Copyright © 2006 Quest Software Best Practices for Web Content Eric Myers, Director, Internet Marketing Ed Mauss, Manager, Marketing Communications Chris.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Web Development & Design Foundations with XHTML
Advertisements

WillHelpYouOut.com Hits 1000 Let’s get Started.
© Copyright 2007 Exempler Telecom Test Automation System Exempler - We pride ourselves with providing lightweight robust engineering solutions.
Copyright © 2006 Quest Software Best Practices for E-Cards and Landing Pages Andrew Kordek, Direct Marketing Manager Ed Mauss, Marketing Communications.
Wikispaces 101 Training Standards & Interoperability (S&I) Framework May 30, :00 - 5:00pm EDT 1.
18 Copyright © 2005, Oracle. All rights reserved. Distributing Modular Applications: Introduction to Web Services.
Centre for the Enhancement of Learning and Teaching Supporting & Enhancing Online Teaching & Learning by Catherine Ogilvie Centre for the Enhancement of.
© 2014 Systems and Proposal Engineering Company. All Rights Reserved Using Natural Language Parsing (NLP) for Automated Requirements Quality Analysis Chris.
Getting Your Web Site Found. Meta Tags Description Tag This allows you to influence the description of your page with the web crawlers.
1 On-line Versus Paper Whats the Difference? Characteristics of E-reader Characteristics of Online Communication Techniques for Effective Online Help Techniques.
©2010 Check Point Software Technologies Ltd. | [Unrestricted] For everyone Effective PR: the Power of Three Craig Coward Context Public Relations.
Improving Web Usability with a Content Management System Fred Miller, Rick Lindquist, & Curtis Kelch Illinois Wesleyan University.
OneBridge Mobile Data Suite Product Positioning. Target Plays IT-driven enterprise mobility initiatives Extensive support for integration into existing.
Communicative Writing Week 8 MMC120 Instructed by Hillarie Zimmermann MMC120 Instructed by Hillarie Zimmermann.
Internet Services and Web Authoring (CSET 226) Lecture # 5 HyperText Markup Language (HTML) 1.
DEVELOPING CONTENT FOR A USER BASED WEBSITE >. CONTENT DEVELOPMENT Thinking Web It’s the anticipation of the user need that is the key to a truly functional.
Basics (and musts) of web design: integration of plain language, usability, and information architecture Lisbon | October 13, 2010.
Hints and tips for good web content. The University’s web presence To clearly inform prospective students, their influencers, researchers, potential members.
Writing for the web Web Authors Group Meeting 20 November 2003.
Skills: short document writing technique, tips Concepts: types of Internet writing This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share.
Prof. Anselm SpoerriWeb Design Summary1 Web Guiding Principles Diversity of Users & Rapid Change –Diverse users, diverse computers, diverse skills, diverse.
Connie Padilla - New Mexico State University Writing for the Web Increase usability of your site by writing and formatting for the web.
Website: Best Practices. Sources: The World Wide Web Consortium the main international standards organization for the World Wide Web Research-Based Web.
Formal Lab Reports –Some personal comments –Structure First and foremost Know what it is to plagiarize Don’t do it !!! Disclaimer: This is not a substitute.
There is a certain way that an HTML file should be set up. The HTML section declares a beginning and an ending. Within the HTML, there should be a HEAD.
Making a Presentation Discussion Points Masters-Doctoral Seminar.
Posters How to make them. How to present them..
Why planning? In order to make a successful project good communication is key! The process of planning and designing a project involves many people from.
]. Website Must-Haves Know your audience Good design Clear navigation Clear messaging Web friendly content Good marketing strategy.
© 2006 Hewlett-Packard Development Company, L.P. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice An FAQ on FAQs for Libraries Pamela.
Website Design. Designing and creating different elements involved in developing a website for e- commerce can help you identify and describe the components.
Multimedia Design. Table of Content 1.Navigational structures 2.Storyboard 3.Multimedia interface components 4.Tips for interface design.
Expression Web 2 Concepts and Techniques Expression Web Design Feature Web Design Basics.
Color Theory in Web Design Web Design – Sec 2-2. Objectives  The student will: –Have a better understanding of effective use of color on the web. –Be.
An Introduction to Content Management. By the end of the session you will be able to... Explain what a content management system is Apply the principles.
© 2012 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All Rights Reserved. Copyright 2012 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All rights reserved. ® WRITING FOR THE WEB.
V How to write for the web Russell Warfield, Sustainability Communications Coordinator Friday 29 November.
Chapter 12: The Internet The ultimate direct. Internet Facts U.S. firms spend $14.7 billion on Internet advertising in 2005 By 2010, they are expected.
Poster Presentations Effective. Presentation outline Why research posters? Visual communication tools Critique Details about poster format and design.
Multimedia & The World Wide Web winny HCI 201 Multimedia and the www.
1. 2 OVERVIEW First Impressions Content Purpose Design Distinction Closing.
Web Strategies for Effective Marketing Results Presenter: Jonathan Buyco, The Active Network.
Unit 1 Changing the Appearance of Text. TITLE CORNELL NOTES TOPIC: NOTES: Summary: HTML Hypertext Markup Language 1 st and last tag on a page Tags Tags.
WEB DESIGN SOLUTIONS. 2 Presentation by JAVANET SYSTEMS 1st Floor, ROFRA House, Suite 4, Kansanga, Gaba Road P.O Box 31586, Kampala, Uganda Tel: +256(0) ,
Copyright © 2002 by Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman publishers. All rights reserved. Chapter 8 Designing Pages and Screens Professional.
CREATING AND SHAPING Web Page Design Chapter 2. Text Matters  Even though when thinking about building Web pages people think of design first, the heart.
Capstone Presentation Guideline February 2010 Middletown High School Middletown Public Schools.
Writing for the Web A short tutorial David Rashty, Isaac Waisberg.
How to develop an oral presentation You have one chance to make a point.
Creating a Usable Web Site Royce Shin - Web Development University of Minnesota.
PREPARING REPORTS CoB Center for Professional Communication.
Effective Web Writing April Overview - Why Content Matters - Reading Online vs Print - Best Practices with Web Writing - Content Plan/Schedule.
Web Design Guidelines by Scott Grissom 1 Designing for the Web  Web site design  Web page design  Web usability  Web site design  Web page design.
How to improve website usability Main findings & conclusions from the MOU seminar Ivana Doulgerof Management Organisation Unit Programming & Communication.
Blackboard Learn 9.1 © 2010 Blackboard Inc. All rights reserved.
Color Theory in Web Design Web Design – Sec 2-2. Objectives  The student will: –Have a better understanding of effective use of color on the web. –Be.
Microsoft Expression Web 3 Expression Web Design Feature Web Design Basics.
Online Journalism – Multimedia Package Writing Professor Neil Foote, University of North Texas.
STANFORD UNIVERSITY INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SERVICES A Book Review of Letting Go of the Words by Janice (Ginny Reddish) DDD Self –Directed Time January.
Posters How to make them. How to present them..
IGCSE Revision – Question 3 Objectives: To recall the methods used to answer question 3 Challenge: To write in concise manner while still making sure that.
1 CSE 403 Web Patterns and Design These lecture slides are copyright (C) Marty Stepp, 2007, with significant content taken from slides written by Valentin.
WELCOME! Communication Camp NDSU Agriculture Communication WiFi Connect to NDSU Limited Open browser Enter Full name Password is 7n7K4X6g.
Thinking Web > CONTENT DEVELOPMENT
Creating Website Content CS Programming Languages for Web Applications
CIM Modeling for E&U - (Short Version)
WRITING FOR THE WEB ® Copyright 2012 Adobe Systems Incorporated. All rights reserved.
Information Systems 337 Prof. Harry Plantinga Usability.
Creating Website Content CS Programming Languages for Web Applications
Creating Website Content CS Programming Languages for Web Applications
Presentation transcript:

Copyright © 2006 Quest Software Best Practices for Web Content Eric Myers, Director, Internet Marketing Ed Mauss, Manager, Marketing Communications Chris Peters, Search Marketing Manager

1 Good Web Writing A factor in customer satisfaction Essential to search engine optimization Helps visitors make better, faster decisions Three aspects: –Orientation: how information is organized on a page –Information: how clear, concise and correct the content is –Action: how the content helps visitors navigate >You'll succeed by putting yourself in the shoes of your site's visitors – our customers and prospects.

2 Remember: Writing for the web and writing for print are quite different: –79% of users scan the page instead of reading word-for-word –Reading from computer screens is 25% slower than from paper So: a web page should have scannable text and use best practices proven to increase usability for customer

3 The F-Shaped Pattern Left to right: an "about us" page; a product page; a search results page Heat maps from user eye-tracking studies of three web sites: red= areas most viewed; yellow=fewer views; blue=least viewed; gray=no views.

4 Best Practices: Pages Overview pages: Brief summary of challenges and our solution, then topic statements linking to more background, if needed Title and/or subhead repeated on each page: for context, so page can stand alone Active, concise language: use the second-person (you) and as few words as possible; avoid jargon Images that add value and dont interrupt message (consider thumbnails linked to full size and aligned right) Consistent organization

5 Best Practices: Paragraphs Precise, unique titles Meaningful subheads (not clever or cute ones) every one to two paragraphs Brief paragraphs (chunks of information), with just one idea expressed in each Text hierarchy no deeper than four levels (title, subhead, body copy/bullets, teaser links)

6 Best Practices:Text Avoid all caps, italicized sentences and underlines except for links Use bold or color to emphasize key words Keep lists to no more than 10 items Use link text to describe whats next; avoid Click here No unnecessary words (e.g., existing and underlying) and redundant sentences Simple words: diverse not heterogeneous

7 Telling a Story Consider this as lead paragraph on Stat page: Towson University, of Baltimore, Md., was seeking a comprehensive change management solution for its PeopleSoft environment and chose Quest's Stat® for PeopleSoft. The result? It has increased its development teams productivity by 65 percent as well as dramatically improved the IT team's response time to change requests.

8 Huh????? [Our] service-oriented management solutions provide a modular and future-proof approach to managing highly diverse and widely distributed IT infrastructures [The product] integrates service impact management with event processing automation to build a service model that maps IT components to the business services they support, consolidating, enriching, and correlating events, as well as determining root causes and the impact of events on business services. [The product] provides a proven suite that adapts to processes to align identities and access requirements, offering capabilities that include user administration & provisioning, password management, Web access management, directory management & visualization, federation, audit and compliance

9 Quest.com Content Samples of Good Pages – – – – Real-Time Critiques –Volunteers?

10 Advice from Pros Eric Myers: Always write content that is going to be helpful to customers. Does it answer the obvious questions they will want to ask? Andrew Kordek: Be strategic, relevant and credible. Ernest Hemingway: Remember – prose is architecture, not interior design. Isaac Asimov: "Try to write reasonably well". –Don't agonize over every little word when you're drafting content –Get your thoughts down, starting with an outline. –Fill in the outline –Fine-tune to check the flow of information and cut extra words –When you've finished that, then do it again Remember, everyone needs an editor, no matter the skill level or experience. –Marcom queue for new/revised pages –Ongoing review of current pages

11

12 Additional Resources Jacob Nielsen, Web Guru: Dont Make Me Think: Elements of Style (Strunk & White): Any bookstore or Amazon.com Great article about writing for the customer: Customer Focus Message Calculator – The We We Monitor : Key word popularity measurement: Key word competitiveness measurement:

13 Questions and Comments?

14 Appendix: Before and After Before Since the database is at the core of todays mission-critical applications, it is essential to an organizations success that it is available and performing as well as possible. DB2 LUW is at the heart of many mission critical applications and with that comes high level of expectation that the database remain available and performing well under many types of conditions. To prevent database downtime requires that data be collected about the database and the associated tiers. After DB2 LUW drives many mission-critical applications, so it must be available 24X7 and perform well under all conditions. To ensure this, you need the tools to easily collect, view and act on detailed data about the database and the associated application tiers.

15 Appendix: Before and After Before SQL Server DBAs are often faced with making changes to their SQL Server database environment. These changes can be driven by a number of different factors: changes to the application the database is supporting; configuration changes to improve database performance; business-related changes due to data retention requirements, data security issues; or other internal and external initiatives. What makes managing change even more daunting is that changes in one area of the database could affect changes in another area. After SQL Server DBAs must often make changes to their SQL Server database environments. These changes can be driven by:Enhancements to the application the database is supportingConfiguration adjustments to improve database performanceBusiness-related mandates for data retentionData security issues Managing change can be daunting because changes in one area of the database could affect changes elsewhere.