Forum Moderators: mack
Paper stage.
I have a rough idea on paper of the overall aim of the website. Try to work out as many problems at this stage by thinking ahead. Have a clear idea of how the website will work, how it will generate revenue and how the revenue generation side of things will be a part of the website.
Try drawing a rough template for how you want the site to look. keep it very basic but allow for all required elements. You should try to make the template fit in as well as possible with the business plan. For example if your revenue generation process involves using adverts then it would be helpful if the advert area was part of the template, as opposed to being stuck in place later. This comes down to thinking ahead and forward planning.
I usually draw a flow chart showing the pages of the website. This really helps me to work out the overall navigation of the website. Being able to see it all in front of you on a sheet of paper will work a lot better than trying to work out the navigation once all the pages have been placed on a computer.
Content
Content preparation is a very very important. Make sure all your content is good quality. Proof read it over and over, and better still have a third party proof read it.
Building
If you have got this far and have a clear idea of exactly how the site will work then you are ready to start the actually construction. Because you already worked out the template ideas on paper this will help you get started building them for real. To be honest you will almost certainly make changes but this is a better idea then sitting down at a blank screen and thinking "what now?"
When you have a template ready for use you can add the content. At this stage you can make sure you have the formatting and layout correct.
Make sure you stick to your structured plan when building your pages. If you planned the navigation properly you should have no problems implementing the structure you designed on paper into the site you are now building.
Now I essentially have a finished site, now for testing. If the website is on your computer you are able to test it out pretty much as you would if it was on the web. Testing is easy, testing properly however takes time. You need to check your links, navigation, quality of copy. It is always a lot easier if you get a second opinion. Very often we are blind to our own errors.
Only after you have ironed out all the faults should you go live with your website.
Further work
Once you have a website life that's not the end of your job. You still need to do all the directory submissions and link building. this takes time but is well worth the effort.
This is just my way of doing things.
What do you do when planning?
Mack.
My Web Site Design Algorithm (expanded for clarity?):
Note: I design for others - am trying to enjoy life - will leave the 60*60*24*365.25 and the millions in ad revenue to you youngsters.
Research:
As necessary. Can be simple or very complex. I treat "database design" as totally separate from the "website design" and as separate but possibly concurrant contracts.
First Test: