With time, nearly every site owner feels that his or her website has lost some of its greatness. In case you too are not satisfied with your website outlook and layout, get ready for redesign. You'll have many questions about the redesign process, so we've prepared some tips to make it easier for you.
There are 3 redesign steps to perform: set goals, plan the site changes, and launch an updated site.
Additional thoughts:
- 1. Goals. First of all, you should have a clear understanding of why you want to redesign your site. Ask yourself: Why do I need to do this? What problems should I solve? The main task is to define, what exactly is missing on your site. Our advice at this point is: you should only be guided by your site audience's needs.
If you consider that the main drawback is that your site looks old-fashioned, you may try to add some trendy accents. For example, you can change colors, menus, or add social buttons. A complete site redesign is a time-consuming process; it may be unnecessary for you in terms of visitor benefit and site conversions. But if your site visitor navigation analysis and visitors' feedback indicate your site has poor usability, then yes, prepare for your site's redesign (or realign).- Plan Changes - It's important to consider changes that you want to see at your new website. Based on your goals, describe the preferred website layout, information structure, changes in site content and SEO-improvements. As a result, other people involved in the upcoming redesign will have a chance to do their job correctly and efficiently to your and their satisfaction.
- 3. Before you launch . . . Before you upload the redesigned site directly to the host, check it thoroughly. Broken links, orphaned pages, missing images, ALTs and META tags – all these should be fixed. There are plenty of services for a site audit nowadays; choose a good one like SEOmoz's
Graphic design
Decide on the style that would perfectly match what your site is all about. Style and quantity of graphic elements, content layout, background and font colors, and font styles – all of these may vary depending on the niche of your project.
Consider a technical factor. Flash looks great and allows a lot of interaction, but it takes much more time to load a Flash page than an HTML one. Java Script menus make a website look convenient and pretty, but the content generated by scripts cannot be effectively read by search engines' bots, which is bad for SEO.
Cross-browser rendering – if you have web analytics activated for your site, check browser statistics for your visitors, watch the overall global trends in browser usage, and define what browsers your site really needs to be compatible with.
Site usability and structure
After you have analyzed visitor statistics and gotten an idea of what pages and content sections of the site require your attention, you can easily plan changes. We've got some tips on how to improve the site theme and structure. You can also find a good checklist on usability corrections here. These corrections will help you make your site accessible and easy-to-use.
Textual information and communication
Redesign is a great chance to review your website content and check if it is up-to-date and if anything is missing. If there's a lack of information – add it. If your visitors cannot find important information on your website, make that more reachable and prominent.
If your site texts naturally encourage communication, add social elements to your website – add comment and poll voting plugins, organize contests, add Twitter and Facebook buttons and add an RSS subscription button. Make people talk to each other! This way they will visit your site more often. If you sell goods and experience a lack of conversions, it's high time to redesign the landing page.
Review images and their ALT tags throughout the website. Update screenshots and photographs, people love fresh stuff.
SEO
Since you're going to remake the site, it's a good chance to check how your site is optimized for search engines. Look through the keywords your pages are optimized for. Use keyword research tools to find out what keywords are most highly queried.
Include the keywords in page names to make the page URLs search engine-friendly.
If you change your site structure, make sure to correctly redirect old pages to the new one.
Update the Sitemap and robots.txt files.
Update the Title and META tags (at least the description tag) for each page. Make them unique for each optimized page.
All the images should be optimized with keywords in the 'alternative text' (ALT) tag.
If you use a visitor tracking system, make sure to move the visitor tracking codes to all pages of the redesigned site.
If you used webmaster tools (Google or Bing), check that your site ownership is still verified (check to see that the specified tag, file, record, or code is present on your site).