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Tips On Effectively Organizing Your Navigation
by: Jamie Kiley
Not all links are created equal.
While all of your links may be important, you must
sort and prioritize to come up with an effective navigation
scheme. Here's what you should keep in mind:
1. Sort your links
Your links should be organized according to their
relationship to each other. Any time you can find
a way to divide your links into two or more categories,
do so.
If you have more than 5 or 6 links, categorizing becomes
very important. Try to find some natural groups. For
example, suppose you sell widgets, and your site has
this set of links:
• Mini widgets
• Multi-colored widgets
• Discounted widgets
• Contact us
• About the company
• News
Your major categories are:
• Products
• Company info
When you separate the two sets of links according
to those major categories, it becomes much easier
to sort the available information.
The simple reason is that a choice between two items
is less complex than a choice between 6 items. It's
the principle of dividing and conquering.
Take a look at the following site:
www.adobe.com
Notice the four main categories--Products, Resources,
Support and Purchase. These four categories help visitors
narrow down at a glance which area they need to look
in to find the info they want.
Imagine if all of those links were lumped into one
long list. How much harder would it be to figure out
where to go?
Often, you might not have clear-cut categories. For
example, you may have three links that all go together
in one category (such as "Products"), plus
several more miscellaneous links. Even if the miscellaneous
links don't fit conveniently under one category name,
you can still group your links. Put the three product
links together, then all the miscellaneous links in
a separate place.
2. Prioritize your links
Hopefully, you have some idea of what you want visitors
to do on your site. Your site should be designed to
drive a specific action--in other words, get visitors
to do a specific thing.
Once you've decided what your primary goal is, your
navigation should reflect it. The links that pertain
most closely to your main goals should be emphasized
the most. You need to guide the visitor in the direction
you want him or her to go.
Prioritize. Ask yourself the question, "What
is most important?" What do you really want to
accomplish? (I'll give you a hint: "About the
company" should not be a top priority link.)
Here are several examples of sites that prioritize
well:
www.fleet.com
On the home page, you'll see three main links. These
links are geared at attracting the company's major
types of customers. All other links on the page are
much smaller.
www.atomz.com
On this page, it's clear that the company wants visitors
to click on one of their three product links: Publish,
Search or Promote. The site does a good job of getting
attention and guiding the visitor in a specific direction.
www.columbiahouse.com
Right from the beginning, it's obvious that the company
wants visitors to join one of their three clubs. All
other links are relegated to the bottom of the page.
By carefully prioritizing, these sites are able to
narrow down the choices and make it more likely that
visitors will head in the direction they want them
to go.
About The Author
There are 605.6 million people online. Can they find
your business? Jamie Kiley creates powerful and engaging
websites that make sure YOUR company gets noticed.
Visit http://www.kianta.com for a free quote. Get
a quick, free web design tip every two weeks--sign
up for Jamie's newsletter: http://www.kianta.com/newsletter.php
jamiekiley@kianta.com
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