Posts Tagged ‘design’

A New Zeek Design Is Coming: The Wireframes

July 28th, 2010 - Jeff Turner

Steve Zehngut and I have felt for a long time that our site was cluttered and lacking focus.

Of course, I could make excuses and say that this visual clutter is the reason for my consistent lack of consistency in writing here. But I won’t.  Those are demons to exorcise another day. Suffice it to say, we need to eat our own dog food and stop putting our site last on our development list.

So, today I submitted my ideas for how the site should be organized to our designer. I must have changed these wireframes 20 times over the past few weeks, but I think I’ve finally settled on something that will remove the clutter, get us focused and make Steve and the rest of the team happy at the same time.

For those who want to play along, I thought I’d share parts of the process with you. The first step – wireframes. For those who are unfamiliar, a wireframe is “a basic visual guide used in interface design to suggest the structure of a website and relationships between its pages.” A designer (in this case, our designer, Kiran) uses this basic visual guide to direct her efforts when laying out her interpretation of the graphic elements. What she delivers back are three or four beautiful graphics that are based on this UI direction.

The graphics in this post represent the home page and one inside page structure and were created using Omnigraffle. I hope you enjoying taking a look into the process. I’ll be back when I’ve got some comps to share.

There’s More To A Creative Website Than Pretty Graphics

July 8th, 2010 - Jeff Turner

In large-scale projects, the most creative part of the work is not the graphics, it’s the architecture.

While there is cognitive recognition of this by most of the clients we work with, this is not a concept that is quickly internalized. In the early phases of many projects, we find that even the most sophisticated and educated of clients find themselves distracted by the lure of pretty graphics way too early in the process. When bidding on projects this is particularly true. A heavy emphasis is placed on visual design and the critical  issues of function, how the site is built, special software requirements, and where and how the site will be hosted often take a back seat.

The most creative aspects of site design are often unable to be seen in the browser.

Creative design is subjective. Whether a site can handle a traffic spike created by a link from a highly influential website, like The Drudge Report is not. The design of the hosting services, the architecture of the content management system, and the way different pieces of software work together to insure that a site stays up and working can and should be as as creative as the visual design.

One of the mistakes we see a lot of clients make is basing the decision about what company should build their site on the look of the visuals in a portfolio. If impressive visual design is not backed up by equally impressive programming skills and system knowledge, your project may look good and not function in a way that supports your business objectives.

Design plays an important role in whether a site will be used properly by those who visit it, this is a fact. Great visual design makes a site simple to navigate and leads the visitor to the pages you want them to spend time on. But it is just one of the factors you should be considering when choosing your site developer.

Here are some other factors you should consider.

  • When your developer describes your project, are they leading the technology brainstorming or merely reacting to features that you have requested?
  • Are they using a home baked platform to build your website? If so, this may lock you in to working with that developer to make what would be minor changes with someone else.
  • What open source platforms is your developer familiar with?
  • How involved is your developer in the open source community?
  • What kinds of “pet” projects is your developer working on?
  • Is your developer showing you multiple possibilities to help achieve your goals?
  • Is your developer sought out for their opinions?
  • What associations is your developer actively taking part in?
  • What conferences do they attend?

Feel free to add to our list in your comments.

Good Or Bad, Design Influences Behavior – A Look At Feedly

February 18th, 2010 - Jeff Turner

I realized this morning that my behavior has changed dramatically over the past two weeks.

Two weeks ago I made Feedly the home page for Firefox on my desktop computer. I did it after going through a few sites I hadn’t visited in a while. It was an experiment of sorts. I’d given up on my Google Reader long ago in favor of human aggregation via my social networks. I wanted to see if it would bring some value back to the RSS feeds I had subscribed to in the past. It did.

Feedly’s design changed my behavior. Good or bad, design influences our behavior. The noise of the Google Reader format influenced my decision to give it up almost as much as the value of the social recommendations I migrated toward. The clean, magazine-style design of Feedly has cut out the noise and allowed me to get to more information faster, moving me back toward my targeted material. That’s a good thing.

If you’ve never given Feedly a try, I think it’s worth setting up an account and seeing how it impacts your own behavior. Here’s a quick video to illustrate my thoughts. If you’ve given Feedly a try, what are your thoughts?

Related reading: 5 Reasons Why RSS Readers Still Rock

HowsMatter.com

February 9th, 2009 - Steve Zehngut

HowsMatter.com needed an original design, a custom Wordpress theme custom plugins and a plan to make sure it stayed updated. We delivered.

howsmatter700

  • Original Design
  • Custom Wordpress Theme
  • Custom Wordpress Plugins
  • Ongoing Maintenance

Phrase Frenzy

February 4th, 2009 - Steve Zehngut

Phrase Frenzy is 100% Zeek Interactive from start to finish. Phrase Frenzy was an original game concept. And we executed every phase of design and development.

Lingo Plus

February 4th, 2009 - Steve Zehngut

We created Lingo based on the TV show of the same name.