Archive for category Web Design
Design by Satori – Web Redesign – Part 3
Posted by Claudiu Geanta in Web Design on December 27, 2009
Design by Satori – Web Redesign – Part 2
Posted by Claudiu Geanta in Web Design on December 26, 2009
This is part 2 of this series. You can view Part 1 here.
I decided to split the main screen in 2 sections, after the “slideshow” on the billboard. One section will cover copy about myself, talents, skills, etc. and the right sidebar will include “Services” and “Design by Satori featured in”.
The sidebar will change according to whatever page I’m on and display information with links for easy navigation. For example, if on “Portfolio” page, the sidebar will include:
- Web Portfolio – with copy and my best samples
- Before & After Design Portfolio – section with jobs I took over and redesigned sites for clients
- Logo & Branding Portfolio – samples of my work along with copy of logo and branding
- Brochures Portfolio
- Print Portfolio
- Graphics Portfolio
For the “Portfolio” page I am currently using thumbnails but after reading some more on Smashing Magazine, I reached the conclusion that thumbnails should be eliminated and large pictures of the design work should be displayed without leaving people guess what every thumbnail would be.
An explanation of each project will be a nice add-on (and that will give me some more tags and keywords that would please the All Mighty Google). Of course “Calls to Action” with “Contact” information would be present next to each project, allowing the web viewer to immediately take action once convinced the work is up to his/her standards.
In conclusion – the below shows where the change will occur:
Design by Satori – Web Redesign – Part 1
Posted by Claudiu Geanta in Web Design on December 26, 2009
It’s been almost a year since my last redesign of “Design by Satori” and it’s time for another one. By the way -I highly recommend redesigning your site once per year or at least updating chuncks of text in your web copy at least 4 times per year. This will maintain Google rankings not to mention the nice surprise you will give your web viewers – showing that you care about your site and the way you present it to them.
I have decided to share with you the pain of redesigning a website, especially if you are like me (looking at tons of websites for inspiration, trying something, don’t like it and start all over again).
Well the present site was a bit too dark. Here’s a shot of it here:
In fact, here are all my versions since I decided to redesign the site every year (sometimes twice):
HTML vs. FLASH – The Ultimate Cage Fight
Posted by Claudiu Geanta in Web Design on November 17, 2009
Flash is often labeled as the SEO death sentence for websites. Equally perceived as bad is also Ajax but by employing other techniques you can bypass the short comes of both Flash and Ajax and still make your website SEO friendly. Well…almost.
Flash is still a powerful technology that can deliver an enhanced user experience. That is why, aware of the poor engine support, Adobe creators released a software development kit that converts Flash files (SWF) into HTML documents. To some degree this effort has paid off and Google is now able to index Flash files, using their own software.
Do You Know What Your Website Should Do?
Posted by Claudiu Geanta in Web Design on November 13, 2009
Just as in sports (coaching, offense and defense) your website should also employ this 3 pronged approach. Apply it vigorously and you got yourself a winning website.
Just in case you need a FREE website opinion, drop me a line and I’ll do my best.
Back to the 3 pronged approach – what do I mean by “coaching, offense and defense” exactly.
Your website should do the following:
Read the rest of this entry »
5 Steps to Methodical Web Design
Posted by Claudiu Geanta in Web Design on November 3, 2009
Before you venture into design territory and build your website make sure you have all the necessary tools and mainly a plan. Without it you will go back and forth from coding to Photoshop to Dreamweaver to CSS files in a merry go round while wasting a lot of your valuable time.
Instead plan every step by following these 5 steps:
- Map out the structure of your site
Decide the pages, titles, and the folders where you’ll store them. Establish parent directories and subdirectories. For instance, I am currently working on redesigning my web design & marketing site for Satori Solution Inc. I know I will have a public-html directory on the root of the website so I have created several folders under this that will store separate files. It is easier to keep track of everything. All my css files I have them stored into a css folder. All the images (jpg, png and gif) are under the image folder, and so on. - Use Logical Names for Files & Folders
Stop using the same old “contactus.html) name coding. This will not score you brownie points with Google. In fact that is lame and web surfers will not even know that this particular page even belongs to your website. Instead, use a meaningful name like yourcompanyname-get-in-touch.html or contact-us-yourcompanyname.html. Your webpages will be indexed in no time by search engines and they will make sense when they are posted on the web. - Replace spaces with dashes for your webpage titles
That’s right – spaces are automatically replaced with that ugly “%” symbol every time it finds a space in the title of a webpage. That is why you should even replace the title of a pdf file that you might want web visitors to download with something like that: http://www.designbysatori.com/how-to-promote-your-business.pdf - Test, test & test again
Once you are finished with the entire site, start testing. Test it from different computers, different resolutions, and different browsers. I have made the mistake back in my young designer years of launching a website without fully testing it in Mac based browsers and after uploading it I was asked by an advertising shop (who of course was a Mac shop) how come they are not seeing the website correctly. Some other time I designed a site as if 800 x 600 was the only resolution available. Of course it looked great to me, but when I switched to a wide screen laptop with a 1280 x 768 pixels, everything looked tiny and very unappealing. So test links and menu items. Take your time and test everything. - Publish only when done
Once you have completed the testing stage, let the site “cool down” a bit. Go back and revisit to make sure you have everything in place and you are ready to upload. DO NOT put an “Under Construction” sign on the temporary site. This is something you’d do back in the 90’s. It doesn’t fly anymore and it looks silly. Leave it as is, with the splash page provided by the hosting company. Usually GoDaddy or JustHost (I am sure many others do the same) have an already splash page letting people know that particular site is hosted with them.
Of course there is a lot in between, but here I just wanted to give you 5 easy pointers that you might forget. I hope that helped and hopefully you’ll get them done right.
Happy webbing!
Think Before You Design
Posted by Claudiu Geanta in Web Design on October 26, 2009
Designing good web pages is a very challenging process. That is in part due to the fluidity of the medium the design is constructed upon.
In other words, just because you want something to look a certain way doesn’t guarantee it will. When you design a brochure for print, you know that everyone has pretty much the same capacity of seeing the design as it was constructed.
Not the same for the web. Why? Because…
Web Design – The Right Way
Posted by Claudiu Geanta in Web Design on October 16, 2009

Designing a web site in less than 30 minutes?
Every time when you conduct an internet search for web design and/or development you get hit by an avalanche of software packages, web experts, design companies and freelancers. All hard at work, trying to impress you with their portfolios, creativity and willingness to go the extra mile to build that perfect website for you.
That is all fine; after all – I belong to one of these groups. What is disturbing for a designer like me is the existence of so called web design packages that claim to be able to build a website in 30 minutes or less. But truly disturbing is the actual existence of a professional company that would consider buying one of these packages and claim they have an effective web presence. Read the rest of this entry »


























