Getting Along With Your Web Designer
By Stacy Clifford
You're all ready to get started creating your web presence
and you've found a skilled web designer to build your website for you.
Do you know what he needs from you to do an efficient job? Good web design
requires cooperation between the architect and the user to create a product
that will serve its intended function, and you don't have to be an internet
expert to do your part. There are a number of things you can do when working
with a web designer during the building and maintenance phases to smooth
communications, reduce confusion, get work done faster, and get the results
you want.
Building a New Site
If you're starting from scratch, your first job as a customer
is to define what you want the designer to build.
- Start by doing some research on the internet to see
what kind of sites your competitors have and how they are organized.
- Look at different layouts and navigation styles and
decide what you like best.
- Know what colors and text styles you like and provide
good, high-resolution copies of your logos and company graphics.
- Decide what kind of information you want people to
find on your website. Do you only want to sell stuff, or do you also
want to provide technical information about your products, processes,
or services?
- Discuss with the designer how to organize your information
with efficient navigation and page design.
- Do you need the customer to provide you with information
through the site? Make a list of what information you need to collect
and discuss with the designer how it can be collected and conveyed to
you.
- Do you need to use information or graphics from your
suppliers on your website? Get the supplier's permission to use their
information. Never use someone else's exact copy without their permission,
this is plagiarism.
- Write your own content for your website. Remember,
you are the expert on your products and services. Even if you are a
bad writer, draft the information you want to present on each page and
hire a professional writer to polish it for you.
- Define when the website will be considered completed.
At some point, the initial design needs to be considered finished, and
any additional changes from that point forward should be considered
updates to be billed separately.
There are also some things you shouldn't do:
- Don't ask the designer to start over with a completely
new design in the middle of the project or when it is nearly complete.
Nothing irritates a designer worse than when you approve a design, then
change your mind three weeks later and decide you don't like it anymore
after the website is more than half finished. It creates a lot of extra
work and will often cost you more money. It also delays the designer
in working on projects for other customers, making everybody unhappy.
- Don't keep adding to the design requirements as you
go along, making the project bigger and bigger. This is called mission
creep, and it hinders the designer in knowing how a project is going
to be completed and giving you an estimate of duration and cost. Sometimes
changes are unavoidable, but it's best if you can lay out all your plans
at the beginning and stick to them.
- Don't make the designer guess what you want. Give as
specific instructions as you possibly can and you are more likely to
get what you want faster.
Website Maintenance
Once the site is completed, you will probably occasionally
need to make changes to the site to update information, add new products,
or remove outdated or discontinued items. Here are a few tips to make
this process more efficient as well:
- Be specific, and don't make the designer hunt through
your website to find where the changes need to go. Provide the exact
page and location on that page for each change that needs to be made.
If some pages contain similar information, copy the URL of the correct
page from the address bar in your browser and include it with your list
of changes. Designers work on a lot of websites and may forget where
everything is in yours if they haven't looked at it in a while.
- Try to send changes by email whenever possible. Copying
and pasting text from an email or Word document is a lot faster than
retyping text from a fax or a document sent by mail, and adding a graphic
that is already in a digital format (.jpg or .gif) saves time over scanning
it from a brochure and cleaning it up first.
- If you are making small changes within a body of text
such as list, a restaurant menu, or a description, highlight the changes
with a different color text so that they can be found with a quick visual
inspection instead of a detailed reading and comparison with the old
version. If you need to remove text, make sure you show what is to be
removed. If you simply omit it from the new copy you send, the designer
might not notice that it's gone.
- If you think something may be broken and needs to be
fixed, describe exactly the steps you took after entering the website
to recreate the error. This helps the designer pinpoint the source of
the error faster so he can proceed with fixing it.
These are just some basic things you can do to forge a
more effective and profitable relationship with your web designer. If
you can do your part to make his job more efficient and be an easy client
to work with, he will be more happy to serve you in the future, and you'll
get what you need with less trouble and less worry.
© Copyright by Stacy Clifford
Stacy Clifford is the founder of ChiliPepperWeb.net
and has been assisting customers in understanding how their web services
work since 2001.
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