Thursday, October 27, 2011

How Often Should You Upgrade Your Website? Part 2 of 6

Website design is not limited to how nice your website looks visually.  Sure the look is a critical component – if people don’t like the way it looks at first glance, they are moving on.  But you also need to consider how your site works; both from a visitors viewpoint and from the backend viewpoint.Let’s talk visitors first.  How easy is your site to navigate?  Do you have too many layers?  Do your drop-down boxes block sections of your website?  Is your home page cluttered?  I think you get the point.  Your home page should be open and inviting.  Information should be easily found.  Contact information should be on the home page.  Most people do not want to click more than 3 times to find what they are looking for.

What seems to be a simple question, “what do you want your website to do?”, actually calls for a very in-depth answer.  You need to give a great deal of attention as to how you want your customers to use your website.  If your website needs to provide a lot of information, you will need to be able to provide the information in an easy to find and read layout.  If you need to display a lot of images, you will need to be sure to allow for the images throughout the website.  Take time a put yourself in your customer’s shoes.  Another good tip is to ask someone outside your group to independently critique your site.

Now let’s talk about the backend of your site.  How the backend is designed directly impacts how your site will operate and the overall cost.  Therefore, considerable thought not only needs to be given to the purpose of the site, but also to how you want the site to be managed.  If your CMS is not user friendly your site will quickly become stale and outdated.  Key questions to ask:
  • who will be maintaining the site?
  • how often do you need to make changes to your site?
  • do you know the difference between structured content and editable content regions?
  • will you be displaying images? if so, how and where?
  • is your website consistent with your company’s image?
  • does information and/or changes need to be approved before being deployed?
Contact us today for a no obligation critique of your website’s design and functionality.

Thursday, October 20, 2011

How Often Should You Upgrade Your Website? Part 1 of 6

We are quite frequently asked how often a website should be upgraded. Our response – if your website is over 3 years old, it’s most likely outdated. There have been so many changes in Content Management Systems (CMS), web design, mobile optimizations, e-commerce, social media, and Search Engine Optimization (SEO) strategies in the past 3 years that it has been challenge for even the savviest webmasters to keep pace. The following is Part 1 of our 6 Part Series offering a brief review of each area referenced above.

While there are several web browsers available, such as Firefox (21.6%), Chrome (11.9%) and Safari (7.2%), Explorer still dominates the web with a 59.3% share of the market. As each browser launches an update, your website may be impacted in a negative manner. Certain pages or images of your website may no longer deploy correctly. To make matters worse, your website may work fine when viewed by one browser and look totally different when viewed by another. Thus it is critical that you ensure that your website is compatible with all of the most popular browsers, but especially Explorer with its domination of the web.

One of the reasons for your website being susceptible to browser changes is the CMS platform that your website is built on. Does your CMS…
       •  stay current with the latest browser changes?
       •  provide you with the ability for quick and easy changes?
       •  offer e-commerce?
       •  offer social media capabilities such as blogging?
       •  automatically resize pictures before deploying?
       •  automatically make accommodations for SEO?
       •  allow for mobile optimization of the website?
       •  have various levels of users/contributors with a built-in approval process?

If you answered no to any of these questions, it’s time for an upgrade. TCG became a Gold Certified Development Partner with Kentico CMS to offer our clients the very best CMS on the market that answers yes to all the questions above and more.

Contact us today for a no obligation demo of how Kentico CMS can improve your website’s capabilities