|
| One Hour HTML -
Learn the language of the web in just 60 minutes. |
The Smaller, the Better: Avoiding Graphical Overload
by Anthony Stai
When you're designing your website, it's easy to start loading it up
with graphics, creating images that you think look good and piecing
them together to make a design. While it's a tempting way to do things,
you have to try to avoid it as much as possible – otherwise,
you'll end up with graphical overload. Why is that a bad thing? Here's
why.
It Takes Too Long to Download.
The first reason to cut down on graphics is that the more there are,
and the larger they are, the longer it will take each of your pages to
download. Now that many people have broadband connections, they're much
more impatient than they used to be when it comes to waiting for pages
to download: in most cases, you have around five seconds before your
visitors start hitting the Back button.
What can you do about this, apart from using fewer pictures? Well, you
can also make sure that you resize your images in a graphics editor so
that their file sizes get smaller. If you just resize images by
specifying a width and height in HTML or CSS, then they still take just
as long to download as they would have, without the extra time serving
any useful purpose.
Also, you might want to consider turning on compression in your image
editor: JPEG files especially can often be compressed by 20-30% before
there's any noticeable difference to the human eye. Try out different
formats and compression levels to see what works.
It Gets Too Busy.
If you've ever tried to use a site that has more than three or four
different images on the page at once, you'll know what I mean by that.
Your eye is forced to dart all over the page, not sure where to focus:
the page simply has too much going on at once. Instead of making your
site busy by loading it up with graphics, you should try your best to
keep it as simple as you can.
One thing I would suggest is that you take a look at the front pages of
a few newspapers, and notice how they only ever lead on one picture.
Putting two pictures on a front page is considered to be very bad: the
reader doesn't know where to look. That goes double for websites, where
the viewable area is much smaller than a newspaper page. Even if you
have more than one thing to say, it's better to 'go large' with one
picture and then explain the other things in text, next to it or below
it.
It Distracts from the Content.
Don't forget that most of the people on your site are there to get
information, not to look at your graphics. Too many graphics will
distract visitors from your content, or, worse, even hide it from them,
forcing them to look around before they find it. Any time your graphics
get in the way of people using your site, you're suffering from
graphical overload.
What's the solution to this one? You simply need to think about whether
all those graphics are really needed – the chances are, they're
not. Don't just add graphics because you think they look nice. Every
graphic on your site should have a purpose.
An Exception: Photo Galleries.
If photography is the purpose of your site, then you obviously
shouldn't be afraid to put a lot of graphics on one page. However, you
really shouldn't just post large photographs one after the other.
Instead, you need to provide thumbnails: smaller versions of each
image, with the visitor being able to click on one to make it larger.
This lets you fit more pictures on each page, and avoids visitors
having to spend their time and your bandwidth downloading files that
they don't want to see. You can even add 'back' and 'next' navigation
to each photo page, so the visitor doesn't have to go back to the
thumbnails to see your next photo, if they want to see them all.
About
The Author:
Anthony Stai invites you to
take your
website to the next level. Get one of the best Search Engine
Optimization (SEO) books on the market for Free! Learn the techniques
that differentiate the amateurs from the pros. Get your book at http://www.makemoneyonline4you.com/seo.html
|
|
|
|