With the start of a new year, many people come out with predictions or trends they see for the coming 12 months. There’s plenty of great writings out there already, so I will not add to the list (if you want to read a good one, there’s Emily Brackett’s Top 10 Web Design Trends for 2011 That Will Help Your Small Business).
As I was pondering my 3 words for 2011 as presented by Chris Brogan I thought of suggesting 3 words for your Web site for 2011. These 3 words are “guiding pillars to focus on in the coming year” as Chris describes.
My 3 words for your Web site are – Measure, Function and Backup.
Measure – Any decision you make for your Web site (or for your business for that matter) should be the result of facts or planning. Whether these are successful or not are determined by the numbers, and you must measure them to ensure if you are on track, way off, or need an adjustment. Many people do not measure their Web site. This starts with the hits, which many people use Google Analytics to measure. It then continues with feed tracking (for blogs or RSS feeds), social media links, surveying and so forth. If you are not doing any measuring, do so. If you have no data to work with, start collecting it.
Function – As much as a Web site must have great content and look good, it must also work. Links should not be broken. Forms should submit properly and accurately process the information entered. Any unique functionality should not only work but also work in all browsers. Where you may think these examples should be a given, many times they are not. The simple thing is to test your Web site on multiple browsers – Internet Explorer, Firefox, Chrome, Opera, etc. – and on multiple platforms – PC, Mac, Linux, mobile devices – and see how they look and perform. Ensuring your Web site works means it is working for your customers.
Backup – Do you have a backup strategy for your Web site? Or do you even have at least one, single backup copy of your Web site stored someplace secure? If not, then you should. Develop a plan of what to backup and how often. Backups can be as simple as a database dump or export of orders, blog posts or customer data. It should be done on an interval that works for you. One you create it, test the backup plan, as a backup is no good if you can’t restore from it. Fortunately your Web host more than likely has some form of backup procedures in place. But why wait until there’s a problem to fund out they don’t?
There are a lot of things to consider with regards to any Web site, as I have presented before with The State of Your Web Site. These are 3 core areas from which you can build the success of your Web site. If you have any questions or comments on any of these, please enter them in the comments area of this post below. If you need help to make these happen, please contact me personally.
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Video on a website is transforming the way we do business. Do you agree? These are what one website Beema considers benefits http://www.beema.com/benefits.aspx. As a business student, tell me what you think of this technology and using it for business exposure.
Comment by Patsy Rivera
on 01/24/11 at 01:47 PM
As one of google’s heads said: I’d decrease site’s download speed. =)
So the fourth - the speed.
Backup? Wasn’t it necessary before? I mean it doesn’t seem to be a trend but everyday site’s reality especially when you operate with lots of users’ data.
I use Handy Backup for that purpose. What software do you use? Or do you do your backups by yourself?
Comment by
Adrian Disaster
on 03/16/11 at 04:46 AM
So, will you be updating your three words for 2012? Did you find this effective?
Comment by
Emily Brackett
on 12/30/11 at 03:50 PM
Excellent question Emily… for myself, the 2nd and 3rd points were always top of mind. Measure? Not always.
Looking ahead, I do have new words in mind - stay tuned!
mp/m
Comment by
Mike Maddaloni
on 01/02/12 at 09:14 AM
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