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Website Design and Development: 100 Questions to Ask Before Building a Website
 
 

Website Design and Development: 100 Questions to Ask Before Building a Website [Kindle Edition]

George Plumley
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product Description

Product Description

A helpful book-and-video package for building and maintaining a successful Web site

How do you know that you've done everything possible to create a unique, enriching, and successful Web site, particularly when you're hiring others to do it? With Website Design and Development, you'll feel confident that you’ve exhausted every facet of building a Web site. The clever question-and-answer format walks you through easily overlooked details, acting as a virtual consultant. You’ll get clear, easy-to-follow advice on everything from finding a host, design and layout, creating content, marketing, to staying secure. Each question features a rating as to how critical it is to the welfare of the site, allowing you to pick and choose where to spend your time and money, and the answers contain helpful illustrations as well as action points. In addition, your learning experience is further enhanced by the high-quality accompanying video.

  • Contains professional advice for creating—and maintaining—a successful Web site
  • Features an accompanying video that offers additional examples, commentary, and advice for each question.
  • Lists questions you should ask yourself or your web developer and then presents clear, concise answers as well as helpful checklists
  • Rates each topic as to its importance in the grand scheme of your Web site so that you can determine how to spend your time and money

Website Design and Development answers the essential questions that need to be asked before creating a Web site.

From the Back Cover

To get the right answers, ask the right questions

Planning a website for your business? Get it right, right from the start! George Plumley knows just what you need to consider to create and maintain a site that achieves your goals. He′ll be your virtual coach, to make sure you create the best site possible.

What should our site look like?

  • How wide and tall should it be?

  • Are we effectively using images?

  • Will our site work on mobile browsers?

How will we make our users happy?

  • Should we use popups?

  • How do we make our links user–friendly?

  • Will our content be easily accessible?

  • How can we protect our users′ information?

Do we have a marketing plan?

  • Are we integrating our site with social media?

  • How do we get other sites to link to ours?

  • What free online advertising methods can we use?

...And the number one question–

Why are we building a website in the first place?


Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 5303 KB
  • Print Length: 360 pages
  • Publisher: Wiley; 1 edition (1 Dec 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B004FEG2P4
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #280,436 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
  •  Would you like to give feedback on images?


More About the Author

George Plumley
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Visit Amazon's George Plumley Page

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
Very good 8 July 2011
By MrsJJ
Format:Paperback
I am a web designer, and this book was very handy for me to know what questions potential clients will ask, as well as things that i should know, and take into consideration on behalf of my client.
This is not a web design book though... it is for those who are new to having a website, and want direction on what to do.
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Amazon.com:  16 reviews
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
A winner in a class that can never win 24 Feb 2011
By M. J. Smith - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
Website Design Development is the type of book but I'm glad someone is willing to write. Thankful because it is such a thankless task - every web designer will have some dispute with the questions selected/deselected, or with design principles or the rating of importance. And, yes, I also don't always agree with George Plumley.

However, the structure of the book itself is a testament to Plumley's ability to present information in appropriate sized units, to provide the tools to relate information on this page to other pages, to allow further exploration via sidebars and DVD, to choose appropriate fonts and colors. The book is so well designed for paper format that one immediately trust's the author's ability to produce appropriate web site formats.

The chapters consist of questions built around a particular issue: domain name, hosting, e-mail, design and layout, user experience, construction, content, marketing, search engine optimization, security. These issues represent the full spectrum of elements of a website. This is a real strength as many similar books present only the business view, the techie's view or the user's view.

For each question one finds:
- a very readabile description of the issue and the elements surrounding it
- a visual indicator of the importance of the issue
- very well done examples
- tips, notes, warnings and references to the dvd resource
- rules of thumb
- a list of the related questions
- a list of action items

All the sidebar items are excellent examples of clear, succinct writing. The list give cross-references in a very unobtrusive and manner.

I would prefer that maintenance, blogs and forums receive attention - and a bit less time be spent on marketing and promotion ... but as I said initially, writing a book like this is a thankless task. I thank George Plumley for taking it on.
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
A great overview for businesses 24 Mar 2011
By Cowboy Bill - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
I've been building business websites for more than 10 years. I can tell you that most businesses are spending way too much on their sites. They do this mainly out of ignorance -- they don't know a lot about interactive communications so thus can easily be oversold by development companies and agencies.

One book I've suggested to my customers for a few years is Building Web Sites All-in-One For Dummies. For a book with "dummies" in the title, it provides a very good overview of how professionals approach a site build. Unfortunately, it is almost 800 pages and many of my clients just can't bring themselves to start it, let alone finish it.

That's where "Website Design and Development" comes in. It covers much of the same material as the "Dummies" book, but it's shorter and easier to read. I can tell this was written by a design/development guy -- it's structured for scanning, just like a good site.

Knowing a little about online design and development can save you and your business -- and I'm not kidding, here -- thousands of dollars. Considering you can read this book over a weekend, I honestly don't understand why you'd hire an interactive agency without reading this first. You'll soon know 1) how to see through the smoke of development jargon, 2) which features your particular site needs and which ones it doesn't, and 3) how you can best gauge your site's projected scope and success. (You'll also enjoy the site build more because you can be more intelligently involved in the entire process -- and the process is kind of fun.)

Nutshell: The "Dummies" book mentioned above is still my recommendation for the layman with an interest in really sussing the build process. If you don't have that much time -- or stamina -- then "Website Design" is a great second choice.

NOTE: This review is not aimed at folks who are actually going to build a site, but at those laymen who want to know the process so they can intelligently oversee and participate in such a project. If you want to actually build a site yourself -- do the coding, image editing, programming, etc. -- you'll need a different set of books.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Well written, but limited practical use 16 Mar 2011
By Chen Sun - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Vine™ Review (What's this?)
This book is written stylistically well, but it is unclear how practical it is.

As an analogy, suppose I wanted to build a mechanical widget, involving learning engineering and manufacturing. My introductory physics textbook has 90% of all the principles I'll ever need. Unfortunately, after reading the physics book, I still can't design or build the widget.

Analogously, this book is a web design-marketing 101 textbook, and though most principles are covered, a reader still won't be able to design build the website.

I write specifications for websites professionally and liked this book's format and style of asking questions. The book asks why-type questions that helps one establish a thinking process as to how to review website designs and developments. For example, there are books about color in designs, but this book instead asks-- how does the color contribute to the marketing objective? This book asks, what colors are your competitors using?

Informative, but not really valuable yet, as such questions needs to be supplemented by several other books on color theory. More still, color theory needs to be taken in an overall website design-marketing perspective, which is too much coverage in a small book.

If one wants a custom website, shop for a custom web designer (analogously, it is more efficient to hire an engineer than learn engineering). If one's budget is limited, buy a self-build kit (in another word, it is more efficient buy a web template than to self-learn from a book as this).

Overall, well written style and format, but not of much practical use to laymen.
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Popular Highlights

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&quote;
Whether to use a fixed or fluid structure needs to be decided early in the design process. &quote;
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Less is always better in design. Keep taking away, stop when it doesnt look right, and add back that last element. &quote;
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&quote;
For typical web pages, paragraphs should average about 3 sentences or roughly 60 words. Pages should be no more than 10 paragraphs long. &quote;
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