Web Sites: Learn to Build Smart and Buy Smart
July 31, 2001
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Building and buying Web sites should be a rewarding experience
for both builder and buyer. For that to happen, though, the
builder needs to make sure the buyer is getting honest value by
using professional tools and professional methods. Further,
buyers should insist on getting their money's worth.
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A potential client recently asked that I analyze her Web site and
some of her competitor's sites, all of which I later learned were
fairly expensive. Not only did the results surprise her, I
suspect it left her with an empty feeling when she thought about
what she had received — or did not receive — for her
money.
From my perspective, it made me realize that I have to raise my
fees for building Web sites.
The reason for her empty feelings:
- Her site was among eight of the 10 that were made with
WYSIWYG
(What You See Is What
You Get) editors, and like most it used templates
that come with such programs.
- It had no title.
- It was not among the half that had adequate META
information.
- There was only one site that used style sheets and it was
not hers.
The reasons for my feelings:
- She paid about three times what she could have and should
have paid for a much better, more professional site of equal
size.
Having spent $7,000 for her site, the fact is she could have
produced the same thing herself by spending $99 for the program
used to make the site and a few hours for production. A real
professional would have charged more, but at least she would have
gotten her money's worth.
Sadly, this same type of scenario is played out daily throughout
the world. People willingly, albeit unknowingly, pay good money
for a less than good product. Here is a look at what consumers
and Web builders could and should do to avoid making these
mistakes:
Using WYSIWYG Editors
There is nothing inherently wrong with using
WYSIWYG editors and their templates for doing personal home
pages or sites such as one done voluntarily for a local
organization. Such programs are designed for beginners and
occasional users, not professional Web designers, and require
little more than the ability to drag and drop items onto a page.
With practice and long claws, the family cat can learn to do
that.
In theory, there is nothing wrong with using WYSIWYG editors to
do original design work on Web sites, but that only happened on
one of the 10 sites analyzed. Most used the templates that came
with the program.
Should you look at the page source and see a tag such as this:
<META name="Microsoft Theme"
content="nature 111">
you know originality is quite unlikely and you have wasted your
money. Clients paying any amount for a Web site deserve original
work and design specifically aimed at their goals. Thus, the
difference between being a Web designer and a Web builder.
While WYSIWYG editors can conceivably make the family cat a Web
builder, they can't make it a designer.
Another problem with using WYSIWYG editors — in addition to
the fact that they often are quite expensive — is that many
of those programs create bloated, redundant, or proprietary
codes. That makes pages load slower. Frequently, these programs
use spacer graphics and other tricks to enable users to put
objects where they want them. Further, some will even strip out
good coding to put in their own coding, and many do not keep up
with current HTML standards.
Additionally, should the Web site owner later wish to have the
site redesigned, perhaps by a professional, that bloated code is
often so convoluted that it would have to be replaced with more
efficient coding, thus adding to the cost of the redesign. Even
more troublesome is that some WYSIWYG editors make it difficult
to even access the HTML code.
So, how can you tell if a WYSIWYG editor was used to create your
Web site? Simply view the source, and look for a line near the
top (in the head section) that says something like this:
<META name="GENERATOR" content="the name of a
WYSIWYG editor">
If, indeed, your site does have that information and you paid
$7,000 for your site, there's a pretty good chance you've been
had.
Not all WYSIWYG editors are created equal, but it is important to
evaluate the quality of the HTML coding before using one of them.
Why Use Style Sheets? - Page 2
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