Web Site Design Tips - Navigation
In this first of a series of articles on web
site design, we're going to start off with a topic that is probably
one of the most important aspects of web site design itself, that
of navigation. Many a web site has gone to the proverbial Internet
graveyard because of poor or non existent navigation, and that is
no way to run a business. This article will give you some basic
tips on navigation that will make your site one that people will
enjoy coming to and not get lost at in the process.
The first thing you need to know, is just what
navigation is. Navigation is the term used to describe how a
visitor gets from one page of your site to another. Now, if you
have a one page web site, this doesn't usually apply unless you
have anchor links on the page that take people to various parts of
that page. Normally though, navigation applies to sites with
multiple pages. The more pages you have, the more tricky navigation
becomes.
Navigation needs to be looked at the way you
would look at the table of contents in a book. If you were to go to
any table of contents, you'd see a page number next to each chapter
name. That way, you could easily jump to that chapter in order to
read it. This is especially useful with technical books where you
may only need the details for a specific procedure.
Well, web design is no different. Let's say you
had a site on health products and you decided that you wanted to
have a main page to greet people, a page with the products you
promote, another page with articles that address health related
issues and finally a page for people to contact you at if they were
to have any questions. Now, this is a very simple web site, but it
still can easily illustrate the point.
The navigation should be simple and clear. The
most common forms of navigation are either menus that go across the
top of the web page or menus that go down either the right or left
side. Left is usually more common that right. As to top and side,
it's pretty much split down the middle. The key, however, is that
you want the navigation links to be uniform throughout the site. In
other words, if you decide to go with left side navigation links
for the main page, then, in the case of our example web site, you
would also want the links to go down the left side for the products
page, articles page and contact page. Each page should have the
exact same layout and look exactly the same except for the content
on the page.
The easiest way to do this is simply to create a
main template that includes all your navigation and use that
template for every page on your site. That way, there is no way
that you can foul this up as you are simply taking the same HTML
shell code and using it for each page. All you need to do is change
the content.
Also, make sure that the links to each page are
large enough to be seen and attractive looking. You want your
navigation to look as interesting as the rest of your site.
While this is a very simple and basic example,
it should be more than sufficient to provide you with a web site
that people will feel comfortable coming to and not get lost at in
the process.
To YOUR Success
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