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| MEMBERS: | Your CSS Code is Slowing Down Your Website - How To Optimize for Speed
Did you know that your css code could be slowing down your website? Did you also know that there is a free solution out there that can help you optimize or reformat your css code for speed and readability? This article is going to explain the benefits of optimizing your css code and the reasons why all web designers should be doing it. First we need to take into account the 2 reasons why you would want to reformat your css: readability and optimization. Readability Having nicely formatted css that easily readable is very helpful when you are developing a site. Most of us (me included) can get pretty sloppy when in a hurry to develop code, and a formatter can really help out to make it more readable. On development teams where both Macs and PCs are used, sometimes line breaks are not read correctly across platforms and your css can end up all on one line. A formatter can help get your code looking pretty again. Optimization The opposite of readability is optimization. One problem with CSS is that it can get pretty file-size heavy when designing with it - especially on complex layouts. Optimizing your CSS will strip out all unnecessary characters and leave your CSS lean and mean. Optimizing css is great to do once you've finished your site and don't plan to work on the design very much anymore. The css formatter is a great tool because it can do both! You can format for readability while you are designing, optimize when you go live, and reformat it for readability if you ever need to work on it again. It's really a 'win win' thing to do.
Have You Registered A Domain Name And Ready To Create A Website?
Creating a website and you already registered a domain name? Trying to build a website around a name is very difficult to do, especially if you have not done a very important step for the process. Your first step in building your website needs to be the planning process. Many beginners do not realize this and when their website fails, they may believe they failed. But in reality they did not fail as long as they understand the missing steps and try again to rebuild their website. Sure, many say it is very easy to create a website with only using three steps but not one of those steps is planning. Planning your website This is a very critical step when you create a website. You need to figure out the Who, What, Where, When, Why and How. It may sound difficult to do, but if you take the time at the beginning of your building process, you will find out that in the long run it will save your time (and money). Who will be your audience? Have you chosen a targeted niche? What is the content going to be about on your pages? What will be your keywords? Where are you going to host the site? Will you use free web hosting or paid? When do you plan on this website being finished? 5 days, 30 days. Be realistic and set a target date. Why do you want to build your own website? How is all the steps above to help guide you with your website creation. The steps above may take you a few minutes or could take you a day or longer. But each one is important when you create a web site. Even if you already registered your domain name and built your site and your site is not working how you want it to, take a moment and do the 5 W's and 1 H. It might show you what you are missing.
Does Your Web Site Need a Workout?
Here's an analogy for you. Yesterday, I was working my butt off in the gym on the cardio machines, panting wildly with sweat dripping off me and my face as red as a beet. Not the most attractive sight, but I figure, you're at the gym to work out right? I might as well "go hard" or "go home", as they say. As I looked around me, I could see all these people simply going through the motions. There they were, minus perspiration in their shiny new lycra and expensive gym shoes, casually walking on the treadmill or lazily turning the wheels on a bike while reading a book or glued to the TV screens in front of them. Only a few seemed to be there for the actual purpose of working out. The rest seemed to be there to check out the talent or to simply keep up the appearance of fitness, while doing the bare minimum. Huh? I don't get it. Why have these gym bimbos paid so much money for a gym membership and all the related gear if they aren't going to take full advantage of their investment? Then it struck me - these gymbos were just like those companies who spend thousands of dollars on a shiny new website with all the bells and whistles like graphic design, blogs, shopping carts, web analytics, the lot and then fail to take advantage of it. I see it so often, regardless of company size. Web sites that could easily be bringing in loads of traffic and revenue simply wasting away because nobody can be bothered tracking visitor activity, analyzing trends or checking for search engine compatibility and usability. These companies are simply keeping up appearances, investing heavily in Internet technology because their competitors are doing the same. But no thought has gone into the search engine compatibility of the site, how usable it is for visitors or whether it meets accessibility guidelines. They don't look at their site statistics, they don't check for broken links and they sure as heck don't investigate why their sites aren't converting traffic into customers. What a waste! Is your web site working hard enough for you? Run it through the following 20 point fitness assessment to find out: - Is your site fully search engine compatible? Are all your pages being indexed by the major search engines? - Do you track your visitor statistics on a regular basis? Do you use the information provided by your visitor statistics to improve your site? - Is your web site accessible to visually-impaired visitors? Does it meet the international standards set down by the Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)? - Do you know which sites and search engines provide you with the most traffic? Do you use this information to increase your traffic further? - Do you track the source of all reported errors in your site statistics and fix them promptly? - Do you know which keywords your site was found for in the search engines? Have you conducted keyword research to determine what search terms your target markets are looking for so you can optimize for them? - Does your web site HTML code validate to W3 standards? Do you check for validation regularly? - Does your site contain zero broken links? Do you check for and fix broken links regularly? - Has your site been fully search engine optimized to integrate your target search terms into your Page Titles, META Tags and visible page text? - Have you created and submitted an XML sitemap to Google Sitemaps? - Have you created and submitted a sitemap to Yahoo Site Explorer? - Have you checked to see if your site meets Google's Webmaster Guidelines? - Do you measure your visitor sign-ups and conversions on a regular basis? Do you tweak your landing page copy to increase the conversion rates? - Is your site navigation intuitive and are your visitors following the navigation paths you intended? - Do you encourage feedback from your site visitors and provide an obvious way for them to provide such feedback? - Are there at least 250 words of text on your home page to satisfy search engines? - Does your site contain a visible, text-based site map to aid user navigation? - Do you have an ongoing link building campaign running to secure more incoming links to your site and improve your site's link popularity score? - Does your site have a high percentage of repeat visitors? Are the majority of your visitors staying on your site for more than a minute? - Do your search engine referrals and site traffic figures grow each month? Unless you can answer yes to all the questions in the above checklist, your web site is not working hard enough for you and needs a workout. Get to it!
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