Great Website Design in Zanzibar
Four Pillars of a Great Website:
Purpose, Structure, Functionality & User Experience
Simply IT is an international Digital Marketing Agency in Zanzibar. We create websites for clients across East Africa and Europe in diverse business sectors and in a variety of languages. We have a team of experienced web developers, designers and Digital Marketing experts who have worked professionally for many years. We apply the same 4 basic principles to all the websites we develop.
Simply IT, Global
First Things First:
Understand the way Websites are Found
Search Engines (e.g. Google)
Before we launch into the four principles for creating great websites, lets pause and think about why and where websites are found.
It seems almost too obvious to state; but visitors to a website have to search, click a link (URL), or enter a link (Domain name) to get to your website e.g. www.simplyit.co.tz
Most people use a search engine in a browser, like Google or Bing. These search engines analyse the content of your website to allow people to find your website using key-phrases like “Best Hotel in Dar es Salaam”, “Computer Store Kenya”, “Events in Stone Town”, “Online Shop for Spices in Germany” etc.
It is worth noting that most of these searches are in English, but many are not!
Good Website Developers are very experienced in how these search engines work and the best way to create a website that will be highly ranked for these various keywords so your website will be found. At Simply IT we also make sure clients rank highly in other languages also.
The process of getting your website to the top of these search engines organically (no need to pay for Google Ads) is called Search Engine Optimisation.
Visitors will be using all types of devices to view your website, laptops, mobile smartphones and tablets. So good websites need to be developed to display well on all sizes and dimensions of screens. This is called ‘responsiveness’.
Creating a website using the ‘4 pillars of Good Website Design’ helps websites rank well on Search Engines and work well on all devices.
It is worth noting that although most searches are carried out in English, a good percentage are carried out in another language.
Did you know: • 20% of online searches carried out in local languages that are not English, says Google • There are 5.9 million Google searches per minute • Top-ranking Google search results see a 22.4% click-through rate • 63% of Google searches occur on mobile in the U.S. • Google accounts for 91.54% of the global search engine market • 66% of web traffic referrals come from Google • Most Google searches are three to four words long • Featured snippets appear twice as often on desktop as on mobile • 46% of Google searches have local intent Google’s Shopping Graph has over 35 billion product listings • 50% of the U.S. population uses voice-enabled search each day
4 Pillars of Great Website Design
Simply IT supports the work of the Daraja Foundation in Zanzibar – Giving young people a family and a future
#1 Purpose
A very common mistake people make when creating a website is they forget to focus on the purpose of the website.
Most websites are informative, but often there are many diverse purposes for having a website:
- Inform
- Make a Booking
- Buy or rent something
- Contact the business
- Donate or volunteer
- Sign up to a newsletter or fill in a form
- Sell or borrow something
- Take a Test/Survey
- Sign up as a Member
These are what we call ‘CALLS TO ACTION‘.
What is it you want a visitor to DO when they come to your website?
The number of times a business owner starts out knowing the focus of their website, only to lose that focus in the process of making the website.
Never lose the focus of the main REASON(s) for the website. Keep asking yourself: “Is the purpose of the website still crystal clear?”
#2 Structure
The structure of your website refers to the way that your content is organized and presented to your audience. This includes the layout, navigation, and overall design of your website. A well-structured website should be easy to navigate, visually appealing, and aligned with your brand’s messaging and goals.
To create a solid structure for your website, start by identifying
A. TARGET AUDIENCE
Your target audience and what they’re looking for. Consider the types of content and features that will be most relevant to them, and organize your website in a way that makes it easy for them to find what they need.
B. THE 10-SECOND RULE
Use clear and concise language, and avoid cluttering your website with unnecessary information or design elements that hide the main things.
Visitors that come to any of your pages take about 5-10 seconds on average to decide if they will stay. In those 10 seconds they will ask themselves about your website things like:
- Who are you: “Am I on the right site?”
- What do you do: “Do I need this business/product/service?”
- Who are you targeting: “Is this business/product/service right for me?”
- Why us: “What’s in this for me?”
- What’s the call to action: “Now what do I do?”
All this in just 10 seconds? Yes!
As users rush through web pages, they have time to read only a quarter of the text on the pages they actually visit (let alone all those they don’t). So, unless your writing is extraordinarily clear and focused, little of what you say on your website will get through to customers.
The website’s clear, clean, direct branding and messaging should tell the visitor all he/she needs to know as they scan it in 10 seconds.
So a brief, well-crafted positioning statement above the fold (on the first screen or the first paragraph) should answer all these questions.
So that means the Logo, the menu, the Hero-Banner (main banner image), Titles (Headers) and first paragraph are very important on every page of every website.
C. ELEMENTS
This brings us to the elements or sections of a website.
Before jumping into the individual pages of a website it is useful to define the elements of the whole website. Always start with the
• Call to Action: Buttons/Links
Buttons or links to take a user to the Booking Page. Remember that a visitor to the website may NOT arrive on the homepage of that website so where to place the important links to the Calls To Action? One the Menu? On the Footer?
• Call to Action: Forms
Some may be obvious like, the Contact Us Form, or the Booking Form, or the Room Availability Form, Vision Statement, or What We Do section.
List out all the sections that you think are necessary on the website.
• Menu
The main menu is probably the most important part of a website for creating a good user experience. Sometimes the best person to develop the menu is someone who does not know everything about the business. Or ask a few people to try out the menu and get feedback. People may have different ideas but if you start to hear the same negative feedback, like “I can’t find out where to book a room” or I had to click too many times to get to what I needed, then change the menu.
• Pages
Pages are generally referenced directly from the menu, so they should have clear names, be listed in categories hierarchically.
So for example if you have two hotels, then you may need a page for hotel, separate pages facilities, rooms, amenities, excursions under each hotel.
• Sections
Sections are very useful for dividing up the pages, allowing visitors to see at a glance what the section is about and are often good ways to summarise information with a button to click TO LEARN MORE. Sections can have unique designs like a carousel, or image-grid etc.
In conclusion it is good to make a structured map of how a website content is divided up into calls to action, pages and sections. The structure is the single most common pillar that is the cause of poorly performing websites.
#3 Functionality
Functionality refers to the technical aspects of your website that enable it to work as intended. This includes the code that powers your website, as well as any plugins, integrations, or other tools that you use to enhance its capabilities.
To ensure that your website is functional, it’s important to work with experienced web developers who can build a website that is optimized for speed, security, and performance. This may involve using responsive design techniques to ensure that your website works well on different devices, as well as implementing robust security measures to protect against hacks and other cyber threats.
#4 User Experience
Have you ever visited a website so intuitive you thought it knew what you were thinking? Or used an online tool so seamlessly it was as easy as wearing a glove? That’s the power of great user experience (UX) design—and, trust me, it’s not a coincidence.
Consider the reverse for a moment. Have you been frustrated by a disorganized clunky website or a really confusing online tool? You click to leave, don’t you? Your visitors do too, and they might never come back.
The user experience (UX) is perhaps the most important pillar of a great website. But if you have done the work on the first 3 pillars this one is made so much easier! UX refers to the overall experience that your website provides to your visitors, including how easy it is to use, how engaging the content is, and how well it meets their needs and expectations.
To optimize the user experience on your website, focus on creating a clean, intuitive design that prioritizes ease of use and accessibility. Make sure that your website is optimized for speed and performance, and that your content is engaging, relevant, and aligned with your audience’s interests and needs.
UX is also becoming more and more important with the growing influence of AI content. So we try to make it a priority for all the websites we build.hire
Quote from How to Optimize User Experience Using UX Best Practices
Conclusion
By focusing on the four pillars of a great website – purpose, structure, functionality, and user experience – you can create a website that truly stands out and drives results for your business. Whether you’re building a new website from scratch or revamping an existing one, be sure to pay close attention to each of these pillars to ensure that your website is effective, user-friendly, and engaging.
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