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Fresh Web Design
Forget quickly dated sites. Here’s how to increase shelf life online. 

by Michelle Taute
August/September 2005
Austin Bale
Created by design studio Also, www.anabelcentral.com is the online home of musician Austin Bale. He uses the site to distribute his music for free, and the site stays fresh because it was designed to evolve and change. Using Macromedia Contribute, Bale can update it as he incorporates new music. He adds a piece of a building for each song, essentially creating a city of his own music. Bale describes it as a “destination that comes to you.”

The web is a little bit like the dairy section at the grocery store—you want to reach into the back of the cooler for the site design with the best expiration date. While many clients request websites built for longevity, it can be tough to capture a timeless quality in such an ever-changing medium. Tough, but not impossible. It takes commitment and creativity, but you can create an online presence that will look and feel fresh for years to come.

Advance planning
The first step is to plan for the site’s evolution from the get-go. A completely Flash site, for example, might be difficult to freshen up, but a Flash banner or homepage movie on a largely HTML site would be fairly easy to switch out. Another good tactic, says Todd Edmonds, creative director at Iron Design, is building in rotating imagery. A header with a photo that changes daily gives the illusion of newness to site visitors.

It’s also important to think about how the client can maintain the site. “Look for a way you can help encourage constant updating,” says Wil Arndt, a principal at Mod7. For the digitalfestival site www.vidfest.com, the firm created a blog that makes it easy to add informal news and notes. Edmonds also takes a long-term view by encouraging clients to budget for yearly site maintenance. “Once they have the budgets, updates become something for them to participate in and think about,” he says.

Bucking the trends
When certain design elements or fonts make a trendy splash, they can become inextricably linked with the time period when they were popular. Arndt recommends that creatives arm themselves with a good understanding of design history and note the rise and fall of trends. “If you can identify persistent trends, resist the urge to build them into your design,” he says. Instead, study projects from the past 10 to 20 years for timeless design elements.

Jenny Volvovski, a designer for Also, thinks the easiest way to create a long-living design is by limiting your choices. She recommends a simple typeface paired with one or two colors and a simple layout. “Use a structure that has worked before and repeat it in a different context,” she says. Edmonds seconds the call for simplicity and thinks it’s good to avoid navigation in unusual places. Most users look for navigation elements along the top or left side of a site.

Tech savvy
Ultimately, content is still king, and regular updates go a long way toward making a site feel fresh. Mod7 creates content management systems (CMS) that make it easy for clients to swap out information— and even photos—on their own. While not every designer has the programming chops to create a CMS, it’s still a good tool to keep in mind. Consider partnering with a company that can build these systems for you, or get your feet wet with open-source CMS from such sites as www.opensourcecms.com.

Thomas Romer, a senior designer at The Chopping Block, recommends that every designer bone up on programming— whether it’s familiarizing yourself with basic HTML or getting to know ActionScript. “Even if you don’t end up doing it, it will affect your concepts,” he says. “You’ll come up with solutions you didn’t know were possible.” It will also improve your ability to communicate with programmers and increase your value as a designer.

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