HOW TO BUILD YOUR OWN
WEB SITE
FAST AND CHEAP
--EVEN WHEN YOU DON'T KNOW A THING
ABOUT HTML.
by Dr. Kevin Nunley
Index
of Articles
The Internet has gone mainstream
and big time! You can't turn on your TV without seeing a
commercial with a web site address prominently featured
right below the company's logo. When my local town hall
stuck two poles in the lawn to hang a banner announcing
their new web site, I knew the web page had come of age.
If you don't have a web
site to market your business to your community and the world,
it's time to get one. Web space is offered free everywhere,
and there are super-easy HTML editors that make designing
a web site just about as easy as typing a memo.
Here are two quick and
easy ways to get a good-looking web site in less than a
week (and that's if you take your time doing it!).
1. If you need to get your
website up NOW, and you don't have time to deal with it
yourself, get a web designer to build your first few pages.
Keep the design simple and promise not to ask for many changes
after the job is done. Many designers will knock out a professional
looking starter site for a few hundred dollars. Then--when
you have the time--you can add more pages to your site using
the suggestions below.
2. OR - Design your web
site yourself. Keep the concept simple and use time-saving
aids developed especially for beginning web builders. First
you need a place to put your site. Oodles of free space
is offered by http://www.tripod.com,
http://www.geocities.com,
and http://www.angelfire.com/
These services also provide
beginner directions on how to design a site. Geocities provides
their web building directions at several levels of difficulty
(or maybe I should say "simplicity")--start-up, basic, E-Z,
and advanced. Tripod sends newbies directly to their Homepage
Builder. They also provide you with places to get free graphics
to spruce up your pages.
If you are a member of
AOL or Prodigy, those services provide both web space and
excellent HTML editors free for your use.
Common word processing
and desk-top publishing programs now offer web design features,
too. I've seen nice looking sites turned out with World
Perfect and Microsoft Publisher. For more complete HTML
editors, look into Microsoft Frontpage, Adobe Page Mill,
and Claris Home Page.
Keep your web site information-packed
and text intensive. Keep the graphics down to one or two
per page. Many of the nifty web sites you see are done by
expensive web design experts (who are often more concerned
with impressing each other than communicating well to readers).
There's no need to feel like you have to compete with whiz-bang
site's of the week. As long as your site has good information
or entertainment to offer, readers will appreciate it.
There are many on-line
tutorials and books that can help you along the way. "Web
Design for Dummies" puts HTML design in the easiest terms.
For those in a real hurry, Lisa Schmeiser's "Web Design
Template Sourcebook" provides you with a CD-ROM of web designs.
Most are aimed at the corporate world including product
brochure pages, guestbooks, and order forms.
One easy method I use to
give a sophisticated look to my pages is to copy other sites
that I like. How? It's easy (although you have to be careful
not to plagiarize another person's copy or art work). Most
web browsers have pull down menus that include a command
like "View." Within that menu is a command "View Source."
By clicking this, you can see the underlying HTML code that
creates a page you like. Copy this code, replace the text
and graphics with your own text and graphics, and you've
got a quick way to build a nice-looking page. (To copy:
Highlight the HTML page, control "c", go to a word processing
page, control "v" to paste the code onto your page.)
Remember the basics of
good web design. Include lots of free helpful information
(that's the engine that make the Net go!). Use a title and
headline that describe what your page or site is about.
Be very clear about what you sell and what benefits you
can bring the buyer. Tell readers who you are and why your
company does what it does. Put your picture on your page
to help people feel like they know you (earning trust on
the Internet is always a concern).
Web sites are rapidly becoming
an essential part of marketing. As millions of people discover
the Internet every few weeks, you will want your business
represented by your own custom web site.
Kevin Nunley provides marketing
advice and copy writing for businesses and organizations.
Read all his money-saving marketing tips at http://DrNunley.com/.
Reach him from his site via email.