2011年1月8日星期六

So what factors should you consider when it comes to a page preview?

Unlike with the bounce rate scenario, however, people might completely bypass a visit to your website when they see a miniature version of it, because many of the elements that need improvement become strikingly apparent.

So what factors should you consider when it comes to a page preview? Let’s look at three of them:

If you sell products on your website, you might need to use a larger image of your top product to gain a person’s attention.
If you sell branded items, you might want to check with the brand owner to see if you can use a trademarked image.
For websites in general, the need for more effective colors and fewer gradients may become obvious, especially if a shrunken version of your site doesn’t appear to be crisp.
To see how compelling your site pages look when they’re reduced in size, you can take screenshots of your pages and then reduce the size of the screenshots. If you have Microsoft? Word installed, for example, you can screenshot a page by pressing the “Prt Scr” button (to the right of the F12 key on most keyboards) and then “pasting” the screenshot in a Word document. From there, you can click on the image and change its size to approximate what a page preview would look like.

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