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You took the leap. You set up a website to display your important
message. Bravo! As in life, first impressions are important on the web. Web
researchers found that you have about 2 minutes to make that first impression a
good one. Visitors will judge your site in those few seconds on its
professionalism and appropriateness to what they are looking for.
In fact, a website can lose about one-third of its potential
customers due to poor design, according to a recent user study conducted by
some professionals.
Take a long hard look at your site. Or ask a friend to give you a
brutally honest review of your site. Does it pass the test of professionalism?
Are the graphics of good quality and clear? Is
the formatting, font size and font colors consistent throughout the
site? Or does your site commit design mistakes that speak amateur as soon as it
loads?
There are some common mistakes website owners make that may cause
visitors to leave early. What are these?
They post "Under Construction" signs all over the site.
Under Construction signs posted all over the website spell
unprofessional in a big way. Seasoned site owners understand the power of
patience. They know that timing the launch of your completed website is much
more effective than doing it prematurely.
Be patient. Wait until the website is complete before publicizing
your site. Doing it this way, your visitors will be impressed and gain trust
faster. They won't feel uneasy and run away because they see amateur stamped
all over your site with each Under Construction sign.
Some place brightly colored counters on every page as a badge of
honor.
The truth is most everyone knows counters can be set to whatever
number you like. If you don't want to start your counter at zero, you can
easily start it at 10,000. It raises a red flag of questions. Therefore, it may
repel your visitors faster than it attracts them. Why raise the red flag of
questions, if you don't have to.
Look at your in-depth statistics instead if you need to analyze
your traffic.
Some websites do not use copyright statements.
Some uniformed site owners don't know that their copyright is
effective the moment their creative work is set in a fixed form. So they fail
to put their stamp of ownership on their work.
If you truly own your work, claim it. Post your copyright
information at the bottom of every page.
First impressions are important on the web. Follow the simple
design techniques above and stop turning your visitors away at the door. Use
your first few seconds to impress your visitors with simple design that
delivers your powerful message effectively
For comments and inquiries about the article visit http://www.ucreative.com
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About The Author
Florie Lyn Masarate got the flair for reading and writing when she got her first subscription of the school newsletter in kindergarten. She had her first article published on that same newsletter in the third grade.
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