Website design

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Website design encompasses many different skills and disciplines in the production and maintenance of websites. The different areas of web design include web graphic design; user interface design (UI design); authoring, including standardized code and proprietary software; user experience design (UX design); and search engine optimization.[1] Often many individuals will work in teams covering different aspects of the design process, although some designers will cover them all.

The term "web design" is normally used to describe the design process relating to the front-end (client side) design of a website including writing markup. Web design partially overlaps web engineering in the broader scope of web development. Web designers are expected to have an awareness of usability and if their role involves creating markup then they are also expected to be up to date with web accessibility guidelines.

History

Although web design has a fairly recent history. It can be linked to other areas such as graphic design, user experience, and multimedia arts, but is more aptly seen from a technological standpoint. It has become a large part of people's everyday lives. It is hard to imagine the Internet without animated graphics, different styles of typography, background, videos, and music.

With the improvement of 3G and LTE internet coverage, the large part of website traffic became mobile-generated. This affected the web design industry, pushing it towards minimalistic, lightened and simplistic style.[2] In particular, the "Mobile first" approach emerged, which implies creating website design with mobile-oriented layout first and then adapting it to higher screen dimensions.

Technology

Web designers use a variety of different tools depending on what part of the production process they are involved in. These tools are updated over time by newer standards and software but the principles behind them remain the same. Web designers use both vector and raster graphics editors to create web-formatted imagery or design prototypes. Technologies used to create websites include W3C standards like HTML and CSS, which can be hand-coded or generated by WYSIWYG editing software. Other tools web designers might use include mark up validators[3] and other testing tools for usability and accessibility to ensure their websites meet web accessibility guidelines.[4]

Homepage Design

Usability experts, including Jakob Nielsen and Kyle Soucy, have often emphasized homepage design for website success and asserted that the homepage is the most important page on a website.[5] However practitioners into the 2000s were starting to find that a growing number of website traffic was bypassing the homepage, going directly to internal content pages through search engines, e-newsletters and RSS feeds. Leading many practitioners to argue that homepages are less important than most people think.[6] Jared Spool argued in 2007 that a site's homepage was actually the least important page on a website.

In 2012 and 2013, carousels (also called 'sliders' and 'rotating banners') have become an extremely popular design element on homepages, often used to showcase featured or recent content in a confined space. Many practitioners argue that carousels are an ineffective design element and hurt a website's search engine optimisation and usability.[7][8]

References

  1. How to achieve Web standards on your Web site?
  2. 10 Usability Tips Based on Research Studies
  3. The W3C Markup Validation Service
  4. Home | Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) | W3C
  5. Is Your Homepage Doing What It Should?
  6. The Ten Most Violated Homepage Design Guidelines
  7. Design Company Profile | thiết kế hồ sơ năng lực
  8. Essential Tips for Designing an Effective Homepage