Eight Stumbling Blocks Site, and Their Prevention
Placed in Website Tricks | October 13th, 2008
Clutter: Too much noise, too much text, and few “white” character means that customers ignore the content. Often customers rapid scanning, reading titles or prompts until they reach the content they want. Be specific, with titles to break the text, not too many fonts and reading at your audience.
Confusion navigation: buttons and menu should be clear links should be as follows: Links. Text should not look like buttons or links. Customers are usually not read and digest the information in linear order and should be able to perhaps between sections.
Company-centricism: Customers are task-oriented. You do not know (or support) on the structure of departments, enterprises or jargon. See your site as foreigners would, by function or mission. Use clear, generic identification and try to minimize the use of company or industry jargon, acronyms and abbreviations, unless the context is.
Design by committee: While teamwork is essential to the success of a website, the group consensus for decisions to adopt a draft of its runway.
Bells and whistles: How does a Web site is not as important as the content and design of their content. Creating the layout of the site before attempting to finalize the design.
High maintenance of static pages dynamic pages on the basis of information are quickly outdated. Add dynamic data if necessary, and to ensure a path to it.
Back patting: non-customers to say how large are your products, they show. Do you think an introduction to a minimum of equipment and focus on your applications or services.
Overcomplicating: design trend, a Web site, as if it should be all spring from the head, before it is published. Remember that for a website is always a work in progress and should be here as such. To publish the information at hand, and the page can develop and, if necessary, revised after feedback from users.
-  design (2) 
All other brands, product names, company names, trademarks and marks are the properties of their respective owners.

