Atlantic Business Technologies, Inc.

Category: Web Design

  • The Most Important Step in a Website Redesign Project Plan

    The Most Important Step in a Website Redesign Project Plan

    You want to redesign your website! It’s tempting to want to jump right in and skip to design and development. However, skipping this important step could lead to costly delays, budget overruns and poor user experience. In fact, according to IBM, fixing problems in development costs 10 times more than fixing them in design, and fixing them after launch costs 100 times more. What’s the secret behind every smooth, on-time, and on-budget, user-friendly and all around successful website redesign project plan? 

    It’s the often-overlooked discovery phase

    In web and portal development, this early stage sets the foundation for everything that follows. It’s the hidden ingredient that ensures your project aligns with both your business goals and user needs, all while maintaining the budget and timeline that you sought to begin with. Without it, your project risks falling short of expectations, whether through misaligned priorities, user frustration, or missed opportunities.

    What is the Discovery Phase?

    The discovery phase is the first and the most important step in any web development project. It’s the process where we dig deep into understanding both business objectives and user needs. The discovery phase is about balancing these two critical elements—because a product that only satisfies one without the other is destined to fall short. By the end of this phase, we develop a detailed blueprint that guides the design, development, and launch of your product.

    At its core, discovery is about uncovering the following:

    • Business goals: What are the business drivers behind the redesign? Are you looking to increase conversions, improve brand perception, or enhance functionality? Defining these goals early ensures your redesign stays on track.
    • User needs: Who are your users, and what do they expect from your website? Gathering insights about user behaviors, pain points, and preferences will guide the redesign toward a user-friendly solution.
    • Technical requirements: What are the technical constraints or opportunities that need to be addressed? Whether it’s integrating with existing systems or ensuring site scalability, the discovery phase ensures your project plan is technically sound.

    The Benefits of a Comprehensive Discovery Phase

    Skipping or minimizing the discovery phase can lead to a number of issues that derail your website redesign. However, when done correctly, the discovery phase sets the foundation for a successful project. Let’s look at the benefits of a discovery process.

    1. Meeting Deadlines

    Without discovery, unforeseen technical challenges or unclear business goals are almost guaranteed to arise during development. These issues cause wasted time and missed deadlines as the team scrambles to address problems mid-project.
    With a clear roadmap from discovery, the development team can work more efficiently, reducing ambiguity and minimizing the need for rework or adjustments mid-project. This ensures the project stays on schedule.

    1. Budget

    Projects that skip discovery often face scope creep, where new features or adjustments are added without a clear plan. As the project expands unexpectedly, costs spiral out of control and the budget can become unmanageable. By establishing detailed requirements from the start, discovery helps prevent scope creep, ensuring that the project stays within the agreed budget and avoids unexpected costs.

    1. Clear Business & User Requirements

    Without a proper discovery phase, the project may proceed without a clear understanding of business objectives or user needs. This often results in a final product that fails to meet its intended goals, requiring expensive rework or leading to a failed launch. Discovery ensures alignment between business goals, user needs, and technical feasibility, reducing the chances of miscommunication and ensuring that the project meets both business and user objectives.

    1. Stakeholder Alignment

    Skipping the discovery phase often means key stakeholders are not involved early enough, leading to conflicting goals and last-minute changes during development, which can delay the project and increase costs. Discovery brings stakeholders into the process from the beginning, ensuring that all departments and decision-makers are aligned. This prevents conflicts later in the project and fosters smoother collaboration.

    Discovery Phase in a Website Redesign Project Plan

    Website Redesign Project Plan Timeline

    Without further adieu, here is a typical Discovery that you can incorporate into your Website Redesign Project Plan. 

    Let’s take a closer look at the key components of the discovery phase and how each contributes to the project’s success:

    1. Stakeholder Interviews: Understanding Business Goals

    Before any design or development begins, it’s crucial to gain a deep understanding of your business goals. This is done through stakeholder interviews, which are 1-1 meetings with key decision-makers and department heads to uncover what the business hopes to achieve with the website redesign.

    Stakeholder interview

    Key Questions Addressed:

    • What are the main objectives of the redesign? (e.g., increase conversions, improve brand perception, enhance user experience)
    • What are the current challenges with the existing website?
    • What business metrics or KPIs will measure the success of the new website?

    By engaging stakeholders early, we make sure that the redesign is aligned with the company’s larger strategic objectives. The insights gathered here lay the groundwork for the entire project, keeping business goals front and center throughout the process.

    2. Technical Audits: Ensuring Technical and Design Feasibility

    Before moving into design and development, we conduct technical audits to assess the current technical landscape and identify any constraints or opportunities. This step ensures that the technical and design decisions made during the project are realistic and feasible within the existing infrastructure.

    What a Technical Audit Includes:

    • Current Site Performance: How well is the current site performing in terms of speed, security, and scalability?
    • Analytics: How much traffic is normal for your website? Are there any common usage spikes?
    • Content: How many pages exist? If the URL structure changes during discovery we will also need this for our redirect plan. 
    • Technical: How much customization is there? Are there existing integrations we need to account for?

    The technical audit helps to identify potential risks and ensure that the new website will perform as expected, without encountering avoidable technical issues during development. This stage also highlights opportunities for optimization, such as improving site speed, enhancing security, or making the site more scalable.

    3. User Research: Understanding User Needs and Pain Points

    A successful website redesign isn’t just about meeting business goals—it’s also about delivering a seamless experience for your users. User research plays a critical role in understanding who your users are, what they expect, and where they encounter frustrations on the current site.

    Key User Research Activities

    Usability Testing: Usability testing is  aimed at evaluating the effectiveness, efficiency, and overall user-friendliness of a web site or application. We use real users and walk them through typical tasks to understand their pain points and behaviors.

    User Personas: Personas are semi-fictional representations of your target audience. They outline the demographic details, behaviors, needs, and goals of your users, helping the design team keep the audience in mind throughout the project.

    User Journeys: A user journey map visually illustrates the steps a user takes to achieve a goal on your website. By identifying touchpoints and pain points, we can streamline the user experience to make the website more intuitive and user-friendly.

    This research ensures that the redesign solves real user problems and creates an experience that meets their expectations. A user-centered approach leads to higher engagement, better satisfaction, and improved business outcomes.

    4. Information Architecture: Building the Structure of the Website

    Once we understand the business goals and user needs, it’s time to structure the website through Information Architecture (IA). IA is the blueprint that defines how content and information are organized across the site.

    Key IA Activities:

    • Sitemap Creation: Mapping out the main pages and subpages of the website, ensuring that users can easily find the information they’re looking for.
    • Content Hierarchy: Determining how content should be organized based on importance, user needs, and business priorities.
    • Navigation Design: Designing an intuitive navigation structure that helps users move through the site smoothly.

    Information Architecture is the backbone of your website. By organizing the content in a way that aligns with both business goals and user needs, we ensure that users can easily find what they need, and businesses can guide users toward desired actions, such as purchases or inquiries.

    5. Requirement Gathering: Keeping Track of Functionality

    From the moment discovery begins we must document all functionality into a requirements gathering tool such as a requirements matrix. This involves documenting the business, technical, and user needs uncovered during interviews, user research, and technical audits and assigning priorities based on project scope and timeline. This ensures that the design and development teams have clear direction on what the website must accomplish and how it should function.

    Business Requirements: Essential features or improvements tied to business objectives

    Technical Requirements: Platforms, tools, or integrations required (e.g., CMS, CRM), Performance, security, or scalability considerations

    User Requirements: Features or flows critical to enhancing user experience

    The requirements matrix organizes and prioritizes all these elements, helping the team focus on what’s most important and avoiding scope creep. This structured approach keeps the project on track, within budget, and aligned with both business and user goals.

    The Outcome of a Discovery-Driven Website Redesign Project Plan

    By conducting these steps during the discovery phase, we develop a comprehensive roadmap that serves as the foundation for your website redesign project plan. This roadmap outlines:

    • Clear business goals: Ensuring that the website redesign delivers real value to the business.
    • User-focused strategies: Ensuring that user experience is at the forefront of design and functionality.
    • Technical and design feasibility: Making sure that all design and development decisions are realistic and based on a solid technical understanding.

    This detailed plan ensures that all teams—whether design, development, or UX—are working toward the same goal, with both the business and its users kept at the center of every decision. With this roadmap in place, the website redesign stays on time, within budget, and aligned with business objectives, creating a website that performs for both the company and its customers.

    Ready to kick off your next website redesign project the right way? Atlantic BT can guide you through a discovery tailored to your business needs. Let’s talk!

  • How to tell if my website is outdated?

    How to tell if my website is outdated?

    If your website is not responsive, not accessible, not performant (mobile included), or leveraging outdated or insecure technology, it may be a sign that your website is outdate. This can give the impression that your business is not reliable or trustworthy. In such cases, it’s crucial to consider the services of a company specializing in website development to ensure your site is up-to-date and effective.

    Outdated websites that are not compatible with modern web browsers and devices can lead to poor user experiences. This can include issues such as slow loading times, broken features, and security vulnerabilities. And since users expect websites to be reliable and functional, these issues can be frustrating and off-putting.

    Add to this the fact that old, outdated websites may not comply with modern web design and accessibility standards – such as a website that doesn’t use responsive web design principles. It may not display properly on mobile devices, or if it doesn’t comply with accessibility standards it may exclude users with disabilities. 

    You may think that because your website still seems okay, it’s okay to not update things. But in today’s competitive digital landscape, businesses need to prioritize their core web vitals and ensure that their website development is up-to-date and user-friendly. Without it, there’s a chance you could drive potential customers to choose a competitor’s website instead.

    Based on our 25 years of website development experience, here are four main things that make a site look outdated:

    Non-Responsive Website

    In 2024, non-responsive website development is no longer acceptable because of the increasing number of users accessing the internet through their mobile devices. With the proliferation of smartphones and tablets, users expect websites to be mobile-friendly and responsive.

    A responsive website adapts to different screen sizes and devices, ensuring that the user experience remains consistent across all platforms.

    Non-responsive websites require users to zoom in and out or scroll horizontally to view content, leading to a clunky and frustrating experience. This gives the impression that a business is out of touch with modern technology and trends, which can negatively impact its reputation and credibility.

    To address and fix non-responsive websites in 2024, businesses need to prioritize working with a website development company who has experience with mobile-first design principles. This means website development with the mobile user in mind and ensuring that the website functions seamlessly on all devices. This ensures that the user experience is consistent, regardless of the device they are using to access the website.

    Another approach is to use modern website development technologies, such as CSS Grid and Flexbox, to create layouts that are flexible and can adapt to different screen sizes. Developers can also leverage frameworks and tools such as Bootstrap and Foundation to build responsive websites quickly and efficiently.

    Accessibility

    When you don’t run your website through tools to measure accessibility you are potentially limiting your audience. Accessibility is a growing concern due to government legislation, contractual requirements, and more widespread news and information about the business value of digital accessibility.  Not to mention it just makes sense.

    Website development companies are now using tools like Google Lighthouse to measure website SEO, Performance, and Accessibility. You may also see accessibility referenced as a11y in your browsing. 

    Needless to say it’s important that your website needs to be accessible!

    Slow Loading Speed

    Slow-loading websites are also a problem when it comes to outdated features. Users expect websites to load quickly, and if a website takes too long to load, they may become frustrated and may abandon the website altogether. This can result in a high bounce rate, lower engagement, and fewer conversions. Additionally, with Google’s focus on page speed as a ranking factor, slow-loading websites may suffer from lower search engine rankings, leading to even fewer visitors and traffic.

    To avoid these problems, website development agencies need to prioritize website speed and performance when building and optimizing websites. This can include optimizing images and media, minimizing the use of large files and complex scripts, leveraging caching and compression techniques, and using a fast and reliable web hosting service. Using a content delivery network (CDN) can also help to distribute website content across multiple servers, resulting in faster load times for users.

    Old Technology

    Finally, using outdated technology on a website can make it look bad and even be dangerous.

    While outdated technology may not be compatible with modern web browsers and devices, leading to a poor user experience, what’s worse is that it can also lead to security vulnerabilities.  Technology, such as Flash, which is no longer supported by many modern web browsers can pose security risks to users, for example. Similarly, using outdated coding languages or frameworks can result in slower performance and limited functionality.

    To avoid these problems, developers and designers should stay up-to-date with the latest web development technologies and design trends. This can include using modern programming languages and frameworks such as HTML5, CSS3, and JavaScript. These technologies provide more advanced features and better performance, resulting in a better user experience.

    If you’re looking to update your website and ensure that it meets the latest technical standards, consider Atlantic BT as your website development partner. We have 25+ years of experience in website development and design. We can help your business to modernize its website and provide a seamless user experience that engages and converts visitors.

  • Why Your Website Needs Accessibility

    Why Your Website Needs Accessibility

    We’ve all heard the saying that “content is king” when it comes to the web. But what if you’re a sight-impaired person trying to access your favorite website? In a perfect world, your screen would read out all of the text on the page and give you the option to click on links. That’s where website accessibility works: to ensure that everyone has access to the same information and tools, regardless of disability or other factors.

    Most of us already know that there are rules for physical premises when it comes to accessibility for people with disabilities, either physical or socio-economic. Fewer know that accessibility can apply to online content, as well. 

    The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) mandates something called WCAG (Web Content Accessibility Guidelines) compliance, which is a means of designing websites, tools, and technologies so that people with disabilities can use them as easily as possible. WCAG compliance covers several types of disabilities, including blindness and low vision, deafness and hearing loss, limited movement, speech disabilities, neurological limitations such as Parkinson’s disease or Alzheimer’s, and cognitive limitations such as learning disabilities. 

    The goal of ADA compliance is the creation of a website that uses a variety of different design and web development practices to assist people with disabilities in successfully navigating the site.

    Who Needs to Have an Accessible Website?

    The ADA requires state and local governments to be accessible under Title I and any business that is open to the public under Title III. 

    State and local government websites, as well as any private business that receives federal funding receive the most scrutiny for accessibility. An inaccessible website can bar users with disabilities from the government entity’s services, events, and activities.

    Websites are increasingly becoming accepted as public spaces and public spaces are required to be accessible in order to be ADA compliant. The Department of Justice has historically interpreted that ADA compliance applies to all “goods, services, privileges, or activities offered by public accommodations, including those offered on the web.” Public websites may include those for:

    • Retail
    • Restaurants
    • Hotels, Inns, and Motels
    • Hospitals and Medical Offices
    • Banks
    • Theaters and Sports Arenas

    What are the Benefits of Accessibility?

    There are numerous benefits to making your website ADA compliant. In terms of customer retention, it’s a good idea to design web content to be as accessible to as many people as possible. Users with disabilities are a highly under-served segment, so ADA compliance can help your organization differentiate itself from competitors. Accessible sites and apps allow more people to engage with your organization, buy your products, or access your services. 

    Some other ways that Accessibility benefits your organization include:

    • Reduced risk of legal complications
    • Improved user experience for everyone
    • Improved website Search Engine Optimization (SEO)

    Simply put, managing your accessibility is part of building a modern, robust digital platform.

    How Do We Know We’re Compliant?

    Companies seeking ADA compliance often undergo a website accessibility audit that includes both automated and manual testing to ensure compliance. The audits help companies identify problems and put them on the path to improving their practices, reaching a broader audience, and avoiding discrimination or legal complications.

    What is the Process for ADA-Accessibility Audits?

    The process is quite straightforward. Once you identify a company that performs accessibility testing, you provide your contact information with the website you’d like the company to review. In particular, you will want your homepage, service/product pages, contact page, and other key landing pages reviewed. Once the report is completed, the company will follow up with a call to discuss their initial findings and share their detailed accessibility audit report with recommendations.

    If problems are suspected, the audit company will set up automated testing to catch code issues that make your site inaccessible. The experts may recommend that you update old, inaccessible document repositories to be compliant with modern standards, and can help you develop your accessibility remediation strategy and work with a trusted partner to ensure your site stays up to date.

    Consult a Professional Web Design and Development Company

    Atlantic BT is an award-winning technology firm located in Raleigh, NC. We offer enterprise web design, website accessibility testing, IT consulting, software development, cybersecurity, and cloud technology to help clients easily manage, secure, and scale their core technologies. We combine full-service digital marketing with custom software development and technology solutions. Our awards stem from outstanding results in all aspects of digital, from UX design to modernizing applications. For more information, contact us or call us at 919-518-0670.

  • Why User Testing is Critical for UX

    Why User Testing is Critical for UX

    Disjointed user experiences are a widespread marketing pain point, according to research conducted by Gartner. User testing is a powerful tool that can help businesses identify and rectify these disjointed UXs, enhancing website performance and ultimately leading to improved customer satisfaction and increased conversions.

    “Siloed UX approaches based on traditional channel mentality are preventing organizations from delivering a seamless digital customer user experience to internal and external audiences,” said the company. 

    In the past, user testing was a complex process, and it often involved collecting volunteers into labs and using high-tech solutions such as eye-tracking cameras. These high-tech solutions, of course, had high costs to go along with them. Luckily, times have changed, and companies are now offering a new generation of usability testing solutions and strategies.

    In Gartner’s report entitled, “Drive Seamless Digital Customer Experiences with Composable UX,” the company noted that a better strategy around customer data management and customer journey intelligence is needed to make composable UX attainable.

    What is Composable UX? 

    Forbes has noted that composable UX helps businesses keep up with the lightning speed of change. It flexes as circumstances shift, allowing for the real-time assembly, combination, and orchestration of individual customer employee experience capabilities from a robust set of building blocks: product, marketplace, CX ecosystem, and development. It’s labeled as “composable” to differentiate it from the brittle, inflexible user experiences of the past. 

    Why Is User Testing So Important?

    In order to serve your customers and enable your employees, you need to know what their needs are before you can begin to address them. (Guessing seldom works out for anyone.) User experience testing, of course, is the process of testing different aspects of the user experience to determine the best way for a solution, a website, or an app to interact with its core audience.

    The following are some of the most critical processes that must be undertaken to engage in effective user testing: 

    Usability testing. This involves putting a website to the test to see if usability problems are stopping your users from reaching their goals.

    Contextual inquiry. During this step, you’ll uncover opportunities for improvement by watching users interact with your sites and products.

    Surveys. There is no substitute for asking users directly about their experiences, so in this stage, you’ll gather large-scale feedback from customers on the questions that you need answers to. 

    Tree testing. This is a way for you to visualize your user experiences (as a decision tree) to figure out where your navigation might be confusing for users. 

    Card sorting. Understand how users group your content by hearing straight from them how they think your topics should be organized.

    Benchmarking. Learning from the best is still a great way to gain insight into the design of the user experience. Perform large-scale user testing to compare efficiency and effectiveness between different designs.

    Consult a Professional Web Design and Development Company

    If you’re in doubt, it’s worthwhile to turn to professionals to jump-start the user experience testing process.

    Atlantic BT is an award-winning technology firm located in Raleigh, NC. We offer enterprise web design, IT consulting, software development, cybersecurity, and cloud technology to help clients easily manage, secure, and scale their core technologies. We combine full-service digital transformations with custom software development and technology solutions. Our awards stem from outstanding results in all aspects of digital, from UX design to modernizing applications. For more information on how we can help improve your website performance with user testing, contact us or call us at 919-518-0670. 

  • Does your website need to be more functional or usable?

    Does your website need to be more functional or usable?

    The simpler the website design, the easier it is to use. The more functionality a website has, the more useful it can be. With website design and development, the focus needs to be on maintaining a balance between usability and functionality to maximize user satisfaction.

    People need to have access to features that help them complete tasks, but they also have to be able to easily find these features. Plus, they need to be able to comprehend how to use them.

    What makes a website usable?

    A usable website has a simple experience. It’s easy for people to find necessary information, complete tasks, and learn how to use features.

    What makes a website functional?

    A functional website has many operational features. Maybe users can add items to a favorites list, get a price quote from a calculator, make online purchases, or filter through content with search.

    Achieving a usability and functionality balance pays off in website design and development.

    If you can find a way to hit the sweet spot of balancing functionality with usability, you’ll reap the rewards. Crafting a this sort of experience with website design and development means:

    • Increased customer satisfaction
    • More online conversions
    • Boosted brand loyalty and positive word of mouth
    • Reducing frustration that leads to poor word of mouth or people calling support

    Why do people clash over functionality and usability?

    Usability and functionality can be considered a tradeoff in website design and development. It’s not easy to design a website to perform complex tasks while being simple enough for its intended users to handle. 

    You’ll have to face tough questions like: Are some features taking away from others? Are they cluttering the website? Can people find the feature they need? Can the average visitor use the feature easily?

    Usually, designers will push back on stakeholders during this step. While a stakeholder wants to add as much functionality as possible to pages, a web designer needs to remind them that if everything is urgent, nothing is urgent. It’s a team effort to optimally prioritize elements of a page.

    Testing is an essential step in website design and development.

    Good UX is not about adding more features/options. It’s about improving interactions based on how a user wants and needs to engage with the system.

    But how do you know what the user wants to start with? Most businesses incorporate a discovery step before development. At Atlantic BT, this phase includes UX workshops where we map tasks a user would perform on the site, interview or survey for more information, gather additional website requirements, and determine Information Architecture.

    However, after Discovery, the best way to ensure a website is satisfactory is to test a prototype. You need to test what a user will actually do in a scenario (not just what they say they’ll do). For large projects, Atlantic BT tests prototypes of a research-based design to monitor usability before a launch.

    Research, design, and testing can feel overwhelming.

    Handling large website design and development projects in-house can feel overwhelming. Atlantic BT can help. Our streamlined process includes the careful research, requirements gathering, and testing needed for successful launches. Reach out for a free consultation.

  • Building Brand Credibility With Visual Design

    Building Brand Credibility With Visual Design

    Think about a brand you experienced in the past that made you feel happy. It could be a one-time thing, or maybe it’s a brand you’ve interacted with frequently. Think about the things that made you feel this way, like delightful products, friendly customer service, or honest communication. Brands can have a powerful impact on people’s lives and emotions, and it’s safe to say that they don’t go in hoping for a substandard experience.

    Similar to a walking inside a store, your website or application is one of many gateways for your audience to engage with your brand. How do you think your audience feels about your brand right now?

    Branding demands commitment. It demands a commitment to connect with people and stir their emotions. It demands a commitment to imagination. Many brands are only given one shot to engage people. Regardless of what you believe, people will quickly evaluate you and your brand when looking at your website or application.

    The care you put into your website and brand reflect the attention you put into your product and services. Consider this: if your content is valuable, someone might assume you believe in clear communication, honesty, and care for customers. If your content is wasteful, contains broken links, or is surrounded by confusing navigation, someone might assume you lack a commitment to quality. Don’t do the latter.

    Establishing and growing a brand—including a website or application —takes careful craftsmanship, commitment, and dedication. Brands are organic in nature, so they need to be cared for over time or they’ll eventually die off. The way in which you approach branding can allow you to speak volumes about your priorities, culture, trustworthiness, and level of expertise.

    Nike—first and foremost—promotes beauty in their products to build brand credibility.

    Is Visual Appeal Enough to Create a Trustworthy Brand?

    Are there any intrinsic biases that we have as a species that prevent us from making calculated and good decisions? Yes, there are. Mainly beauty.

    Beauty can influence whether we decide to walk into a store in person or explore deeper into a store online. It’s quite fascinating to observe how our behaviors and inclinations translate between offline and online existences.

    As aesthetically-oriented humans, we are psychologically hardwired to trust beautiful people. In fact, research conducted by the University of Melbourne found that visually attractive websites or applications were perceived as more trustworthy than those that were unattractive.

    Credibility begins with aesthetics. Whether or not a website or application has credible content, a beautiful user interface can give people the impression that the brand pays attention to detail and quality.

    If your organization does not value design at its core, your brand—and your organization—will inevitably fail.

    However, visual appeal alone isn’t enough to make your brand trustworthy. Beauty is only skin deep, right? The largest source of frustration from people on the web is the inability to find the right information. What’s important here is that your website or application should not only have a professional appearance, but also should have both logical structure and friendly navigation.

    Connecting Brand Value to Real People

    Pretty website or application—check. Logical structure—check. Friendly navigation—check. Valuable content—uh oh! Ultimately people will still struggle to get what they came for if your content isn’t written properly and adds value.

    Common Reasons Your Content Fails:

    • It’s too vague, complex, or full of jargon.
    • It’s either too shallow or too full of meaningless words.
    • It’s incorrect, outdated, or unverified.
    • It’s simply boring.
    • Timing is off: it’s not customized to a user’s journey.

    Even if you have information perfectly aligned the way your audience wants it, timing can also determine a content’s value. Providing the right amount of information at the right time is the key. A solid content strategy can help your brand find the right balance, presenting users with highly relevant information depending on their pain points.

    Characteristics of Effective Content:

    • Speaks to the human reader.
    • Tells the reader what they need to know, when they need to know it.
    • Reduces confusion through consistent, concise wording.
    • Provides value and freshness.

    Additionally, where appropriate, effective content shows personality, telling the audience that the brand has the capacity to truly appreciate what matters the most to people.

    Simple & Effective Ways to Build Brand Credibility

    With passion and attention to detail, you can design a website or application that expresses your brand while building credibility. Let’s go over a few of the commonly-used, proven design principles that can help build that brand credibility.

    Design “with people”—not “for people”

    It’s important to understand your audience and what their objectives are so that you can connect with them. Are they here to perform an action? Soak up information? Interact with a particular process? Rather than making risky assumptions, design alongside your audience to meet their needs. It’s not only good practice to be more inclusive with them, but it will also add more credibility to your brand if they feel like they are being heard.

    I believe as creative professionals, it’s not only important for us to run designs through tests to get a quantitative measure, but also to test qualitatively with humans who will actually use the end-product.

    Provide Clear Navigation

    Whether it’s a website or an application, navigation is one of the critical ways to allow your audience to discover your brand’s products, services, and information they seek. Every action a person takes with your brand has risk.
    Your audience may be saying:

    • Is what I’m looking for here? No, wait… there? Umm…
    • How does this work? Ohh… is this clickable?
    • Where am I at? Ugh, forget it – I’ll google it.

    Is your audience willing to take a risk and explore deeper into your brand to find value, or will they become frustrated and leave? Is your brand willing to take a chance on that? Good labeling practices can alleviate those risks.

    Everything should be organized and labeled in a meaningful way that makes the most sense to your audience. Stick with conventions and do not get overly creative, unless you want to risk hindering brand exploration and reduce brand confidence.

    Don’t Sacrifice Usability for SEO

    Believe me, the last thing you want to do is write your content in such a way that’s only meant for a robot—e.g. Google—to read. Search engines are great at understanding the type of information you have, however, they cannot decide whether your brand is worth buying into. Only people can decide that.

    Focus on a people-first content strategy and allow your brand to speak naturally to your audience. Search engine optimization (SEO) should not dictate your message. Instead, use keyword research to see what topics your audience is interested in, and hold off on optimization until this human-centric content has been written.

    Present Information at the Appropriate Time

    It’s important to guide your audience through every step of their journey efficiently. Throughout their journeys, information needs will vary. For example, a user may begin by trying to see if you offer the services they need. On another visit, they may be interested in learning about your company’s processes. If you deliver all of this information at once, the user could be overwhelmed or discouraged with difficulty finding the information they need. On the other hand, not showing enough information can make you look like you’re hiding something.

    As part of your content strategy, consider the context you’re presenting to your audience and disperse your information accordingly.

    Delight Your Users Whenever Possible

    Delighting your audience may vary depending on the industry you are in, but make no mistake, great design can and should delight all the same. Whether it’s the subtle animation of a button, the unique style of a photo filter, or the clever integration of a Konami code easter egg— plan something different to surprise your audience with.

    Often times, it’s the little things that make the most impact, while showing there are real people behind your brand. We’re all human—so let your brand connect with us.

    Final Thoughts on Branding

    Branding is about creating a difference, adding value, and connecting with people. Life’s purpose is the same thing, right? What story will your life—your brand—tell people next.

    This article was originally posted by Mark Riggan on Medium