More on Website
Design
by Tim Smith, PhD, May 7, 2002
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While some design firms produce nice looking sites
using Flash, these same techniques force limitations that call their
value into doubt. Specifically, the limitations affect search engines,
multi-windows, and CAP technology.
On the search engine front, web crawlers and search
engines have difficulty finding text within web sites that rely
heavily upon frames, Flash, and other advanced tools. (lhttp://www.webpage-promotions.com/webpage_promotion_design.html)
Businesses use websites as a touch-point with their audience. When
audiences search for a business, they resort to common search engines
like Google or Yahoo. Unfortunately, frames and Flash sites are
difficult for the search engines to list and sites that are heavily
dependent upon these techniques will have a lower ranking within
the results of a search. Hence, fewer visitors will discover the
businesses with heavy Flash sites.
The second issue is one of multi-windowing. In using
browsers with low download speeds, it is often more efficient to
open five windows at once when looking for information. For instance,
I like to open the About, Services/Products, and Contact pages all
at once, in separate windows, when doing firm level research. (Right
click, Open in New Window command.) Then, I might open a few more
pages in new windows to see if I can find out about the details
of the product or management team. I noticed that in web sites designed
exclusively in Flash, such an activity is not possible. This greatly
slows my acquisition of information and decreases my desire to research
the firm.
The third issue is with CAP technology, AKA "Cut-And-Paste."
Often, readers of web sites would like to capture a sentence or
graphic and reference it in a document. With Flash sites, the method
for grabbing text and pasting it within Word isn't obvious. Users
can't easily cut and paste text to an email for spontaneous communication.
Hence, if a site visitor wanted to share some information, that
information would have to printed-out in its entirety and hand delivered.
Yet, throwing the baby out with the bath water isn't
the right answer. For example, BuzzBait's customers have taken a
more conservative approach to using some of the advanced tools in
websites. Their clients use design and Flash skills to make a small
portion of their website. This enhances the aesthetic of the site
while leaving the bulk within standard HTML protocol. Overall, it
is easier to use for us plebes with 56 K dial up lines.
Someday broadband will come, but even broadband won't
solve all of the problems of Flash sites.
---
Tim Smith, PhD is a principal at Wiglaf, a Market Research and Sales
and Marketing Strategy consultancy serving tech-driven businesses
operating in business markets. Small and medium sized businesses
select Wiglaf for our quantitative and fact driven approach. www.wiglaf.biz.
----
The May Report, TECH BUSINESS BRIEFS, May 7, 2002
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