Designing your site to stand out from the crowd

Why have a boring website just like everybody else?
What really makes a difference?

Pleasing the eye with grace
Displaying clear content
Offering visitors clear navigation
Look good in multiple web browsers and in multiple screen resolutions

"Each place should behave exactly as expected, each path should be clearly marked, and a few familiar paths should suffice for all."

Today's Web designers are taught to avoid irregularity, but in a hypertext, as in a garden, it is the artful combination of regularity and irregularity that awakens interest and maintains attention. -- Bernstein, 1998

Anjez*, Ushie and Nynke will do their utmost to have your site stand out from the crowd! And at an affordable price ...

Towards a concrete promise

  1. If you know what your wyrd wishes are, answer our customer questionnaire,  ... and we may have some additional questions.
  2. If you do not know your wishes yet, we recommend you explore your wishes using  our website project questions, marketing message questions or our website layout questions for brainstorming more clarity.
  3. We respond with a proposal
  4. Proposals include basic Search Engine Optimisation
  5. Our service may include logo design, and creating a branded look and feel, and can even involve slogan, jingle and video creation, business cards, letterheads ....
  6. Our rates are 100 Euro per hour

Customer Questionnaire

If you are not clear about answers to these questions, we offer deciding-what-you-need, website project, marketing message and website layout questions for brainstorming more clarity.

If you are determined, and wish us to design a website for you, please continue ... These questions are not set in stone (nearly all are optional). Pick and choose the ones that fit your purpose best, and save yourself some time so you can do what you really love, and we can get going building a proposal for you.

Other by you preferred contact channels.
Who are you building the web site for and what do you hope to get from it? -- our questions for deciding what you need can give some clarity.
If you do not have a brand, it will take us longer to create a branded look and feel, design a logo, and then build the web site -- see our marketing message questions for supporting brainstorming on this.
If you do not wish your site hosted on our servers, no problem, we will just need some answers to additional questions regarding technical prerequisites of and access to where you are or wish to be hosted.
If you have not chosen a particular software, we will propose three for you to choose from based on answers to the following questions:
What you like about other websites (For optimal results, include some websites of businesses you can perceive to be "competitors"), what you don't, and if possible tell us why and provide us with the url of such websites -- see our website layout questions for more supportive questions.
Give us an idea of how large the site will be, and what type of content we will need to include -- our website project questions may be helpful here.
Will we be expected to write content or find someone to create it?
This helps us create a proposal that fits within your budget.
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Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

Website layout questions

Some questions for getting started with a dynamic website from void, meaning, you currently have no website, and no clear image yet of what you need/want/desire: Visit three (or more) websites in your field that impress you and answer these questions. Include some websites of businesses you can perceive to be "competitors".

With your answers to these questions, it becomes easy to pull initial impressions together in a first sketchy version of what destinations are possible with the IT Train.

Tickets to a particular destination are much cheaper (in whatever value measured) than a year round ticket for all possible destinations of trains that don't stop at your platform.

  • What images from these websites are still printed on your brain?
  • What words or phrases caught you?
  • What colors stood out for you?
  • Any sounds or sound associations?
  • What functionalities stood out?
  • What is intruiging about the sites?
  • What is not so intruiging?
  • What associations or memories crossed your mind as you browsed through the sites?
  • What is the most exciting thing on each of the sites?
  • What bored you?
  • What are these websites for?
  • What don't they do that you would need/want/desire them to do?
  • What aspects would need changing for your purposes and preferences, if these sites were yours?
  • Do you have a main message?
  • Favorite colors?
  • What media would you need/want/desire now (and in the future) to get your message accross?
  • What fonts?
  • Particular graphics (types)?
  • What will be your next destination/step with a website?
  • When do you expect your train to stop at the platform again for a next round of questions?

Simple Search Engine Optimization of dynamic sites

Dynamic sites require Search Engine Optimization (SEO). SEO is a seemingly complex weavework of little facts built out of how people believe things work. Partly this is because the search engines do not make their algorithms known - that is part of their competitive edge. Search engine businesses spend a lot of time and energy researching how to best index the internet, so that people using their engine find what they are looking for AND they make money on paid search and connection services.

Because the covert algorithms of search engines evolve rapidly, many myths - "known facts" about how people believe SEO works - exist and perpetuate long past their 'sell-by date'. Here is a particularly sticky myth:

Search engines cannot index sites with long query string url's with magics like '?' and '=' in them.

Search engines send out their spiders to crawl the Web and bring back as many urls and pages as they can. Go out and feed! The spiders go from link to link gobbling up everything they can find. This simple ecosystem works well for what is now known as "static urls". Static urls link to what is already a web (html) page on your site and server.

Complexity starts when spiders get to particular dynamic pages found on dynamically generated sites. Dynamically generated pages don't actually exist on the server until someone clicks a link. When a dynamic link is clicked, data stored on the server is pulled from a database and converted into a web page. For visitor experiences this doesn't matter, as long as we can ignore those complex unreadable urls appearing up top in our browser.

But the bots have a problem. These types of long query string urls lead to many different urls which in turn lead to pages that are very similar (and often the same) as other ones on the site. If a search engine spider were to eat all the different variations that each such a page on a site might have, it could end up just sitting there and eating, and eating, and eating ... millions of similar pages. And when one of these page sets has some hard to detect "loops" leading to each other, the number of urls for it to gobble up are infinite.

That's why Search engines cannot index sites with long query string url's with magics like '?' and '=' in them.

Myth Busted!

While it is true that for years search engines programmed their spiders to stay away from urls that might be dynamic (based on whether the url contained magics like '?' and '='), nowadays Google, for example, is fully capable of indexing dynamic urls and ranking them normally.

True, they still seem to handle static urls more efficiently, deeply and frequently. We can still report significant difference, for instance, between crawling a dynamic link on a dynamic url and a dynamic link on a static url. And that's understandable, for crawling urls with query strings like '?' and '='does require some extra intelligence by a search engine spider, if only to make sure it isn't lost or eating itself rounder and rounder in circles though a never ending pie.

An evolution. The web spiders have become way more intelligent than they were before. We can also report that rewriting urls and url aliases has greatly improved our own indexing of dynamic sites, and that quality of content is still the major factor for Google ranking. Simple and true.

And like the more intelligent search engine spiders, we simply do not get lost in all of the details of doing "perfect SEO" and "outplotting" the search engines to prove our intelligence, for that doesn't return value for you, our customer. We focus on the business purpose of a site or portal at hand and on what works for you and what doesn't for creating a presence on the web.