Do I need to live in San Diego to hire Websites San Diego to do my website?
Here at Websites San Diego we serve San Diego and THE WORLD. We can help you no matter where you are located!
How much will a website cost me?
Bottom line is, we can have your initial** business Website up in 30 minutes for 50 bucks. Give us a shout! With that said also know that each website is different depending on it's size, scope and other specific details. Generally, you can count on it costing from $200 to $2000 for a small personal or business account.
Hosting
Take advantage of the fastest, most secure hosting you can find anywhere. We have no porn running on our servers so your search engine ratings are not compromised. We're waiting for you to jump on our dedicated server in a closed network 24x7x365 tech-supported environment. And don't forget to take advantage of our fantastic SEO. (Search Engine Optimization)
With Websites San Diego Web Services, we offer you a simple, but in-depth development process that will ensure a smooth, speedy and successful launch of your new site or blog. Our Web Services division has built its reputation on a mind blowing customer experience (with over 200 happy customers to date).
Our team is both personable and knowledgeable; they bring the energy and ability that ensures success. We build Living Websites; which we believe are a solution to remain competitive in today's online world. Give us a try and experience a solution delivered in an old fashioned way where ability, customer service, and integrity are the key ingredients. Call (951) 623-6715 today to get started or click HERE to send us an email.
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Ever been on a web site trying to do something that you were supposed to be able to do
on that site and couldn't? That's not a good web site then. It doesn't matter how good
it looks, how much effort went into the color scheme, or how slick the JavaScript code
is that makes the little rollover buttons, if I can't find what I'm looking for, then
it's not a good web site, it's a bad web site.
So what makes for a good design versus a bad design? The following points will help to
make the difference clear:
| Features |
Good Design |
Bad Design |
| Site Entrance |
A simple website homepage that is easy to enter
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Anything, including flash pages and other portal pages that must first be clicked on to enter your site.
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| Organization and Navigation |
A well-organized website has a site structure that is easy to understand and navigate through
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A confusing site structure, navigation that is difficult to understand and use, and dead links.
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| Purpose and Intent |
A clear explanation on the website's home page detailing what your site is about and what visitors can do on and get from your site. A ‘mission statement’ on your website's home page can help to achieve this, as can appropriately constructed title tags and page descriptions. This must also include information on the website's homepage detailing what can be found on other pages in your site.
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No clear message on the homepage allowing visitors to immediately know what your site is about, what can be found on your other pages and how they can find the information they need. If they must read through several pages just to find out what your site is about, you will most likely lose them.
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| Content |
Lots of valuable, relevant content that provides your visitors with exactly what they’re looking for. Website content must be easy to read and interesting.
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Bad content that is difficult to understand or read, irrelevant, or doesn’t provide visitors with what they want. Pages that have been stuffed with keywords, thus making them unreadable, will drive visitors away.
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| Text |
Easy-to-read website text is text that is of a large enough size, that is a color which contrasts with the background, and that is an appropriate style of font. A bold font or different color can be used to highlight important text.
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Hard-to-read text is text that is too small or text that is a color which does not contrast with the background or is set against a busy background. Also, different fonts can prove hard to read.
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| Download Times |
Fast-loading website pages are essential and can be ensured with proper use of or limited use of images, flash and other graphics. Large or multiple website images should be given their own page with an appropriate page name and description so that visitors understand the potential for slow downloads.
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Slow-loading pages which can force visitors to go elsewhere. Using flash, too many or too large images or other graphics can slow download times. Avoid the use of plug-ins that visitors must download in order to view a page.
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** - very basic design, domain name, and content.