[nycphp-talk] Changing your site look - What is the norm
Peter Sawczynec
ps at blu-studio.com
Tue Mar 10 14:39:32 EDT 2009
Google. Has undergone numerous updates to their style.
Changing the logo, the favicon and adding artwork
across the top 2 inches. Google allows users
to customize too.
Craigslist. Looks dated.
Drudgereport. Looks dated.
Amazon. Has made many updates to their look. Modernizing
buttons, product display, text colors, column widths, etc.
To follow well-timed and in tune with trends commercial updating
in action. watch global corp. sites like: Sony, VW, Bugati. Look at
Las Vegas casino sites. Major hotels, cruise lines, Club Med.
Even never-changing websites likes Microsoft, Apple, NYTimes
have undergone constant tuning to meet the shifting market
tastes and style.
I would pose it is still better to stay updated than to see
just how long a site can look timeless. (Very few, almost none. But
you could look at Tiffany.)
Warmest regards,
Peter Sawczynec
Technology Dir.
blūstudio
941.893.0396
ps at blu-studio.com <mailto:ps at sun-code.com>
www.blu-studio.com
From: talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org [mailto:talk-bounces at lists.nyphp.org]
On Behalf Of Edward Potter
Sent: Monday, March 09, 2009 9:48 PM
To: NYPHP Talk
Subject: Re: [nycphp-talk] Changing your site look - What is the norm
>>>
5 Years Is Death
Craigslist
Drudgereport
Google
Still alive and kicking!
2009/3/9 Peter Sawczynec <ps at blu-studio.com>
I have never read any exact rule on how often to update
a website look. But, here is my opinion from my experience.
First, it is important to keep in mind, that most all web sites
get technologically stale every single year.
Updates < 1 Year
Very commercial websites and youth oriented sites (MTV,
TV shows, shampoo, fast food, bands, high-profile politicians)
update at least every year. Many aggressive commercial sites
change 2 or 3X a year.
1.5 - 2 Years Is Sensible, Proactive Time to Update
If you want to keep the website looking like it is ahead
of the curve or at least right on the curve; the website
could use to be updated by 1.5 years. Up to 2 years
update time is still Okay.
3 Years Is Far End of Time to Update
Most standard web sites (govt., high end retail,
associations, accountants, lawyers, real estate, furniture,
car dealer, local radio station, local politician) start to get
totally visually stale at about 3 years. And, of course,
I feel even a 2-year old web site design
is showing its age.
5 Years Is Death
It is common though for these types of above noted
business entities to try to take a website design out
to 5 years. At 5 years the old design is absolutely expired
and is hurting the company image, not enhancing.
Even a great clean corporate-look web site rigidly
conformed to a classic design grid and using virtually no
graphic dingbats of any kind would still need a refresh
at about 5 years max, I think.
The site width and height proportions get stale.
Color scheme gets stale, font choices get stale.
Even the widths of the columnar layout
can get stale.
Warmest regards,
Peter Sawczynec
Technology Dir.
blūstudio
941.893.0396
<mailto:ps at sun-code.com> ps at blu-studio.com
www.blu-studio.com
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