Posts Tagged ‘business website’

How to choose a web designer

Tuesday, March 2nd, 2010 by Lorenz

Welcome to part 2 in our series on how to create a successful business website. Yesterday we discussed how to choose a domain name, today we’ll look into how to hire a web designer or a web design agency.

Step 1: Searching a Web Designer or Web design firm

  1. Search onlineDo a search online for web designers + your local area. That way, you will find web designers that are local to you and that you can keep accountable. One way of suppressing cost is by looking for foreign website developers, but keep in mind that creating a website is never a one-off job. You will want updates in the future, your web designer will from time to time need to update the security of your site to prevent your site from being hacked, and you might want extra functionality.
  2. Always look at more than one web design company. Do you like the design of their site? Then check out their portfolio. Do you like the style of the work they’ve delivered? Does the work look sufficiently different from site to site? If the answer is no, you are dealing with a company that only can create a generic, ‘one-look fits all’ site. If the answer is yes, you have found a design company that is flexible enough to cater for different needs.

Step 2: Conducting the interview

  1. Web DesignWhen talking to a web design firm, really notice how much they talk about your business. This is a good indicator of what type of partner they will be in the project. If they try to close the sale too hard without showing interest in your business, they will offer little value. Only a firm that wants to know your business intimately will be able to represent your business as it is.
  2. Make sure you ask them if they do all the design work of their websites themselves. Some firms hire outside designers and only take care of the technical side of creating websites. That means that you are dealing with a middle man when it comes to trying to get your site designed, which pushes up cost and Chinese whispers can soon get the better of your project.
  3. Equally, ask them if they did the programming of the websites in their portfolio themselves. If the company doesn’t know how to program a site and hires third party service providers, you might be facing unpleasant surprises that the firm cannot solve easily. Programming a website isn’t that hard for a firm, but managing a third party programmer (usually in India) can lead to a number of accountability issues.
  4. Web design processAsk your web designers for a structured process on how they develop a site, clearly detailing every design phase. It will show you how organized they are. They should be giving your an opportunity for input with every step along the way, otherwise how could you make the site into an accurate representation of your company?
  5. Do they know about SEO? SEO is the art to have your site rank well in the search engines, such as Google, Yahoo and Bing. Your site should be designed with the search engines in mind, so that you can be found online for your products and / or services.
  6. Also ask how you will be invoiced. Never accept a ‘payment up front’ arrangement. Instead, look for a deal where you pay 50% now, 50% after satisfactory delivery of the website. We offer payment terms of 30% at the beginning, 30% midway through and 40% payable 30 days after the website has been launched, giving you every opportunity to spot mistakes in functionality before you have to pay the full sum. It is important that you can agree with your web designer that you don’t have to pay on the day of completion, but that you get plenty of time (a minimum of 14 days) to ‘play’ with the live site to find if there are any glitches. This makes the web designer more accountable.
  7. Ask if they will maintain your site. The more dynamic your site is, the more it will need security updates, in order to make sure that nobody can hack your site. What are their terms, how much will you be charged on a recurring basis?
  8. Ask them if they offer technology that helps you edit your site yourself. You don’t want to have to call your web designer each time you need to update text on your website or each time you want to add an image. You should be offered a simple way to update your website yourself.
  9. Make sure that any contract states that you own the copyright of the look and content of the site and that you own the domain name.
  10. Tell your web designer what your deadline is and what sort of compensation they offer if they go beyond this deadline.

In order to effectively communicate with your web designer, it might be worth understanding more about choosing a font for your website and knowing the psychology of color design for website.

Follow our guide if you want to research how much a web design should cost.

Your website is a crucial part of the success of your business. If you pay attention to the above tips you will find a web designer who will be able to meet your needs and help you make a success of your website and in turn of your business.

If you’d like to talk with us about your website design project, please contact us.

How to Choose a Web Address?

Monday, March 1st, 2010 by Lorenz

Every website needs a web address or domain name where it can be found. Usually, your web designer will help you in making the correct choice, but how should you evaluate his or her recommendations? Or what if you want to register a website address yourself?

This guide aims to help you with these questions.

Finding an Available Domain Name

How to choose a domain nameA good place to check for available domain names and potential variants is NameBoy. It will show you web address alternatives, and what names are still available. Even if a domain name is taken, you can still go back to their homepage, enter the domain name there, see who owns it and how you can contact them to discuss buying the domain name from them (warning: this can be an expensive option!)

Another great service is Picky Domains. For $50 (or free when you are a blogger) you can get help finding the ideal domain name. If no ideal domain name is found, you pay nothing. This can make the ordeal of finding a suitable domain name relatively easy for you.

You can also ask our community to help you with brainstorming a domain name in our Forum.

Your Web Address Should Ideally Be the Same As Your Company Name

Our firm is called Online Design Bureau. As a result, we registered the domain name onlinedesignbureau.com and all of its variants (.biz, .net, .org, etc.)

Microsoft owns microsoft.com, Apple owns apple.com. Examples are league.

But why is this important?

domain extensionsWhen people know your brand name, they will conduct a search for your brand online. The website that is most likely to show up is the site that has a web address with an extension (.com, .org, .biz) at the end.

You want that result to be your site. How bad would it be if you did a search for Sony, and the first result (sony.com) did not belong to the Sony corporation? Exactly.

For that same reason, you should also register all variants of your brand name. At least the ones that would have relevance in the countries where you trade. So when you register a domain name, register all the suggested variants as well. E.g. Microsoft owns .com, .net, .org, .biz, .us and all other variants on the net. You do not want one of your competitors to buy up one of these domain names and undermine your brand.

Choosing a Good Web Address When You Have No Company

Sometimes you want more than just a corporate address. You might want to build an alternative site, or you might be a blogger without a corporate brand behind you. How do you choose a good web address then?

1. Your web address should relate to your product, service, business or the content you deliver

What do you do? If you are a plumber in Dallas, Texas, a good website address name could be plumbingdallastexas.com. If you write about agriculture in Nebraska, a good name could be agricultureinnebraska.com. Etc.

Think about what best describes what you do and then try to find a catchy web address that corresponds with that.

If consumers might get confused about alternate spellings, register these domain names too. For instance, if you run a blog that speaks to both US and British readers, keep in mind that the Brits spell many words differently. Register domain names according to this spelling. You can then redirect these extra domain names to your main website.

Chances are that the domain name with your profession or industry topic + location is already owned. Keep in mind that there are plenty of key phrases people type into Google’s search engine to find your brand. To see what type of popular searches relate to your brand or product, simply go to the Google external keyword tool.

The video below will show you how to use the Google external keyword tool:

(You can subscribe to our YouTube Channel to get updates about our latest tutorials on YouTube.)

Once you know the keywords that people are looking for, try to see if there is still a domain name available with these keywords avaible (NameBoy will help you with this).

2. Your web address should be memorable

Yes, the main source of traffic for your website will be the search engines. But once in a while your website might come up in a conversation between 2 people you might not necessarily know. If they tell each other they found this great website and that the other should check it out, you don’t want it to be something complicated like AnantharamanSubbaraman.com. However, if I told you that the main competitor for Ikea is thisisfurniture.com, than that is a name you might be able to remember until you come home, or would find easy to type into your browser. An added bonus is that if you own thisisfurniture.com, it isn’t hard at all to have top billing for the search ‘this is furniture’, the brand name of the company.

3. Good web addresses aren’t easily confused with other addresses.

If your website is all about recipes, and you try to compete with a famous website called recipezaar.com, it might be unwise to name your brand recipebazaar.com. You’ll end up being responsible for sending more traffic to the better known site.

4. Beware of trademarks

When web addresses were new, people made it a sport to buy up famous brand web addresses, and then ‘cybersquat’ them, often selling them on for major money. Recently, legislation has caught up with technology, and the legislator now favors the trademark holder. So if you’d own nike.com, chances are that Nike would still get the name if they took you to court and you couldn’t justify how that domain relates to you or what you do.

As a result, it is important to tread carefully if your domain name could be confused with that of a major brand. You might put in all the work to promote your web address, only to lose it when contested.

Google Apps and Domain registrationRegistering a Domain Name

Registering a domain name is easy. Probably the best value for money is by registering your domain with Google. For full disclosure, we are heavily integrated with Google’s services and love these people. Again, your web designer will be able to guide you in this decision, or simply look up “domain registration” on a search engine of your choice and compare prices. You should never pay more than $10/yr for your domain name!

Over to You

If you have additional observations, or find yourself with additional questions that we didn’t fully answer here, don’t hesitate to leave a comment or contact us.

Have more questions about how to make the most of your website? Join the conversation in our forum.