Basic website structure
As the diagram below shows a website is composed of three main areas: The homepage, the main sections and the subsections

Breaking down the structure of a website
1) The Home Page of a Website
This is a visitors first impression of your site. It should tell visitors what your site is about. The homepage should answer the questions Who, What, and Why about the sites purpose.

Sitemap
A home page should also provide an sitemap or table of contents and guide visitors to the information they need. If they can find the information they want quickly and easily, they will enjoy their visit. And if they enjoy their visit and find that the time spent there was worthwhile, they'll come back.
Limit your text and links
A home page should not contain a lot of text. 400 words should be about the limit you should shoot for. It should provide an overview of your site giving the visitor a clear idea of what is available and how to get there and also provides the search engines with something to go by when they index your site.
Also, don't present your visitors with a huge list of links to every single page on your site - that's why you have main and sub sections. (see diagram above)
Keep your homepage short and to the point
It has been determined that most web users browse a website's homepage quickly. They look to see if there is any reason for them to go deeper into the site. They want to find this information quick without being confused by irrelevant distractions.
A large percentage of those using the web never scroll down past the first screen full of information. So, keep that homepage short and to the point. Have your links prominently displayed and make sure a visitor knows what your site is about on the first screen they see.
2) The main sections of a website
For example if you are selling shoes your main sections might be mens shoes, ladies shoes and childrens shoes. The subsections would break down each category of shoes into color, size and style.
Developing your navigation schemeYour main sections will form the backbone of your navigation system. These will be the links that take your visitors deeper into your website. Select them with care, keeping in mind that your website structure will be shaped by them. These pages should provide one click access to the subsections.Links and themesThis tier of your website structure is primarily a collection of links that provide access to the main content (i.e. subsections) of the site. Each main section should cover a specific subject or data base which is focused on a single topic. Theme each main section to correspond to its subsection content | |
3) The subsections of a website![]() | |
The content and central message of your websiteThe subsections of a website form the body and central message of the site. This is where most of your content will reside.Accessing your subsectionsWhen a visitor decides to look further into your site it is into the subsections that they should be directed. Provide a navigation scheme that allows one click access to your subsections.Well organized and easily accessible subsections should always be your goal. | |
Subsections are the money pagesThis level of a website is often referred to as the money pages. Here is where sales occur and the place that your primary message is presented. If a website had a soul the subsections would fill the bill.The heart and soul of your websiteIf your visitors have drilled down this deeply into your website they are very interested in what you are presenting. It is likely that they are ready to purchase a product or click on ads. The heart and soul of any website is in the subsections so spend a lot of time and effort here and make it easy to get to. |
No comments:
Post a Comment