Website Design

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The value of professional web design

Chic Sister beforeQuite often when clients from existing small businesses come to us for a website a lot of the reason behind it is they want something that looks professional and does a good job at reflecting their business.

For recent client Chic Sister this was certainly the case. Their old website wasn’t exactly reflecting the ‘Chic’ image they were trying to portray.

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15 essential small business website launch steps

Back on April 11 I posted a list of what to do before you launch a website. That one was all of the things to consider prior to launch so the natural successor is what to do when you launch.

I’m not going into the detail of specific search engine optimisation tactics here (e.g. article writing) it’s just the basic stuff that I think pretty much every small business owner should do when they launch their site.

Note while these things should be done after launch, you need to be thinking about them well and truly before launch date.

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What to do before you launch a website

As a small business, by the time you complete the process to build a website you are probably just relieved that it’s finally finished, whew! But there are some things that you (and or your web provider) should do before the button is pressed.

In this post I’ll outline some of the thing we do and provide a bit of a checklist of what you can do before you go live with a new site.

  • Remember when you decided to build a website for your business you must have had a reason for doing so? Increased sales? A more professional image? More leads? Whatever it was, now is the time to revisit that goal and determine how your site is looking in relation to it. Hopefully you haven’t lost site of this goal during development. If your goal is a measurable (like increase conversions by x or increase leads by x etc) make sure you have a tool like Google Analytics set up to track the goal.
  • Show your friends and family first and get some feedback before you do the public launch. Tell them what you want from the site and ask them how well the site does in relation to what you are looking to achieve.
  • Grab a coffee and give the site one final read through on every page. At worst it’s an excuse for another coffee.
  • Do a quick final check in the common browsers (IE, FireFox, Chrome and Safari) to make sure it all looks good.
  • Test the contact form and make sure you get an email!
  • Ensure you can log into the admin area, change basic text and upload files (in some cases the web developer will have to set permissions to enable you to upload files) .
  • Make sure both the http://www address and the http:// for your domain work (i.e. if your domain is stevethebutcher.com.au visit http://www.stevethebutcher.com.au and http://stevethebutcher.com.au. One might forward to the other or they both might show the same thing. Either is fine as long as neither of them break.
  • If the site was in a temporary directory before you launched the live version (for example www.yourdomain.com/beta) make sure it has been removed.
  • The favicon is the little icon that appears in the browser tab and / or the address bar in the browser – make sure you have one and it looks enough like your logo.
  • Test all site components from start to finish (for example if there is a shopping cart installed run through a purchase (with real money – change a product to 1c temporarily for the test) – if there is a newsletter system test by sending a newsletter to a few different email clients such as Outlook, Gmail and Yahoo etc).
  • Make sure you have access to a good reporting system (our free system CASBIR sends out a report each month with a good summary of a broad range of stats to do with a website). This system provides lots of different website measures including web stats from tools such as AWStats and Google Analytics but as a bare minimum make sure you have stats of some sort and it’s easy for you to monitor them (you can set up Google Analytics to send you a monthly web stat report as well).
  • Click every link in the site and make sure none of them are broken. If it’s a larger site you might want to look at an automated tool for this such as broken link checker.
  • Check the site is reasonably quick to load. Quick loading pages are good for users and a really slow site can harm your search engine position.
  • Hopefully you have a good host so your backups will be all taken care of but make sure this is the case now (we would suggest backing up daily to the server and either weekly or monthly to a server in a different location). If you want to do them manually yourself every month or so you may be able to do this via the hosting control panel or via the CMS itself so check these options out now.

That’s a good start, once you are ready to launch the site there are more things to do to get people going to it and I will cover that in an upcoming post.

As always feel free to post any comments on here. If there are other things that you think small business owners should be thinking of before they launch a site I’m keen to hear them.

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New Site – Bikram Yoga Gold Coast

Today we launched a site for Bikram Yoga Gold Coast. The site is built on our CMS Basic package and uses the WordPress CMS. It features a homepage slider using images with permission from Sean Scott photography, newsletter integration, image gallery and more. Check it out at Bikram Yoga Gold Coast.

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Editing images for the web for free

Editing images is something anyone who maintains a website will have to do from time to time. These days most small businesses have a website with a CMS so this means they will be maintain their site themselves for the main part.

The first thing to know when uploading an image is some image files are huge (ones off a decent digital camera might be 5 meg in size). We would suggest trying to keep any images loaded onto your site under around 50 kilobytes so to do that you will have to do one (or both) of the following.

Change the image resolution

Images straight from a camera will be high resolution and suitable for printing large copies. They might be 300DPI (dots per inch) or more. For the web 72 DPI is sufficient so reducing the resolution to 72 will reduce the file size significantly and it will still look more or less the same on the web.

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