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Where do you go for inspiration?

Time for a redesign – not sure where to begin.

         

Hawkgirl

11:07 pm on Jun 30, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



It’s time for a redesign.

I have several sites that need to be redesigned from the ground up. The general subject area will stay the same. The content will be updated. And the designs ... the current designs need to be nuked and I need to start fresh. So really, I’m talking:

  • New links
  • New nav
  • New content
  • New layout
  • New ... everything

I think I’m experiencing a severe case of Usability and SEO Information Overload, though, and I don’t know where to start!

So far, here are the steps I’ve taken:

  • Looked at my competitors’ sites
  • Looked at the top ranking sites in my subject area
  • Looked at the top ranking sites for the style of site (content vs. online store)
  • Stared at a blank screen
  • Played several hands of solitaire
  • Stared at a blank piece of paper
  • Folded a blank piece of paper airplane-style and sent it flying across the room

And I have nothing to show for my efforts!

I see so many poorly designed, hard-to-use sites in my space that it’s easy for me to say, "See that? That is what I don't want." But when it comes down to it, I don't have any inspiration for what I do want.

So where do you start, when you’re ready to design a new site? How do you keep things fresh and exciting, without reinventing the wheel? How do you design a new site to make it both (a) familiar and usable to your audience, and (b) more than just a rehash of something that was inadequate to begin with?

Give me a site already built and I'll tell you what's wrong with it and how to fix it. But building a site from the ground-up, incorporating all of the best practices? I need inspiration!

Namaste

11:20 am on Jul 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



1. Start with a blank sheet
2. Draw page layouts in rough
3. Look at them from the USERS point of view
4. Re-Design
5. Look from USERS point of view
6. Re-design
7. Look at them from the USERS point of view
8. Re-design - you get the idea
9. Pick 2-3 colours
10. Populate with only those colours. Stay within the pallette of those colours
11. SEO
12. Redesign
13. Debug
14. Launch

A site is never finished. It is always BEGUN. It is a living creature. After you 1st launch your site, it will be vs. 0.1, you need to work on it to bring to 1.0 (minimum qulity)...then you add features, thus creating vs. 1.1 and so on.

Looking at other sites is NOT a good idea. 99% of sites out there have poor usability. You need to start with a clean sheet...only that will work.

You can get almost every answer from yourself. It requires more effort than looking externally, but the answers from within are ALWAYS better than from looking externally. That is becasue each situation is unique, so ONLY YOU can answer your situation.

Cyborgia

12:05 pm on Jul 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



i've found that since i have move to my current company which is very straight laced and boring in terms of design, that my design work outwith is more reflecting the style of design i like, it's actually getting to the point where if i didn't do my design work outwith of my day job, i'd probably quit through sheer frustration.

For the most part i take inspiration from photography, check out stock image libraries which are searchable by them have a look around the ideas will start to come, shape colour contrast etc it's all there, I also look around graphic design websites, portfolios, it's not cheating to base your design on another site because 9 times out of 10 it won't be anywhere close by the time you've finished. Just gives a good starting point.

If design inspiration still doesn't come, build the html skeleton around the content, that'll atleast give you a frame to work with. I swear by a bit of cypress hill or anything funky wihile designing, haven't had a bad design with cypress hill and a few beers yet, good design doesn't come when your stressed ;oP

most of all simple sites are usually the ones that look the best don't over design it.

Cyborgia

12:08 pm on Jul 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



A pencil and paper is also very handy, doodling gets the ideas flowing

my site: <snip>

[edited by: Woz at 12:42 pm (utc) on July 3, 2003]
[edit reason] no self URLs please, TOS#13 [/edit]

bwelford

12:46 pm on Jul 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



This is a fascinating question. Some suggest "jumping in" to some activity, that will hopefully get the creative juices flowing. Others suggest almost a strategic approach of standing back, seeing a bigger picture and then working down from that. Obviously each person has their own way of working that works best for them.

For those with the "big picture" approach, you may find a thinking approach labelled SOS (Survey, Observe and Solve) is helpful. You can find more details in a white paper entitled How to Think Better [strategicmarketingmontreal.ca].

Barry Welford

rogerd

1:07 pm on Jul 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member



Welcome to WebmasterWorld, Cyborgia! I like stock photo sites, too - a lot of the images are straightforward and uninspiring, but sometimes you'll run across some really clever, creative stuff that is relevant to what you are working on or at least points you in a direction.

In my experience, there isn't always one foolproof approach for igniting that creative spark. Sometimes just looking at the site's products or objective will cause a design to pop into mind; other times, a scan of web portfolios may trigger an idea. The one certain thing is that if a particular approach isn't working, it's a lot better to move on to a totally different approach and see what happens.

prplspud

2:03 pm on Jul 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I either look through glossy magazines (especially the ads) for color combinations or unusual design elements and I visit www.coolhomepages.com where Web sites are grouped into different categories. I find inspiration everywhere from television ads to billboards to flower gardens.

I completely understand and sympathize. Try giving yourself permission to play for the afternoon and you may find your creative juices are recharged.

Good luck!

dragonlady7

2:26 pm on Jul 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Of course, the worst thing is when you're at work, and you need to do something creative for work, and the boss has a habit of sneaking up behind you and staring at your computer screen and asking "so what're you doing?" I know most bosses do this from time to time, but mine is actually pathological about it. He wears quiet shoes on purpose and it seems to give him his only joy in life. But it distracts, annoys, and startles the living hell out of me.

So I'm imagining myself, as I'm reading these, following some of these suggestions. Imagining myself sitting at my desk with a vodka and iced tea, cranking some Skynrd (or something else inappropriate for work, pick your flavor), zoning out with a stock photography site on the monitor and a bunch of glossy magazines on my desk, making collages as I stare blankly into the pretty, pretty colors. My boss sneaks up, startles the hell out of me, I throw my glue pot and accidentally stab him in the eye with the scissors in my tipsy startlement, and not only get fired, but sued and thrown in jail. Alternately, I manage not to poke anyone with scissors or douse them in glue, and he gets to ask me the inevitable "so whaddaya workin' on?" question, and I'm so far zoned-out on creative juices that all I can answer is "pretty, pretty colors... pretty colors..."

I just haven't figured out how to really get creative at work. I mostly do boring stuff there. I can zone out at home because my boyfriend almost never sneaks up on me, and he knows that if he does he deserves what he gets.

Visit Thailand

2:40 pm on Jul 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Interesting thread and am sure as can be seen by the number of posts something that affects us all.

When you have decided your deign get a person who knows little about the net, but know roughly what to do and ask them to find a,b,c and d on your site.

Watch them do it and see what they do. I find a lot of people try to click on things that should not be clicked etc.

dragonlady7

2:45 pm on Jul 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Once I have my personal site up, I'm going to have my mom be the tester. She's sure she knows everything that anyone needs to know about the Internet...
actually I might have my dad do it, because he knows just as much but thinks he knows less. A little easier to deal with. ^.^

It's a very good idea to have someone test it, and one I have never done enough of. Of _course_ I know where to find everything; I _put_ it there. Sigh.

GHSnow

8:15 pm on Jul 3, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Hawkgirl,

Take a tip from a pro:

"Good artists copy. Great artists steal"

– Picasso

I am not advocating you violate any copyright or intellectual property laws, or do anything unethical. A great website, is never original. Or at least it starts out that way. It is a compilation of the best ideas reinterpreted in a new vision.

Need Inspiration, go to pixelmill.net.

GHSnow

Hawkgirl

12:18 pm on Jul 4, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Well, I can tell you I've already figured out how to redesign these sites. Haven't really put the design into reality yet, but I have definitely found the spirit.

Thanks guys!

rogerd

2:46 pm on Jul 4, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member



Thanks for starting this one rolling, Hawkgirl. Some creative ideas got thrown out, a few lurkers were drawn into the fray... great thread! I wonder if we could support a "creativity" forum here... For general questions like the one that launched this, and maybe specific ones like, "I'm trying to come up with a creative way to showcase products for a cotton-ball maker..."

fathom

2:54 pm on Jul 4, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member Top Contributors Of The Month



"Good artists copy. Great artists steal"

– Picasso

This is an ongoing debate, and so true.

There are truly very few original thinkers out there, as digitalghost once pointed out "de novo thinker".

Excellent thread! :)

limbo

3:12 pm on Jul 4, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I have been compiling a notebook for years - it's in its third volume. Basically it is full of ideas, notes, doodles, drawings, urls, snippets, prints, and anything else I think would be an inspiration.

I picked up the habit at art college some years ago and is a great way to record ideas and then resource them when you are stuck for creativity.

SlyGuy

9:58 pm on Jul 4, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I wonder if we could support a "creativity" forum here...

Excellent idea, Rogerd, an area for members to share creative ideas and questions.

I second the motion.

- Chad

claus

2:25 pm on Jul 5, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



>> I wonder if we could support a "creativity" forum here

subscribe!

Maybe the term "creativity" is a little misleading, though. I see a lot of creativity in alost all forums, from the use of htaccess files to PR-improvement.

I would suggest that "Web design and layout issues" might be better, just to narrow it down. That said, perhaps "design" is better, as layout is already covered in the CSS threads - eg: "One column for small windows, two columns for large windows "

/claus

Hawkgirl

3:31 pm on Jul 5, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



My brain must function better when I'm not trying to use it.

I dreamed about my site redesign last night. Must've been sparked by all of the stuff in this thread.

I had a picture in my mind of what I wanted to do with my redesign ... and then last night while I was sleeping it all came together.

I wonder if we could support a "creativity" forum here...

We definitely have enough creative people - but I wonder if the topic is sustainable. I'd love to have a place more specific than "Webmaster General" for this kind of thing. It doesn't quite fit into Content and Copywriting ... it doesn't quite fit into Site Graphics and Multimedia Design, either ... :)

rogerd

4:43 pm on Jul 5, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member



I wonder if the topic is sustainable

That was my concern, too, Hawkgirl. This has been a great thread, but I think a forum would have to deal with solving specific creative problems rather than general discussion of the creative process. I'll let *you* suggest this one... If I bug Brett with another great forum idea, he'll ban me for life. ;)

amznVibe

6:26 am on Jul 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



I stopped collecting these about 5 years ago (was embarassing in my "old age") but rave flyers have got to be some of the most inspiring and creative little works of art I have ever seen (I have an entire wall wallpapered with them :) ) Most of the time these flyer artists don't worry about copyright infringments so its an ultimate mix of immitation combined with true talent... great sources of inspiration for websites, to just browse through them...

They tend to have entire themes... some are as small as business cards, others fold out to an entire poster size...

DMOZ has an entire section just for rave flyers!
[dmoz.org...]

vincevincevince

2:29 pm on Jul 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



first go to the site most similar and successful to the one you want to build...

look long and hard at it...

start building yours :$

or am I the only one to do that?

waldemar

2:54 pm on Jul 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I dreamed about my site redesign last night

Another way, creativity pops in. When I keep thinking about the site when I go to bed, chances are sometimes I dream of it and most of the times it makes sense (I dreamed of an alogrithm once which was an enlightning experience). Occasional beers before that procedure improves the qualitity of the creativity.

Man about The web

10:41 pm on Jul 6, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Where do I go for inspiration?

The bar ;)

Robino

2:59 am on Jul 7, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



Sorry if someone mentioned this:
coolhomepages.com

sugarkane

11:12 am on Jul 7, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Senior Member 10+ Year Member



One starting point I've used is labelling on consumer goods - cosmetics, foods, cigarettes, whatever. A good label will usually be eyecatching, and focussed in terms of the information/image it conveys. Often, it'll kick off an idea for a logo, which then defines the rest of the site's look.

Syren_Song

3:25 pm on Jul 8, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Take a walk,
in the woods,
around the block,
to the zoo,
to the playground,
to the ocean or a lakeshore,
to a construction site,
or anywhere else you can think of.

While you're there, try to look at everything through the eyes of a child.

Don't just look and see trees. Look at the branches, the bark, the leaves, the bugs, the colors, the shapes, the shadows.

Don't just look at the giraffes. See the way their spots are placed, the different shades of the spots (they're not quite all the exact same color, you know), the lumps and bumps on their bodies, the way they move when they stand and eat leaves from the treeetops, the way they pick up something from the ground, the way they scratch and itch.

Aw heck - you get the idea.

Syren

rogerd

5:38 pm on Jul 8, 2003 (gmt 0)

WebmasterWorld Administrator 10+ Year Member



Several posters have suggested alcohol as a creativity enhancer. They probably didn't mean that the way a client of mine did. He brought in a beer can (empty) and said he really liked the color scheme, and could we incorporate it in his site? I had the can sitting on my desk for a while, which drew many odd looks.

As sugarkane suggests, consumer goods can be good starting points. Presumably, the big firms spend tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars on a product package design, so why not learn from their their work?

jordanm

5:45 pm on Jul 8, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



something I found that worked for me on my last design was to simplify everything to blocks of color and circles. Create a blank PS or Fireworks page the size of your site page. Then start placing blocks and rectangles, circles, etc on the page. Move them around until you have a shape that catches your attention. Then begin working with specifics such as text blocks, nav blocks, etc. Worked for me on my last site.

lefou

12:07 pm on Jul 9, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



Great thread! One of the most interesting and rich with ideas I've seen ever:)

I'm relatively new in this forum, but not as new as it might appear;) Only that since I found this wonderful place on the Web, I just spend sometimes hours, browsing through the different topics in WebmasterWorld. I don't have a specific question just now, so I just listen what others have to say... but I couldn't resist the desire in this thread!

I'm also sure when I have questions, I'll find the answers right here, in this community (I'm just a beginner and I can code a bit of html and css).

What I can say about inspiration? I think maybe the Mountains are one of the best places to go, when you feel tired, when you lack ideas, when you think you cannot invent nothing more... In such a time, just leave the city, go somewhere high, where air is pure and Silence has its meaning, and don't try to think about anything. If you started or must start a project soon, don't think about it. Just relax. And you'll see, when you go back to your work, ideas will come, as if by themselves.

Truth is, we NEVER stop thinking... but when we go in such a place, all the process goes to the background, and that's why it helps.

At least, Mountains help me.

Of course, sometimes all you need maybe something very different - like coupla cans of good beer, or a walk in the moonlight, or simply a nap.

But for me, Mountains are the Inspiration:) Maybe because when up there, we're closer to Heaven? ;-)

Snake da Sniper

12:37 pm on Jul 9, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



To be honest IMO a good website only needs two things.

Good content & easy navigation, I've seen plenty of sites that are eye catching with content that dosen't provide enough information or has very poor navigation & on the latter people will click off to another site, I know I do.

I tend to plonk the content on a page then build around it, ususaly several times until I'm satisfied it's right. Whoever invented cut & paste is a god!

antipodes

12:12 pm on Jul 12, 2003 (gmt 0)

10+ Year Member



I always look at a site from the products point of view. Yep, the product.

Take for example my latest project for a cycle shop. This shop sells mountain bikes that vary in price but are upwards of 7K. for the elite series. I looked at all the competitors sites and they all had difficulty in presenting the product. A cycle is an odd shape but that's no excuse for something small and blurry.

After working on the design for a while I began to understand why they had problems. The correct pixel value was just too (way to big) big an image for a website, both in terms of image space and download speed (in spite of optimization of pics).

So I utilised the modular approach and highlighted the essential features of each cycle and cropped them at that point. The click through leads to the full image on a page on its own. The site was powerful and graphic in its representation of a high quality bike.

I often work with the modular approach because I believe people need to see the product at its absolute best when it costs a lot of money. What you see is what you get. Present poorly and the products lose out in the process.

So. Product first design-wise. Customer-viewer-target market needs second. Pleasing the client is not my main priority because there is sometimes a gulf between what a client considers cool and what is practical and effective for the audience.

Does any of that help? Yea bit long winded. You can sticky me for the address of the cycle site :)

antipodes

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