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This guide will show you the steps you should go through before, during, and
after your website project. This is by no means a complete account, as I will
try to be as industry-nonspecific as possible. Using these steps in your
planning process will help to ensure your success online!
Step 1 - Why
Before you do anything, you'd better know why you need to be online. Are you
planning a full e-commerce endeavor or just an online advertising brochure? The
answer to this will determine the entire scope of your project and should be
considered carefully. If you decide now and change your mind later, you'll have
to begin the whole planning process again. Be informed and know what you plan to
do.
Step 2 - Outline
Now that you know why you're going online, you should begin a general outline
and begin brainstorming ideas amongst your partners and affiliates. Set down a
rough estimate of the number of pages the site will have, decide the basic style
you'd like to achieve, and list every idea you have for the site (outlandish or
ordinary).
Step 3 - Rough Draft
Take the list you created in Step 2 and refine it. Mark each item as being
"necessary", "valuable", or as a "perk". If you
don't know how an item qualifies, it's not "necessary" and therefore
is one of the other two. Only items that you MUST have for the site to exist
should be listed as necessary. Items such as "logo", "brochure
content," "contact info," etc. are considered
"necessary." Items such as "email form," "graphical
interface," and "product catalog" are "valuable."
"Flash animation," "automated link-through-systems," and
"really cool graphics" are "perks."
Create three new lists, one for each category: necessary, valuable and perk.
On a sticky note, write your proposed budget for this endeavor and paste it to
the "necessary" list. Now you have the basics and are ready to begin
contacting designers.
Step 4 - Begin Shopping
If you have a small budget, your list of necessary items is fairly small, and
you do not see anything on your list which appears complicated or unusual for a
website, then just about any good and reputable designer will suffice. In this
case, you should shop by price and service instead of portfolio and pizzazz.
If, however, you have a large budget, a complex list of items to accomplish,
and you need experience over price, then you'd be better off looking for a large
firm of designers who specialize in your type of site or market.
In either case, you should ask up front (on the phone or in your first
meeting) if they'll supply a rough site map and/or set of mockup designs for
your proposed site. Usually a designer is more than happy to excite you with
nifty pictures of your site-to-be. You need this, as this will give you an idea
of where the designer wants to go with your site. If it isn't where you want to
be, then you'd better get it clear now before you've written a single check for
the designer's service!
The sticky note with your budget figure is your guide to not going overboard.
Know what you can afford and what you really need. It's easy to go crazy with
all of the nifty options and cool widgets, but ask yourself if they're
necessary. If they are a good addition or perk, make a note of it. You may use
it later during the website's long-term development.
Step 5 - Domain Names
Choosing a domain name is a very important step in getting yourself online. A
domain name to your online presence is as important as a name for your business
was when you first began. Careful consideration and a lot of thought should be
given to your choice of domain. www.yourbusiness.com is a good start. Go to
http://www.register.com or any other domain registration site that offers "whois"
service (most of them do) and put in your desired domain name. Don't register it
yet if it's available, just check. Many of these services also include a list of
"suggested alternatives." Look through them; sometimes something you
hadn't considered will pop up!
Start a list of domain names you think would be appropriate. Once you have
six or eight of them, show them to your spouse, your friends, or anyone else who
can give you a fresh perspective. Narrow the list down to two or three names.
Mark them 1 (most wanted), 2 (next) and 3 (last). Go online and find a good
registrar. You should not pay more than $15 per year for the registration of a
com, net or org name. If a service charges more than this, go somewhere else. I
recommend www.IsThisDomainTaken.com, but you can use whom you'd like.
Register your domain. I suggest a year to get started. If you're still around
this time next year, then go for a longer period. No use spending more than you
have to right away!
Step 6 - Initial Designs
Unless your site is very simple and you were extremely prepared in the beginning
(probably having done this before), you will have to have your site built in
stages. Each stage should be thoroughly considered for every aspect of the site
thus far. Check the navigability, the color scheme, the general look and feel,
will it sell product or get customers interested, etc. Be sure to spend a lot of
time with your designer to discuss these attributes and what you like and
dislike. Print the pages of the site out (at least the main page for each
section, if it's large) and write and sketch on them to show changes to
graphics, text, and whatever else. Write up a detailed list of changes you'd
like to see made and present that to your designer. Your designer will not be
resentful of this-- don't worry about stepping on toes. This only makes his or
her job easier!
No matter how small, every site has at least three design stages: mockup,
rough draft, and the final version. Each stage allows changes to be made (even
the final one)! Don't let a designer fool you into thinking that you only get to
change a site so many times. Until you're happy, the site isn't done no matter
what they say. On the flip side of the coin, however, don't be nit-picky or
wishy-washy. Know what you want and point it out the first time. Don't change
your mind halfway through and force the designer to scrap the whole thing.
Likely, if the designer is smart, he or she will refund your deposit (minus a
fee for time spent) and bid you farewell. Designers know that a wishy-washy
client will never be happy and will do nothing but lose them money. As a
professional, a designer has better things to do with his or her time than waste
it on a never-happy client.
During this process, you should be considering the customer's point of view
while visiting your soon-to-be-launched website. Will your customer want to come
back? Will they be disappointed? What will they be expecting when they first
type in that URL or click on that link? Your site needs a "draw" or a
reason for being. Interesting content, prizes or coupons, and other items are
good "draws." Content is best (a tutorial perhaps, or a continually
changing tour of your factorysomething) as it gives users a reason to show
their friends, stay interested, and come back to double-check information they
saw.
Step 7 - Begin Marketing
The marketing of your site should begin as soon as you have an idea when it will
be complete. When a finish date is set in concrete, then your marketing should
begin in earnest. Change all of your printed materials, business cards,
letterhead, phone listings, etc. to include your new domain name (URL). Your
company's new presence (www.yourcompany.com) should be as important as having
your phone number listed. Consider giveaways or other interest-grabbers
(freebies are always popular) and use them as a tool to launch your site (see
Step 6 above). Promise a lottery, prize, coupons, or anything else that can only
be had by visiting the website and entering the contest/printing the coupon.
Whatever this "getter" is, make sure it's good enough that people will
be interested. Once they're on the site, they should have a reason to stay (see
initial designs, Step 6).
Step 8 - Hosting
Now that your site is nearly complete, you'd better find a place to put it! Your
choice is web host is very important to the long-term success of your site. You
need to make sure of several things before you hand out any money for this
service: 1) is the host reliable? 2) will this host be around next yearthe
year after? 3) how much are they charging? 4) what are the limitations of their
service (bandwidth, email accounts, etc.)? 5) will this host be flexible enough
to keep up with the increasing demand of your site as it grows? 6) does the host
offer several plans that can be easily upgraded to facilitate growth? 7) how
quickly do they respond for customer service via email or the telephone?
All of these questions are very important. In the past, before I began
hosting my own sites and customers, I would find a lot of competition and narrow
it down to one provider using only questions 5-7. Finding a flexible host who
also offers great customer service is difficult to find. Generally, if you send
an email to your final prospects (after having narrowed the list using questions
1-4), the one who answers first is most likely your best bet. The one who takes
longer than 24 hours to respond (including weekends!) should be removed from
your list. At this point, you should have no more than one or two prospects. If
you have more than one, the final question to ask is "who has the best
facility, best hardware, and offers the best technical support?" Check
their website or ask them via email what type of facility they are in, how many
connections their server has to the outside world, and where the hosting company
is located. If you are in the US and your prospective host is offshore, consider
whether you want to take this risk. Remember: other countries have different
laws and you may not be protected from data theft or other potential problems.
As a rule, two outside connections for a server or rack is the bare minimum. The
more the merrier here! What kind of machine would they be hosting you on? Check
the library or another source of up-to-date magazines and find out what the
newest technologies are. Chances are you can take the names of the hardware (RAQ
4 for instance) and guess that a RAQ 3 was the last generation of that machine.
The newer the better! The technical support should be equivalent to the server
and the facility: more is better!
Step 9 - Site Launch!
Now that your website is complete and you have a host and domain name, you're
ready to launch! If all of this happens earlier than your expected or announced
date (which it should if all is well), then DO NOT launch your site before the
announced time. If you do it too early, you might give the impression that
you're over-eager and desperate. Worse, people may believe that you pad all of
your estimated dates too heavily and will have less trust in you. Keep in mind,
though, that one day early is a far cry from a month early. A day will not hurt,
a month could kill. Stick to your plan and don't jump ahead of yourself. Use the
extra time to keep hyping your new release. Use screenshots or video captures of
the now-finished site to enhance the anticipation. When the time comes, fire
away!
Step 10 - Maintenance
Once your site is open to the world, you will begin to deal with the day-to-day
items of owning a website. Keeping your site up-to-date and well maintained
requires time and effort. Eventually it will become a regular routine and only
the details will be different each time. It may sound mundane, but if done
right, you will never lose interest in your website. You may need to contract a
professional (generally the developer who created your site to begin with) to do
your technical updates for you. Or you may wish to keep these updates yourself
and learn a little about how a website is built from the inside out. Most
likely, you'll hire a professional: and be smart to. Contracts can vary in scope
and price. Find the one that fits your needs best and use it. Always take full
advantage of what you're being given in a contract. If it's a by-the-hour list
(say four hours per month), then utilize all of that time the developer is
giving you. Have your marketing department (or whoever fills this role) create
new and interesting things to update the site with. Include changing
information, tutorials, new features, and other enhancements. Keep the site's
focus at the forefront of your ideas, but continue to update and change things.
If you create a site and leave it the way it is, changing it yearly or less,
your visitor count will begin to drop, as people get wise to your lack of
attendance. You change your other marketing regularly to keep them fresh, right?
Do that with your website too! The advantage here is that a website is generally
cheaper than another form of mass-media advertising, so changes can take place a
lot more often.
Step 11 - New Looks
In general, a website should be completely re-vamped to receive an entirely new
look or design at least once a year. This helps to keep the content fresh and
forces your users to take notice once more. Making an anniversary of it can be
an added bonus with plenty of hype and circumstance to build it up feverishly.
When a company moves into a new building, they usually make a big deal of the
event. Why not with your website too? Several months before you wish to change,
consult with your original designer or maintenance provider. Get a tentative
quote on the time frame and cost of these changes.
Step 12 - Success!
By the time you're ready for Step 11, you should have an idea of how successful
your site has become and projections of how successful it will be if it keeps to
its current path. Like most businesses, a website should start out small and
become larger and larger as time passes. It should also become more and more
popular. After the first year, begin to make more long-term goals and at minimum
a yearly prospectus for your site. Goals reaching out as far as three years are
not outlandish, but make sure they're flexible enough (and are reviewed for
relevancy enough) that they can be altered to meet new challenges or changing
viewpoint. Your yearly prospectus should match your first year's goals in scope.
If your goal is to have a certain number of visitors per week six months from
now, then your prospectus should show how this is going to happen (and whether,
realistically, it really can happen). Above all, keep your focus! Know where you
want to be, why you want to be there, and how it's going to happen. Your website
and your business should share common threads throughout--including their goals.
Keep on track and you'll have nothing but success!
About The Author: Aaron Turpen
Aaron Turpen is the proprietor of Aaronz WebWorkz, a web services company providing consultation, development, and more to small businesses online. Aaron publishes several newsletters regularly and is the author of many ebooks, including "The Layman's Guide to Doing Business Online" and "The eBay PowerSeller's Book of Knowledge." Visit him online
Visit the author's website at:
http://www.AaronzWebWorkz.com
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