Websites Ict 10
Websites Ict 10
Websites Ict 10
1.
Ethics in everyday life serve as moral guideposts, comprising a code that defines
behavior as right or wrong. ... Web ethics provide a guide to appropriate online
behavior, adapting familiar ethical standards to provide a moral framework for
navigating the Internet's virtual environment.
While you’re at it, you’d be wise to register your business’ name on popular social media sites such
at Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram. Even if you aren’t planning on currently using these services to
promote your business, you may find that they will eventually become useful tools to market your
business. Registering your business’ name now will make sure you maintain superior right to use the
name early on.
Finally, although not required, it’s not a bad idea to apply for federal trademark protection for your
domain once it’s been registered. Doing so strengthens your hand if a dispute ever arises down the
road while simultaneously preventing others from registering the same name with the government.
This is also true if you are allowing others to post to your website. When the popular image pinning
site Pinterest launched, for example, a firestorm ignited because many people felt that the
company’s terms of service actively encouraged the widespread infringement of intellectual property.
Eventually, in order to avoid potential liability, the company amended its terms of service to address
those concerns, but it left many copyright owners with a bad taste in their mouth.
But while users occasionally pose problems for a company’s website, you’ll also want to carefully
monitor your employees. After all, because employees are acting as your agents, it’s even more
likely that you can be held liable for their activities. In order to limit your potential for liability, draft a
clear code of conduct for your employees that outlines what is and isn’t acceptable on your website.
Create a system that allows you to monitor their activities to make sure that they are adhering to that
policy.
It’s true that there are unique risks involved in operating a business website. Nonetheless, the
benefits to your business will almost certainly outweigh the risks. And if you implement some of the
best practices outlined above, you’ll limit the dangers posed to you and your company.
Placing your website address on all your promotional material will help you gain additional exposure
and encourage the visitors to first check your site for the information they are seeking.
A website can act as your online brochure or catalog that can be changed or updated at any time. If
you employ a content management system (CMS) you can make changes quickly and at no charge.
You can have your existing customers refer you to their friends and relatives using only your web
address or URL.
If maintained properly your website will always be up to date and current. Easily make updates, edits
and deletions from any computer on the Internet. No more having to pay a programmer every time
you want to chance a date or add a product.
5. Improve Productivity
A website increases your company’s productivity because less time is spent explaining product or
service details to customers because all this information is available 24 hours a day on your website.
Your website can offer free advice about your products and services. This information can be
delivered in a well thought out and consistent way any time of the day or night.
The Internet allows businesses to break through the geographical barriers and become accessible
from anywhere in the world by a potential customer that has an Internet connection. Selling products
online is cheaper and easier for you and your customers.
8. Extend Your Local Reach
Extend the local reach of your brick-and-mortar store to consumers around the world. You are open
for business 24/7 365 days/year with all the information the visitors needs to make an informed
decision.
Provide photos and detailed descriptions of your products or services. Explain why your products or
services are superior to your competitors. Show visitors how your products or services can help them
in their personal or professional lives.
When customers and potential customers are out and about, they will still be able to find you via their
phone. Your phone number, address and full selection can be made available from your website or
mobile-friendly site.
If you move your business to a new location your customers can still find you because your main
marketing tool, your website, is easily changed and updated. Your website is flexible and if your
search engine optimization is done properly your business will appear to online visitors who search
for you.
You can post job opportunities for available positions and applicants can investigate your company
and apply online.
Your own domain name (www.yourcompany.com) establishes a strong online brand identity.
You can set-up a personalized email addresses for the company, yourself and your employees. If you
set-up a system to accept emails on your site you can then email updates, notices, sales and holiday
store hours to your customers.
Customers can quickly and easily contact you, give feedback on your products or ask about product
availability.
16. Cheap Market Research
You can feature visitor polls and online surveys to take the pulse of your customers.
Become or remain the expert by demonstrating knowledge and expertise in your area of work. Write
blog posts and articles on the site that educate visitors and help them understand your business and
offerings.
Information requests can be processed immediately via online forms and autoresponders
automatically day or night.
Having a website risks attracting bad publicity. If a customer is unhappy with your
service or products, then they may feel the need to vent their frustrations online
and reference your website in their review/comments. This could be potentially
damaging, hurting both your reputation and your search engine ranking. Of
course, not having a website won’t prevent such things happening but it might
allow you to monitor and be aware of it. Providing the best possible customer care
and learning from your clients feedback is the best possible course of action to
combat this problem.
Taking Advantage of a Business Websites
As you can see, the advantages of a business website far outweigh the
disadvantages. The potential for business exposure, advertising and increased sales
should be too good for any business to pass up.
Get your business online today with a business website design by The Company
Warehouse!
How To Evaluate A Website
1) Open the site
The first thing students need to do is open the site.
When looking through your Google search results, you may want to teach students
to open sites in new tabs, leaving their search results in a tab for easy access later
(e.g. right-click on the title and click “Open link in new tab”).
It can also be worthwhile to explain the anatomy of a Google Search result and
the benefits of looking past the first few results. I go over this in more detail in
my guide to teaching students how to research.
2) Skim read
Next, skim read the site and determine whether you can read and understand the
text. If it’s too complicated or difficult to understand, find another website.
Decide whether this is the sort of site that might provide you with the information
you’re looking for. If the site is difficult to navigate, cluttered with ads, or has
other red flags like poor spelling or inappropriate content you might want to leave
straight away.
Skimming and scanning is the default way most people now consume new content
so this now holds an important role in literacy education. A regularly
quoted study from Nielsen Norman tells us that 79% of users always scan a new
page they come across. Only 16% read word for word.
Scanning and skim reading can be worth practicing in the classroom. E.g. give
students one minute to look at a text and then share what they think it’s all about.
This is something that could be tried with emerging readers right up to higher level
students.
3) Look for the answer to your question
If you think the site might prove useful, you now need to find out if the
information on the site actually answers your question. You could use a search
box, navigation menu, or pull up your own search box by pressing
Control/Command F. Type in the keywords you’re looking for.
Stop skimming, and read more closely to see if this information is useful to you.
4) Consider the credibility of the author or website
If the information is there, you need to consider the credibility of the author or
website. Can you rely on the information?
Here are some things you can look for on the website:
Domain — sometimes domains that include .gov or .edu come from more
trustworthy education or government sources.
Author information — look at at the author bio or About page. How
qualified is this person?
Design — we can’t judge a book (or website!) by its cover but sites that are
cluttered, difficult to navigate, or look amateurish may be worth avoiding.
Sources — trustworthy articles usually link to other sources or cite where
their facts come from.
5) Consider the purpose of the site
The next step is to think about the purpose of the site and whether it meets your
needs.
Is the author trying to make you think a certain way? Are they biased or
one-sided?
Are they trying to sell you something? Sometimes ads might not be so
obvious, for example, blog posts can be written to promote a product.
Is the author’s tone calm and balanced? Articles fueled by anger or
extreme opinions are not going to be the best source of information.
Do the headlines match the article? Or are they simply designed to hook
readers?
Is the author trying to educate the audience and present a balanced and
factual picture? This is what you usually want.
6) Look for the date
Finally, it’s important to consider whether the information is current enough for
your topic. You can look for when the article was written or it might tell you when
it was last updated. Sometimes URLs include dates as well.
Does it matter how old an article is? Well, that might depend on your topic. For
example, if you’re looking for the latest research on nutrition or a medical
condition, the date might be very important. If you’re looking for some facts about
World War One, it might not matter if the information hasn’t been updated in a
few years.
If the site is no good, bounce back…
As the flowchart demonstrates, if you’re ever in doubt, just head back to your
search results and try again. You might want to alter your search terms based on
the results you’re provided with. Sometimes you need to change your keywords or
be more specific.
Crosscheck
When you overcome all these hurdles and find some information that looks useful
and reliable, it can be a good idea to crosscheck the information. So, have a look at
a few other websites to see if they corroborate the information you’ve found.
It’s important to remember that you can’t believe everything you read and it’s
essential to consider multiple perspectives.
Conclusion
Studies have shown that students find it difficult to discriminate between fake
news and factual information. This is very important to address but not the only
aspect of website evaluation.
Like so many skills, website evaluation is something that people can become fluent
at with practice. An important part of the process is thinking critically — not
believing everything you read, not settling for any source of information, and
always questioning.
Students need to know that anyone can be an author and publish online nowadays
(hopefully they’re already publishing online themselves through a blog or
similar!).
Like all aspects of teaching students how to research, classroom integration is key.
You don’t need to spend large chunks of time on one-off lessons. Model your own
searches explicitly and talk out loud as you evaluate websites. As you model, you
could evaluate any old website or sometimes show a ‘fake site’ (check out Eric
Curt’s examples of fake sites).
A linear website is one that is organized with a logical beginning,
middle, and end, much as a printed book would be. Most websites
are not designed to be linear, but it is a useful presentation for long-
form content, such as manuals and online texts.
The circle, a shape so simple, so perfect, so... rounded. No basic
shape is more organic than the circle, it has a smooth quality that
makes it appealing to the eye. Adding circular elements to your
website can turn a bland design into something that breathes
life. Nowadays CSS3 makes easy to create circles and rounded
shapes without the need to use images. This has result in an
increment in the use of these shapes among designers. In this post,
we compiled for you 40 great examples of circular elements in
websites.
hierarchical navigation structure is tree-like in its nature. The home
page is at the top. Underneath it breaks into categories which can be
further broken into different sub-categories. There will usually be a
link back to the home page on every page below it.
How to Plan a Website: Tools and Templates to Help You Attract
and Keep Visitors
Posted By: Lucidchart Content Team
Have you ever wondered how many websites there are in the world?
It’s hard to pinpoint the exact number of sites because the number
changes almost constantly. As of January 2019, the Netcraft Web
Server Survey says there are over 1.5 billion websites.
Because people have so many sites to choose from, it can be a
daunting task to develop a website that will draw customers. It’s not
like you can simply throw together some HTML, use some pretty
colors, slap on some eye-catching graphics, and expect customers to
instantly flock to your site.
Even if you could, pretty pictures and colors alone will not drive
customers to your site in the numbers you expect. Planning how
your website will look and how it will function is just as important
as building it.
In this article, we will give you a simple website planning guide and
offer some online website planning tools that can help you create a
compelling site that will appeal to your customers.
Step 1: Preplanning your website
Before you start tagging HTML, coding, scripting, or throwing
graphics at your site, you need to determine what the website will be
and who it is for.
What are your website’s objectives?
You should already have a business plan that defines your goals.
With the goals from your business plan in mind, begin your website
planning by defining the site’s goals. Answer questions such as:
Who is the target audience? Who will be more likely to visit
your site and buy your products?
What are the goals of this website? Do you want to:
Build brand awareness?
Generate new leads?
Increase brand awareness?
Improve communication with customers?
Create an informative blog?
Increase sales?
Provide access to a social discussion community?
What information will you need on the site to achieve your
goals? What keywords will you use to drive traffic from
organic search?
What is the best way to present information to your target
audience? Do you want a formal business tone, or do you want
it to be casual?
Be sure that your website’s content is written for humans and
search engines. It is important to write your content for SEO, but
don’t inject your keywords so often that the content doesn’t make
sense and becomes unreadable. Try to add your keywords where
they make sense and where they can flow naturally so the
information sounds like it was written by a human rather than a
robot.
What are your competitors doing?
Chances are that other companies are already selling products or
services similar to yours. Spend some time looking at their websites
to analyze what is or isn’t working for them. Compare your
observations with what you have in mind for your website. Their
designs and layouts can give you inspiration for your website.
In addition, you should analyze current trends that are leading your
market. Understanding these trends can help you to create a more
useful and compelling website for your target audience.
As you define your website’s goals and analyze the competition, you
may want to get input from team members and management.
Step 2: Planning your website’s structure and layout
As you start to determine what type of information you want on the
site, you can start to plan how you want the website to be laid out.
Organize information and develop a sitemap
According to usability.gov, “information architecture (IA) focuses
on organizing, structuring, and labeling content in an effective and
sustainable way. The goal is to help users find information and
complete tasks. To do this, you need to understand how the pieces fit
together to create the larger picture, how items relate to each other
within the system.”
Use IA to determine the usability of your site. Try to make sense of
how your information is displayed and how your visitors will access
it.
Create a sitemap to give you a visual representation of the
navigation and flow of your site based on your IA analysis. Use
Lucidchart to create a sitemap to help you decide which pages you
want and how those pages should be arranged.
A sitemap can be useful for other people on your team or in other
departments, such as graphic designers and programmers, who may
be assigned to help with the website development.
Lucidchart Site Map (Click on image to modify online)
Determine the navigation flow
Using the data you gathered when working through the information
architecture, try to find patterns in the way your target audience
seeks for and accesses information.
From the sitemap you created, you should have a better
understanding of how many pages you will need for your website.
Creating a flowchart or user flow diagram can help you map out a
logical flow of how your ideal customer will access these pages. The
flow includes the cues, such as phrases and images, that will keep
your visitors engaged and keep them from leaving your site for
another.