Seeking Advice on Website Design

mrgreenjc

New member
Hey everyone,

I'm currently working on designing a website, and I could use some advice. I want to ensure that my website not only looks great but also functions smoothly and effectively.

I'm particularly interested in understanding the best practices for user interface (UI) and user experience (UX) design. What are some key elements to consider when designing a website to enhance usability and engagement?

Additionally, I'd love to hear about any helpful tools or resources that you've found valuable in your website design projects.

Any insights or tips would be greatly appreciated!
 
Hello,

Honestly this won't be the best explanation, but I see nobody else has answered you in almost two months...

But you should take into consideration:
  • Ease of Access (is your website friendly for colour blind visitors? is your font sizes good for short-sited? etc...)
  • Device Sizes (does your website look good on mobile as well as desktop? does your website look good on tablets? etc... This is also good for SEO!)
  • Titles / Headings (are you overusing titles and headings? is there enough titles and headings? you need to find a balance here... SEO reasons as well as UX reasons, you want some things to "pop out" at them)
I hope you find what you're looking for, if you have any further questions, do feel free to ask and I can help you the best I can!
 
Focus on creating a visually appealing design that is also intuitive for users to navigate. Incorporate elements such as clear call-to-action buttons, easy-to-read fonts, and logical page layouts.
Consider the user journey and how users will interact with your website. Ensure that the user experience is seamless and enjoyable.
Utilize tools like Adobe XD, Sketch, or Figma for mockups and prototypes, and seek inspiration from websites like Dribbble and Awwwards for design ideas.
 
Hey everyone,

I'm currently working on designing a website, and I could use some advice. I want to ensure that my website not only looks great but also functions smoothly and effectively.

I'm particularly interested in understanding the best practices for user interface (UI) and user experience (UX) design. What are some key elements to consider when designing a website to enhance usability and engagement?

Additionally, I'd love to hear about any helpful tools or resources that you've found valuable in your website design projects.

Any insights or tips would be greatly appreciated!
Easy access and for it to be clean not clogged up with a lot of text.
 
Assuming you are working on building a website specifically for a web hosting company:

— Keep it simple when it comes to graphics and information. Visitors/potential clients should be able to find what they need without much effort. Avoid clutter of graphics/text at all costs.

— Make it easy to navigate through the website. The less clicks they are going to take to place an order, the more favourably Google will view your site when it ranks it.

— Make it responsive to all devices, but think about mobile version first. Google is a mobile-first company, meaning that they only consider the mobile version of your site for indexing/ranking purposes.

— Optimize your site to make sure it loads before you finish typing in the URL.. :) It means no heavy images, no endless pages, etc.

— Stay consistent with your typography and heading sizes, colours, layout choices. If every page of the site looks different, this will throw off the users.

— Involve visitors and customers to submit feedback, share their stories, that you can use to (a) improve service, (b) proudly display on your site.

— Make sure that your website and the information it provides is as helpful as possible.
 
These are all great tips and should be followed for a base.

In my opinion, the real design of a website happens post-launch when you have numbers, a demographic, and data to support your design.

I can't tell you how many times we have altered parts of our website that we thought were great designs. Only to watch Google Analytics or Hotjar find there are ways to possibly improve with AB testing.

You can start off great if you really put time and effort into what you are doing, but there will always be something new something better that you can do. (but the data is what you need to figure that out.)

This is a continuous cycle. I believe this is how it should be.
 
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