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The Real Business of Web Design

The Real Business of Web Design

List Price: $19.95
Your Price: $13.57
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Very good information, and worth the read...
Review: I read an interesting book on web design recently. It's titled The Real Business Of Web Design by John Waters (Allworth Press). It offers up some different views on web site design that I hadn't considered before...

Chapter List: Linking and Thinking; New Rules for Growth; After the Bubble Burst; Business Fundamentals; Expanding the Circle; The Growth Continues; The Information Age Is History; Mission-Driven Design; Organizing the Trip; Developing the Look and Feel; Building the Site; Form, Function, and Feasibility; Interaction Designers; Functional Designers; Business Designers; Governing the Web; New Basics for Marketing; Making a Difference; What Customers Want; A Value Proposition for the Web; Building One-to-One Relationships; Integrated Marketing Communications; Faster, Better, Cheaper; Economic Possibilities; The Circle of Language; Golden Music; Resources; Notes; Index

To be sure, this isn't a mechanics book. You won't go here to learn new techniques for animating graphics or structuring navigation. What you will learn is how to approach web design from a functional and business perspective. It's not enough to just throw out a few web pages and call it good. People expect more than that. Your site becomes the calling card for your business and is really an extension of it. If the customer has a bad experience on the site, you can rest assured you'll never see them again. By designing for a specific person who is using your site to accomplish something, you'll meet the needs of that person type as a whole. So instead of saying "what would a user want to do?", you build a fictional person, complete with name and background, who has a specific goal in mind. You then design for that single person. After designing the site for a set of these characters, you'll find you've successfully met the needs of most everyone who falls into those categories. In addition to that design technique, Waters covers a wealth of more generic information on the business of using the web to run your business.

All very good stuff, and worth the read...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The One-Stop Primer on Web History, Design, and Marketing!
Review: If you are at all curious about the Internet's origins, already have or want to have a web site, want a primer on marketing in the 21st century or are involved in web design, this book is for you. John Waters has put his broad knowledge into a one-stop read in his first book, The Real Business of Web Design.

From the vision of Tim Berners-Lee, founder of the World Wide Web, Waters describes the original objective of the Web as a place where information is to be shared freely. Of course, since Berners-Lee made the tools to do this available to anyone in 1991, the Web has grown dramatically, changing how we do business.

Simple guidelines for designing web sites are discussed in the book with major emphasis on the consumer and their experience. "Show respect" for the site visitor is a key point to keep in mind and it includes such things as easy design, easy navigation, permission marketing, and sharing information.

Waters also makes distinctions that illustrate how much marketing has changed as a result of the accessibility that we have to consumers everywhere. Old style methods of repeatedly bombarding consumers with unwanted messages is increasingly ineffective as consumers' have learned to filter them out. Waters explains and touts the effectiveness of permission marketing as well as other strategies that are aligned with the realities of today's marketplace.

To complete the points illustrated in the book, the author brings in vivid examples of numerous companies that have successfully implemented the strategies discussed. This book is a great place to start, and probably end, your education on Web Design.


Rating: 5 stars
Summary: How to identify both casual visitor and business objectives
Review: In The Real Business Of Web Design, veteran design consultant John Waters offers a resource of developing web strategy, clarifying relationships between design, technology and business and showing how to make Web sites work more effectively by making them more user-friendly to their visitors. Use The Real Business Of Web Design to simplify and clarify Web site development, and learn how to identify both casual visitor and business objectives.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Practical, philosophical and historical
Review: It's not easy to write a book about something as intangible as the Web that is simultaneously practical, philosophical and historical, but John Waters has. I appreciate most the excellent overview of where we've come from and how to design a site for today's Internet.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Practical, philosophical and historical
Review: It's not easy to write a book about something as intangible as the Web that is simultaneously practical, philosophical and historical, but John Waters has. I appreciate most the excellent overview of where we've come from and how to design a site for today's Internet.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Balanced Look at Today's Web Design Considerations
Review: When everyone was putting up their first Web site, I was overwhelmed with books "explaining" what needed to be done. Much of that advice looks pretty ridiculous in retrospect. So I was curious to learn more about how the great Web sites I enjoy are being developed today. The Real Business of Web Design proved to be a satisfying look at principles, processes and practices that I found to be enlightening. I especially liked the detailed examples that dot the book.

One of the book's great strengths is that Mr. Waters constantly reminds us that the Web offers us all the potential to have new relationships with one another through new and enhanced interactions. I am constantly and pleasantly surprised by the wonderful people I meet through the Internet, and the interesting activities these contacts lead to.

Frequently, that valuable focus on enabling us to be with one another is lost in the welter of "up selling," "creating customers for life," and other buzz words for wringing more money from the pockets of those who happen to visit.

For those who love processes, this book will be a delight. I especially enjoyed the sections about how to ensure that specific customer needs are kept in mind during Web design.

This book will be valuable to both those involved in Web design and those who hire them to do their work. I certainly intend to refer back to this book many times as we redo our Web sites in the future.

If you already know the Web's history, I suggest you start on page 56. Otherwise, you will feel like you are off to a slow start.

Nice job!


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