Best Web Image

Best Web Image – Web Usability and Design
  • Home
  • Be There and Be Square
  • Website Checklist
  • About BWI
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy

Linking Your Logo Home

Apr 092009
 

Back in March I started a poll asking if you expect the logo to link to the home page. Current results say 93% of you say yes. The reason I started it was because I had a client that was not linking their logo. I told them it’s a good idea, we did it, and now it’s a month later. Here are the results.

The Results

  • Bounce Rate: Up 0.92%
  • Pages Per Visit: Up 6.8%
  • Time on Site: Up 36.33%

Though I was expecting a decrease in the bounce rate, the slight increase was not much to worry about. Appearance in the sites layout did not change at all. We simply made the logo link to the home page. The numbers I did like seeing were the number of pages per visit and the time on site, both went up. Page views went from 5.5 to nearly 6 per visitor, and that slight increase made a dramatic change in time on site. All because of a now linking logo.

Another Factor?

I don’t think so. This now linking logo was the first and only change done on this site in more than a year. It was also the first significant change in site stats that it had in a while. Trend lines were leading a longterm, non-eventful path back to zero. The previous month showed negative numbers for pages per visit and time on site.

Final Check

The last thing I checked for to see if the home page was getting seen more by the average visitor compared to previous months. Previous months showed 16% of all visitors went to the home more than once per session. Now, with the logo linking back home, that number has increased to 27%.

Note to self…link your logo home!

  •  April 9, 2009
  •  Posted by Robert Campbell at 9:42 pm
  •   No Responses
  •   Usability & Design
  •  bounce, home page, linking, logo, pages per visit, poll, time on site

Linking Your Logo Home

Mar 292009
 

A couple of weeks ago I started a poll about having your logo link to your home page. So far, ninety-three percent have said they expect it to link to your home page. Well after taking a few days break from reviewing sites my first one gave me another reason to why linking to your home page with your logo is a good idea. When the menu fails, for whatever reasons, the visitor can at least get back to the home page.

Menu Failed, Logo Saved

Getting back to the grind, my first site to review was this insurance quotes site. Flipping through the site looking for things that need work, I found something interesting about their menu. They had the home page link in the center of the menu, or at least so I thought.

home

When I first saw the menu, without clicking anything I began thinking how unusual that was to have the home page link between other items. It turned out, silly me, that it was a link to their home insurance page. So how the heck do I get back to the home page? Well this was the case where the menu had failed, but by good fortune, they linked their logo to the home page. I was able to navigate back, and start over.

It’s What Visitors Expect

I believe it was Jakob Nielsen that coined the phrase or concept anyhow, that visitors to your website spend most of their time on other sites besides yours. The lesson here is that it can’t hurt to include design techniques used by other popular websites. It’s what people are used to, and doing something like linking to your home page with your logo could be a life saver for your site. It’s what visitors expect.

  •  March 29, 2009
  •  Posted by Robert Campbell at 9:33 am
  •   1 Response
  •   Usability & Design
  •  home, insurance, logo, menu, visitors expect

New Poll – Logo Link

Mar 042009
 

Most sites do it. Does yours? Having your logo link to your home page is a fairly common practice. As a user of a website though, do you expect it to be like that? Does it improve a sites usability at all?

Here is the poll: Do you expect the logo of a website to link to the home page?

Archive of Previous Polls

  •  March 4, 2009
  •  Posted by Robert Campbell at 9:56 am
  •   9 Responses
  •   Usability & Design
  •  home page, link, logo, poll

Logo Basics

Jan 302009
 

Looking to make a logo for your site or company? May I suggest not doing it yourself, and hiring a professional? That is probably a good idea, but if you are simply building a logo for a website that you are having fun with, or have no budget for, then we must do what we must do. Here are a few logo basics to get you on your way.

Description Quality

graffYou must easily be able to describe your logo without having a picture of it. Looking at this link building logo from Graffias Network, you can see it’s pretty easy to describe. It’s simply their name with a few lines (dots indicating lines) of a network. This is a great example because the image compliments the word network. If you look at BWI’s it’s simply a square with the BWI on top. Why the square? Well you will have to read to understand. There is a reason though.

Limit Colors

Don’t go nuts with the colors. Three is a very good number, and if you do a little searching on net for the keyword “Magic of 3″ you will see all sorts of reasoning. Limiting the colors to just three will help you comply with the first rule making it easy to describe, it will make it easier to blend a site theme with it, and it will certainly make it easier when it comes time to putting your logo in print.

Simple in Design

Having a simple design is a key for branding, and compliments the first two rules. By keeping it simple it makes your logo easy to remember. It makes it easier to describe, and it makes it easier to control the number of colors. Using the Graffias site as an example again, they could have just as easily put a picture of a computer or a server on that logo. Would it say the same thing? It might, but do you really need to see a picture of a server to understand what a network is? It may even give the wrong message. It may be perceived as that they fix or build networks. Yikes, you don’t want that.

Building logos doesn’t have to be hard, but before you take on the task yourself make sure to look at some of the big boys, like the Fortune 100 companies. They are banking on their logo, and many of them rely on branding type advertising where their logo is everything.

Graffias Network

On a side note, since I used Graffias Network as a logo example, I thought I would give them a quick mention on what they do. They are a web marketing company, so yes, they put a lot of thought into their logo. They also have a cool directory list for you directory submitters out there.

  •  January 30, 2009
  •  Posted by Robert Campbell at 10:00 am
  •   2 Responses
  •   Graphic Design, Usability & Design
  •  colors, design, graffias, logo, network, simple

Writing Your Tag Line

Nov 252008
 

Hopefully after reading my last two posts, you are on your way to writing a tag line. Don’t have one yet? Don’t know how to write one you say? It’s not always easy.

Herefordshire Canoes has allowed me to use them as an example. If you look at their home page you will see they have a tag line, “Canoes, kayaks, fishing boats, inflatables, paddles, equipment” in great big text. It looks more like a keyword list to me. A good reminder here is to design/write for visitors not search engines. Playing the search engine game came be a difficult task, if this was their intention, and I would simply not play it.

An Example

Here is a great method, search engines like it, and it will read well for your visitors. If they had used, “Canoes, Kayaks and Inflatables”, we would still be able to quickly understand what the site is about, the search engines would get it, and your site would be a little more readable. Why? Because it is short, and it’s to the point. One of the other reasons you want make a short is because it can easily be used as a common anchor tag. Canoes, Kayaks, and Inflatables makes a much better link than “Canoes, kayaks, fishing boats, inflatables, paddles, equipment”. An ideal link should make the anchor text match the title of the link page. Herefordshire needs to take advantage of this. If they were to link to their fishing canoe page, their title should match with “Fishing Canoes”, not “Herefordshire and Borders Canoe Kayak – Fishing” like it currently is. Keywords will match, and visitors are not confused by mixed messages.

So How do You Write One?

So here is what I like to do when coming up with a tag line. I first write a brief, three to four sentence description of the site. I really work on it, making every word count. Then I edit it down to just two sentences. At this point you should really like it. You should even be able to use this as your introduction message. A little hint here. If you look at Herefordshire’s site you will see the word “Welcome” in their introduction message. Welcome would not be a valuable word to a tag line or an introduction message. Seriously use every word as if you are paying for them. At this point it’s still to long though, so now it is time to edit it down to just one short sentence.

By the time you have it down to one sentence we can throw out the grammar, and really define your site to just a few words. Best Web Image, Web Usability and Design. Herefordshire and Borders, Canoes and Kayaks or Canoes, Kayaks, and Inflatables.

A Little Credit

On a final note, and to give Herefordshire a little credit, the tag line “Canoes and Kayaks” is in their logo. A good choice as far as I am concerned. The reason they have created a second tag line on their home page though, is because their more brief tag line was in graphic format. Search engines can’t read it, and that is not good if you are trying to get search engine traffic. My suggestion, make the tag line match the logo and lose the confusion. Density for your preferred keywords will also improve.

  •  November 25, 2008
  •  Posted by Robert Campbell at 2:17 pm
  •   3 Responses
  •   Usability & Design
  •  canoes, introduction message, kayaks, logo, tag line

Defining Your Home Page

Nov 242008
 

define 150x150So on my last post I wrote about the value of defining your site, and if you don’t you could be wasting your time and the money marketing it. So what makes a good example?

Key Elements

There is an endless list, but I recently came across a site that really slam dunks it, Home Information Packs. If you open the thumbnail I have included of the site, you can see the key elements that they included to define it. They have included: their logo, a tag line, a brief introduction, and a mission statement that helps give reasoning why you should use their service. It’s all very clear who they are, what they do, and why you should use them.

Don’t Forget the Other Pages

Now don’t forget the who and what you are on the rest of your site though. Digging around a little more on this Hip Consultant site I notice a little slipping when visiting their blog. If you compare an inner page on their main site, Commercial EPC, you will noticed the tag line is still there, but if you visit their blog, UK Property Blog, site definition is nearly lost. Don’t skip out out your blog, it could be one of the greatest marketing tools you may have. Inner pages are also often the pages that draw your visitors into your site through search engines. Clearly define your site, and avoid that targeted bounce.

  •  November 24, 2008
  •  Posted by Robert Campbell at 2:20 pm
  •   2 Responses
  •   Usability & Design
  •  defining, hip consultants, home information packs, home page, introduction, key elements, logo, mission statement, tag line

Elegant Templates

Nov 052008
 

elegant

In a hurry, and looking to crank out a site in a flash. Elegant Templates might be good source for you. They offer logo templates, web design templates, flash templates, and even some free templates.

Templates can be great, especially in the testing process. It’s a nice way to see your site idea in different formats. Elegant Templates offers templates for a variety of web related items like logos, and flash intros. They have a huge listings of categories for each type of template you need so you should be able to find something that fits your theme.

Using a template, especially a free template, can have a downside though. You will find other sites using the design. I’m not a big fan of that, and if you are like me, don’t worry. Elegant Templates offers templates in exclusive format, meaning you can buy the template, and they have to stop selling it. The price will jump dramatically for this service, but it’s a fair price considering the work involved. Prices for shared web design templates averaged around $60. Comparing to other template sites, a pretty standard to low price.

Anybody using an Elegant Template? Let us know how it went.

  •  November 5, 2008
  •  Posted by Robert Campbell at 12:34 pm
  •   3 Responses
  •   Sites Reviewed
  •  elegant templates, exclusive, flash, free templates, logo, templates, web design

DreamSight Logo

Sep 062008
 

dreamlogo Do you see it? Did you realize what they did? Do you think it’s obvious. Did you know I was hinting for the letter “D”. DreamSight, a web design company has elected to use an image in place of the first letter in their name. Good idea or bad idea?

I saw it right away, but it took a second. I first read to myself, “ReamSight” which might not be so good. I quickly recognized though that the water drop was a “D”, and thought good idea. I ran it by my wife who happened to be sitting by me, and she recognized it as well. She is a litter quicker than me though, so she saw it second one. I wonder if everyone sees it that quickly though, and if they don’t, does it really matter?

What Makes a Logo

There are many aspects to making a great logo, and this post really isn’t about that. It’s about why does DreamSight’s logo work. It works because it obeys a basic logo design rule. The rule is that you must be able to easily describe the logo to another person without them looking at it. You should also be able to describe it in just a few words. “DreamSight Limited”, their logo replaces the “D” with a drop of water facing the text so that it looks like a “D”.

The reason you want it short, and easy to describe is because it makes it easy to talk about. When I say the guys in brown, do you know who I am talking about? UPS, if you didn’t guess. The brown may not be a logo, but it is certainly part of their brand which was created out of their logo. The web design company with the water drop? Now we know it’s Dreamsight. Best Web Image, well I am just a square little box with my acronym in it. Why a square? I’m a web usability analysis, if that doesn’t say square, nothing does. That logo is who you are, so don’t skimp on the time it takes to come up with it.

Did You See It?

On a final note. I mentioned that my wife and I quickly recognized the “D” in their logo. Did you? Leave a comment below!

  •  September 6, 2008
  •  Posted by Robert Campbell at 3:04 pm
  •   18 Responses
  •   Usability & Design
  •  design, dreamsight, logo

Introduction Messages Part II

Jun 052008
 

Back in March I wrote an article about introduction messages. I was doing website reviews today on one of my favorite forums, and in one of the threads someone asked for a review of their new webmaster forum. Well guess what? It was just like a thousand other webmaster forums, dead, boring, no members, and little activity. It takes a lot of work to get any kind of forum working, and in regards to a webmaster forum, seriously, good luck.

The site owner asked for a basic review, and after looking at it for just a couple of seconds I saw the header included a small logo, a guy with glasses, and that is it. No tag line, nothing, just the forum below. I mentioned to him he needs to get a tag line, and gave him a few more tips. He replied back with, “Well the basic tag line for th whole site is ‘Web Resource Community’”. Gag. I’m sorry, but that tag line is not going to cut it.

How to Write an Introduction Message or Tag Line

Here is a great way to write a tag line or introduction message. Write a two sentence description of your site. Be as descriptive as possible. Now sit on it until tomorrow. Now edit your two sentence message to make it a one sentence message. You may need to be very selective with your words, and when you are finished, I am guessing you will be very proud of yourself. At this point the introduction message is usually high quality. Now sit on it for a day. Here comes your tag line. Forget writing a whole sentence, and only using the most absolutely essential words from your one sentence create your tag line. Mine is “Site Usability Testing and Web Development Services”. This originally came from an entire paragraph of material. Odds someone will read the entire tag line instead of whole paragraph? 100%. Odds that someone will skip your site if it is not clearly defined in a twenty seconds or less? 100%.

  •  June 5, 2008
  •  Posted by Robert Campbell at 7:37 am
  •   No Responses
  •   Usability & Design
  •  introduction messages, logo, tag lines

Logo Design Work

May 232008
 

In need of a logo design for your company? ReLogo Design offers custom logo design for your business, website, or whatever.

logosamples 119x300Entering the home page you will immediately see three very attractive, and very professional logo designs. I immediately recognized them as professional because they follow a couple of important rules for logos. The first being, can you easily describe them verbally, and second they represent the companies title. Looking at the first company Logo, Spotburn, I don’t think you can come up with a better logo than that. What does it look like, a flame surrounding a spot. Looking at the second, the logo is dead on as well. The name of the company is Etnernaleds. Verbal description, light bulb with flame. Does it match logo? Yes. Flames often represent eternal, and the light bulb represents the led, or lighting industry. A perfect logo design if it were my company.

It’s important to have a logo that is easily describable because when someone is talking about your company, the logo may be the only thing they can remember. So, in conversation, I could imaging someone talking about Eternaleds saying something like, “Haven’t you seen that those vans driving around with the green light bulb on it?” A good logo often upscales the company name.

Getting back to ReLogo Design though, they offer a lot of tips about logo design. They have a pricing packages that you can select from if you are ready to get things going A.S.A.P., and they also have a gallery to check out what they are capable of. Before signing up for a pricing package though, I would use their order page, or contact page first. The order page lets you input several factors about what you want so the owner can get a good idea what is best for you. The order page doesn’t require you to purchase anything at that time, its just there to get your details, and begin the process. I have a website I am working on, I may have to test them out.

A pretty snazzy looking site I must say, obviously designed by a graphic artist. It’s owned by Repiro Media. I will have to put that site in my future review list.

  •  May 23, 2008
  •  Posted by Robert Campbell at 9:30 am
  •   No Responses
  •   Sites Reviewed
  •  design, logo, logo design, ReLogo
 Older Entries

Get Web Design Tips by E-mail

Recent Posts

  • No Keyword in Your Title: Fail
  • Variable Email Form with Mailto
  • How to Link – PDF
  • When Should You Push The Design Envelope?
  • Blue Text on Black Background- Bet on Complaints

Categories

  • Analytics (47)
  • Business Side (18)
  • BWI (147)
  • Code (54)
  • Graphic Design (12)
  • Server Side (19)
  • Sites Reviewed (146)
  • Software (70)
  • Usability & Design (410)

Top Commenters

  • Ali Imran Ali Imran (5)
  • Curtis Curtis (4)
  • Graphic Design Company in New York Graphic Design Co... (1)
© 2012 Best Web Image Suffusion theme by Sayontan Sinha