top of page

The Do’s and Don’ts of Website Design

Building a website is like putting up a house. To make sure your creation lasts for a long time, you need to build a strong base and use the right materials. Some of the most important parts of a good website are choosing a domain name, researching keywords, making sure the website looks good and optimising it for search engines.



The Do’s and Don’ts of Website Design

Do Choose a Good Domain

A domain name is like a sign in front of a store: it can either make people want to come in and look around or make them want to stay away. Choose a domain name for your website that is friendly, catchy, and easy to remember. Avoid domains that are hard to remember, easy to misspell, or make you look bad. Long domains with lots of keywords and hyphens are also not good. In short, choose a domain you can be proud of.


Do Plan your site.


Don't start making websites without first making a plan. Set up key points. Know who your audience is, what your site is for, and how you will make money from it, if at all. Look into the keywords you want to use. Make a site map that shows how many pages you will have and how they will connect to each other. Figure out what information is most important and put that first. If your site's purpose and goals aren't clear, you won't be able to tell if it's a success or not. So make plans early.


Do Make the Site User Friendly


People quickly move through Web pages. People may leave your site if they can't find what they're looking for or if they have to look through a lot of pages to find it. Make it easy for people to find their way around your site to keep them happy. Add a menu bar, use fonts that are easy to read, avoid busy backgrounds, and put the most important information at the top. Make sure your website is easy to use. If it takes first-time visitors a long time to find what they want, your site's navigation needs work.


DO: Keep Your Page Structured


In the past few months, there have been a lot more great grid layouts and CSS files than ever before. I think 960.gs is the most well-known, and the 1kb grid is one of the coolest and lighter grid systems. These grid systems help layout information in a way that is organised and easy to understand. They are based on the structure and balance of a good magazine or newspaper.


DO: Pick a good colour scheme


You'll be able to choose the right colour scheme if you know how your readers feel. If your website is about meditation, you won't want a bright and "loud" colour scheme. Most punk rock bands use CMYK (pink, yellow, black, and blue) colour schemes, while a doctor's website will usually use a lighter, more "open" colour scheme.


DO: Make sure your navigation is set up right.


If you have a sign-up page on your website, you might use blue for the main navigation and green for the sign-up button. No matter what, you'll want your navigation to be easy to find and use.


DO: Optimize Your Load Times


If there's one thing that comes up over and over in this whole article, it's that visitors are impatient. You need to make sure that your website is fast and that each page loads in about one to two seconds. You can do this by making sure your CSS files are compressed, using the Google-hosted javascript files, and making sure your page is coded and designed with speed in mind.


DO: Choose The Right Fonts And Sizes


I just started getting into typography recently, and I've learned that it's a very important part of web design. Making sure your section titles are the right size and using the right fonts will have a big impact on how your visitors feel when they look at your websites. In general, you should use one main font for the text, and then you can use a different font for the titles of the pages.


Don't Write Bad Code

If you programme for the Web, you should know how to write code that is clean and works. If you are new to HTML or don't know much about it, use an HTML editor like Adobe Dreamweaver that makes clean markup. Use a code validator after you've made your site. Coding correctly helps make sure that the programme works on all platforms.



Don't Use Large Images


Don't use pictures that are too big. You want your website to load as fast as possible, but big images make it take longer. You don't have to use images that take up many megabytes. With a slow dial-up connection, even 500KB can slow someone down. Compressing your pictures will help them work better on the Web. Most likely, people who come will not be able to tell the difference.


Don't Spam Your Content

Some authors "spam" keywords on their Web pages on purpose to try to change how search engines find them. This is called using too many keywords. Avoid it at all costs. Make content with people in mind, not search engines. Use keywords only as often as you feel comfortable. Read the final copy out loud to yourself to make sure it sounds right.


Don't end a website.


The work on a good website is never done. Instead, these sites change all the time. Update your site often by adding new content, making changes to the layout and design, or adding new features. A website that isn't kept up-to-date may soon be passed by competitors or have its followers leave it. Of course, you don't have to change everything. If your topic is one that will always be interesting, many of your articles should last.


DONT: Stuff Your Pages Full Of Keywords


Google isn't stupid. Your readers aren't either. If the main keyword for your site is repeated 30–40 times in each paragraph on your page, it will not only be hard to read but you will also be penalised. Your writing should flow naturally, and you should only use keywords when they make sense.


DONT: Place Irrelevant Ads Across Your Page


If you want to make money from your website or blog, do yourself a favour and stop putting too many ads on it. People are likely to leave and never come back if your page loads with 70% ads and only 30% content. It's not a good idea to put your ads first. Try to work them in and make sure they don't take away from what you're saying.


Learn how to make a website and join our online web development course today! Our course will teach you everything you need to know about making a website, from design to coding to marketing. You'll be able to build a website from scratch and get it live on the web in no time. So what are you waiting for? Sign up now!


15 views0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Comments


bottom of page