal of a wireframe is to ensure your visitors? needs will be met in the website. If you meet their needs you will meet your objectives.

To create a wireframe requires dialogue. You and your developers talk to translate your business successfully into a website. Nobody knows your business better than you and your developers should listen to ensure the resulting wireframe accurately represents business. You, however, must answer the questions; questions such as:

- What does a visitor do at this point?

- Where can a visitor go from here?

and ignore questions about what your visitor sees at this point. Sounds easy, but!

Storyboards

Storyboards were first used by Walt Disney to produce cartoons. A storyboard is a ?comic? produced to help everyone visualize the scenes and find potential problems before they occur. When creating a film a storyboard provides a visual layout of events as they are to be seen through the camera. In the case of a website, it is the layout and sequence in which the user or viewer sees the content or information.

However, the wireframe provides the outline for your storyboard. Developers and designers don't need to work in a vacuum - the wireframe guides every design, information architecture, navigation, usability and content consideration. Wireframes define ?what is there? while the storyboards define ?how it looks?.

Templates and style guide

Templates are standard layouts containing basic details of a page type that separates the business (follow the $) logic from the presentation (graphics etc) logic so that there can be maximum flexibility in presentation while disrupting the underlying business infrastructure as little as possible.

Style guides document the design requirements for a site. They define font classes and other design conventions (line spacing, font sizes, underlining, bullet types etc.) to be followed in the Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) used to provide a library of styles that are used in the various page types in a web site.

Prototypes

A prototype is working model that is not yet finished. It demonstrates the major technical, design, and content features of the site.

A prototype does not have the same testing and documentation as the final product, but allows client and developers to make sure, once again, that the final product works in the way that is wanted and meets the business objectives.

Now you have built your virtual site it's a lot quicker, easier and cheaper to build the real one.
Article Source : Pg. 309

About Author
Both Godfrey Winner & Richard D S Hill are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.

Godfrey Winner has sinced written about articles on various topics from Computers and The Internet. CEO of and publisher of
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