The Front Porch
November 30, 1998
Good navigation starts with the very first page that visitors
see. This may be either the home page itself, a "splash" page,
or (unfortunately) something that for want of a better term
I'll call a "utility page."
Some Web designers are obsessed with the fact that a Web page
cannot appear the same to every visitor. In an attempt to get
around this fact of life, they design parallel Web sites, each
designed to look good to a particular subset of Web surfers.
This is a fine thing to do, as long as the selection of different
sites is transparent to the user. You can have two versions of
your site, one designed for Netscape and one for Explorer, or
perhaps one designed for those with newer browsers, and one for
the Luddites. A bit of
Javascript
ascertains which browser a
particular visitor has, and directs them to the appropriate
version. If done properly, this can be quite nice.
Some designers, however, opt to give visitors a choice, perhaps
between framed and non-framed versions, or between "high-bandwidth"
and "text-only" versions. There's nothing wrong with this either,
as long as the choice is integrated into your site design.
The abomination that I call a "utility page" works this way: When
a visitor arrives at your main URL, they are presented with an
unattractive plain-text page that offers a choice of different
versions of the site. Sometimes such pages recommend one browser
over the other. Some designers carry this to ridiculous extremes,
like the one who instructed users to ensure that they have a
particular browser version, make their window full size, and
adjust their screen resolution before entering the site. It
ain't gonna happen, dudes.
The first page that visitors see is your front door, and it
should look good. If you want to offer a choice of different
versions of a site, those choices should be made from the home
page. It's silly to spend time and money making your whole site
look good, and then set it up so that the first impression
visitors get is a plain white page with plain text, requiring
them to click. It looks amateurish, and it will drive away a
certain percentage of visitors.
So will a "splash" or "entry" page, but some designers feel that
it's worth it for the chance to make a flashy entrance. Many
designers want that priceless first impression to be a big flashy
graphic. It's impractical to put it on the home page, so they put
the flash on a page by itself. This page is the first thing a
visitor sees, and leads to the actual home page. A properly-designed
splash page automatically loads the home page after a few seconds
(using the
META REFRESH tag),
and also has a clickable element that
will take a visitor to the home page if he or she chooses to click
before the few seconds have elapsed.
Think long and hard before you include a splash page in your site.
If your business is graphic design, animation, or something else
that requires you to show off your graphic chops, then a splash
page is appropriate. For most business sites, it isn't. Some visitors
will bail, and others will resent the delay. Remember that most people
don't go to a business site to be entertained - they go for information.
Nav 101
Nav 101
The Foyer
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