Archive for August, 2010

Two High Quality and Massive Icon Sets

There are not many iconsets that can match the quality nor the quantity of icons that we feature in todays design news roundup. The first set, released this week by WPZOOM, has over 500 icons for every social network service you could possibly think of. And the second set, also released this week, has over 170 crafted icons perfect for web design brought to you by WooTheme.

500 Free Icons Social Networking Icon Set from WPZOOM

500 Free Icons Social Networking Icon Set from WPZOOM

This awesome icon set includes 100 icons of popular social networking websites. Every icon from WPZOOMs Social Networking Icon Set is available in 5 different sizes: 64×64, 48×48, 32×32, 24×24 and 16×16px (PNG & PSD format), which means you get 500 beautiful icons!

You are allowed to use these icons anywhere you want, however WPZOOM would appreciate linkback.
500 Free Icons Social Networking Icon Set from WPZOOM

WooCons – 170 Free Web Icons

WooCons - 170 Free Web Icons

This huge icon set, designed by Janik Baumgartner exclusively for WooThemes, consists of 170 icons, sized at 32×32px and are in PNG format.

This icon set has been released on the GNU General Public License.
WooCons – 170 Free Web Icons

By Paul Andrew (Speckyboyand speckyboy@twitter).


PaintbrushJS

PaintbrushJS:

New from Dave Shea, “…a lightweight, browser-based image processing library that can apply various visual filters to images within a web page.�

I’m salivating just thinking of the possibilities here. Be sure to check out the demo.


The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

Smashing-magazine-advertisement in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To BeginnersSpacer in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners
 in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners  in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners  in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

At one time or another, we are all newbies. That’s right: you can deny it all you want, but not one of us got into this game with a full deck stacked in our favor. We entered as newbies, born fresh after the start screen loaded. However, unlike in a game, we are not immediately launched into a tutorial level to learn the ropes in this new world — what to avoid, how to progress, etc. And if we feel overwhelmed by our newbie status, we may not be able to find our way to the tutorials and guides that the community has put together to help us sort all of this out. So, feeling very alone in all this is easy.

Train in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners
Jumping in a new passion can be difficult and time-consuming at first. The support of the community can be extremely helpful in overcoming the learning curve and helping to find the right route for your career and your professional skills. Image credit.

But this is the great thing about being part of the online development community — that you are never truly alone. Your experience may be unique in its details, but it’s not generally, which is great because the community is very open to sharing its experiences and offering guidance to help newbies navigate the twists and turns we are sure to face as we continue down the developer’s path. In most cases, all you have to do to get some helpful advice is to venture into the social media neighborhoods and ask the community at large. At times, the answers just pour in.

That is what we found when we went out on Twitter and on Facebook recently to poll our followers and fans. We asked “What is the single best tip from your experience that you would give to newbie developers?� This article is the result of all of the amazing responses we have received. Before we go any further, we would like to thank those who took the time to answer our query and who offered so much great advice to all the newbies out there in the development arena. As usual, the advice also serves as a nice refresher to all those seasoned veterans who have been in the game for a while.

[Offtopic: by the way, did you already get your copy of the Smashing Book?]

Never Stop Learning

This answer, which we received repeatedly, is by far one of the best pieces of advice for newbies in the development field: never stop learning. This truly is one to keep in mind as you tread through this new world, because working in a field as dynamic and fluid as development, you can quickly fall behind if you do not actively strive to stay ahead of the curve. Without somewhat of a dedicated effort on your part, your progress could stall, and your skills and work could stagnate.

Learning in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

Once again, the online community and so many others have your back in this respect. So many wonderful books, blogs and other accessible resources are teeming with knowledge, just waiting to be absorbed and passed on. So, read. Implement and practice what you have learned. As noted in the replies below, trial and error is a fantastic method of self-teaching. You might even go so far as to schedule some kind of weekly assignment for yourself, to always keep your skill set growing.

  • Start with examples and muddle around with them. Change every line of code to see what it does. Then learn why those things work.
  • Be a sponge. Don’t let pride get in the way of learning from others.
  • Never stop learning.
  • Read. Oh god, read so many books on the subject that force you to practice things over and over again.
  • Learn how to learn for yourself.
  • Never think you’ve learned it all.
  • Don’t pretend you know all. Blogs and forums are your best teacher.
  • Read the docs. Don’t reinvent the wheel. Test. Learn.
  • Don’t copy and paste. Learn.
  • Always have a project on the go. It makes sure you keep learning.
  • Learn by putting as much as possible into practice.
  • Always learn more. You should never be 100% content, and always strive to constantly improve your skills.
  • Never stop developing their skills.

Take Criticism Constructively

… No matter how it is given. This is another important piece of advice that is both vital to learn and extremely difficult for some to do — especially because the anonymity of the Internet seems to give so many license to forget one half of the constructive criticism coin; they instead berate and belittle through their comments and their assessments of the developer’s talent. But no matter how harshly they come at you, find a way to distill the essence of their statements to see if you can gain anything from them. If they have no merit, let them go.

Criticism in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

One thing to always remember, as pointed out in the advice below: never take criticism of your work personally — especially given that in this field we are never supposed to stop learning. We should always welcome feedback from others in the community that helps us improve. It is simply a means of keeping our skills sharp. Inviting open criticism allows others to help open our eyes to new approaches and even problems we are entrenched in. Also, thinking of it as feedback and not as “criticismâ€� might soften the blow for you. After all, who doesn’t love feedback.

  • Be open to feedback as everything changes.
  • Learn to love criticism.
  • Test in every browser/OS config you can. And don’t take criticism of your work personally.

Be Patient

Here is another major tip to hold onto: be patient. If you can master this one, then you will have saved yourself many sleepless nights and hair-pulling-induced headaches along your journey to greatness as a developer. Remember that these skills do not develop overnight, no matter how much we wish they would. This journey is just that, a journey — not a direct flight to the final destination. Getting to where you want to be will take time.

Patience in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

Take your time. Don’t rush through the learning process too quickly, or you will likely burn out and get frustrated. Take the slow route, making sure you completely grasp one area before moving on to the next. If you hurry, chances are something important will slip past you. And as you work with others in the community, be patient with those both behind and ahead of you on the learning curve.

  • Have patience… a lot of patience. And if you have to get IE6 to work, start a pot of tea or something to calm yourself. :P
  • Have patience: with yourself, others and especially the code. :)
  • Take all the time you need to learn the basics. They are fundamental.
  • Prepare for frustration.
  • No matter how stupid what your client just said was, think before you reply.

Comment Your Code

Another pearl we found in the plethora of replies is a wonderful coder’s mantra (or at least it should be): comment your code. Comments are a powerful aid to new developers for many reasons, the main one being that learning through repetition is a fantastic way to make information stick. If you constantly comment on why you used a particular bit of code or how another bit works, then each time you return to it, you will be further cementing it in your brain.

Commentcode in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

Also, comments can provide just as much benefit to others who will be interacting with your code. Remember, it is not always about you. Comments are a way for others to learn from your work, just as you have learned from the code of those who came before you (if in fact they did think to leave comments). If you work with other developers on a project, this is an easy way to keep each other informed on why someone coded their part the way they did. It demonstrates professionalism, too, so keep up the comments.

  • Thoroughly comment your code! It will help infinitely in the long run.
  • Always use detailed comments. At some point, someone else will look at your code. Do them a favor and comment like mad.
  • When commenting: describe why not just how.

Be A Helpful Member Of The Community

This next bit of advice ranks quite high for many developers, not just because of its obvious benefits but because of the reward one feels from doing it: be a helpful member of the development community. It could prove to be an invaluable asset in your arsenal, not only because the lines of communication that you open will create great learning opportunities, but because you are building lasting relationships that you can call upon later when you find yourself in need of assistance.

Communityhelper in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

Those of us who have gradually moved through the ranks have especially relied on these resourceful posts and helpful guidance to make the most of our skills and code. We should really stay active in the community and give back when and where we can. Paying it forward for all of those who have paved the way for us is not only an obligation; we really should want to help this community of ours thrive and grow. Reaching out through social media outlets, blogs, forums and more can really improve one’s skill set and viability.

  • Get involved in the design and Web community as quickly as possible.
  • Peer code reviews!
  • Set aside time to help other developers. It could be in online forums. It really helps you reflect on what you know and don’t know.

Learn The Business

Learn all aspects of the business side of the industry, especially if you are freelancing. We got a few responses about this. And it makes sense. If you want any kind of sustainability in your career, then having a solid grasp of the business side of things is important.

Thebusiness in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

Knowing how the business operates and what clients generally expect will prepare you well for a freelance career… and will also keep you from being taken advantage of. If you learn the general pay scale and expectations of players in the field (including those of clients and other developers), then you’ll be well prepared to set your own rates and expectations. It also teaches you how to handle paperwork, which can be cumbersome and potentially overwhelming if you are unfamiliar with this side of the business.

  • You can only make so much money coding. Learn the business.
  • Quadruple your hourly estimate.
  • Make a careful and detailed estimate. Now triple it. You’re probably close to the truth.
  • Your estimates will suck for a long time, so be as conservative as you can, and offer discounts on overage.
  • IE6 is a bitch!
  • Choose your clients wisely. Bad clients end up costing you time and money.

If You Don’t Love It, Leave It

Some other words of wisdom that were passed along can be summed up like this: if you don’t love it, then this is not the right work for you. Developing is more than a job; it is a career — beyond that, even a way of life. Coding changes the way you see and interact with the world around you. It challenges you every day with something new to conquer or sort out. The hours seem to keep piling up, and your brain becomes harder and harder to switch off, continuing to solve problems long after you have bidden it to rest.

Love in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

This holds especially true for freelancer developers. As a freelancer, you are so much more than the person behind the code: you are the person behind it all. This is where your love of code comes into play ten-fold. Passion goes a long way in development. True passion for what you do comes only from loving it. You can’t fake it, either. A lack of passion not only will reflect in your work but will impede your progress.

  • If it is just a job for you and you do not look forward to breaking nights, find another job.
  • Love what you do, and remember those who taught you.

Make Time For Yourself

Another bit of advice to keep you sane as you grow is to make time for yourself. The best way to do this is to keep some sort of side project going. There are many reasons to do this, your sanity being the main one. Staring at code for hours on end takes its toll, especially if your code is failing and a solution escapes you. One way to fight off this madness is to have something to work on that lets you unplug.

Taketime in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

A side project gives you an outlet to recharge and sustain your interest in the field you have devoted yourself to. Make no mistake: this is a time-consuming career path, and without a side project to keep you engaged, you will quickly burn out. The work that once enthralled you will lose its appeal, and the passion that got you to where you are will fade. A side project also ensures that you constantly learn. You can choose projects that challenge you in ways that you don’t find in work for clients.

  • Keep sane with a side project of your own.
  • Work on a real project every day, even just a personal one.

Believe In And Be Yourself

Another powerful bit of advice offered by the collective that we polled was to always believe in and be yourself. Given people’s tendency to aim for the throat when “critiquing,� these words of wisdom are especially potent. Allowing negative words and disparaging character assessments to lower your opinion of yourself and your abilities will deflate your momentum.

Believe in The Web Design Community Offers Advice To Beginners

Always be true to your personal voice. Don’t compromise it while finding your way. You want to carve out a truly individual path, and that includes your voice, too. So, don’t try to imitate others who have found success. As noted below, never try to be someone else, because that never works the way you hope. Being inspired by others is fine, but don’t lose your identity and voice in the process.

  • Believe in your qualities. Never try to be somebody else. Life is too short for that.
  • Don’t quit! Hang on! Everything will work out fine.

A Few More Words Of Wisdom

Below are other responses that we couldn’t just leave hanging in the Twitterverse:

  • Try everything yourself before asking someone else (trial and error to the max).
  • Find your niche and focus on it until you are an expert.
  • You could probably code it well, but there is a fair chance that there is a time-saving jQuery solution.
  • Think of the visitor who is trying to find out something. They need to understand what’s going on, not just be impressed.
  • Some bridges just have to be burned.
  • Web developer? Practice sleeping less.
  • Don’t scoff at new ways of doing things because you don’t initially get them, nor should you embrace them without honest evaluation.
  • Stay informed about the direction of the Web. There’s a lot to learn, and along the way you’ll pick up skills.
  • Google before you ask.
  • RTFM!
  • Use source control. After that, comment your code.
  • Never write anything but standards-compliant code: faster, more reliable, and you won’t have to fix it when new browsers come out.
  • Regression test.
  • Do not fall in love with the code you write.
  • Put functionality first. Beauty comes in second place.
  • Don’t be cocky.
  • Focus on one subject at a time. Start with CSS.
  • “Stay hungry, stay foolish.â€�
  • Learn to write and format your own code cleanly and in as few characters as possible.
  • Run away from clients with red flags.
  • Take the most pride in your team’s code, not your own. Don’t complain when people edit your code. Enjoy how it improves.
  • All the stuff you say about all the old code you read, someone will say about your code in 10 years. So, knock it off. :)
  • Stay organized. It’s the key to success.
  • It’s never a hardware problem.
  • Logical, step-by-step thinking will solve any problem you encounter. No doubt about it.
  • Find a good IDE (like Aptana).
  • Appreciate the design in front of you, and design in general.
  • You don’t fully understand something until you can explain it succinctly to someone else. So, learn → do → teach.

Other Resources and Related Posts

Below are a few more articles and resources to help the newb start off on the right foot, armed and ready. If you have some time, we recommend checking them out.

(al)


© Robert Bowen for Smashing Magazine, 2010. | Permalink | Post a comment | Add to del.icio.us | Digg this | Stumble on StumbleUpon! | Tweet it! | Submit to Reddit | Forum Smashing Magazine
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50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Advertisement in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010
 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010  in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010  in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Today we present a refreshing collection of free icon sets. In the past, we posted a huge collection of icon sets and due to the increasing users’ demand, we decided to showcase a yet another collection. Everyone knows that a suitable icon can help users with nice metaphors (if used properly). This is the reason why many artists and designers pay attention to icons that they use in their designs. Feel free to suggest and share more icon sets in the comments section below.


Outstanding Free Icon Sets

This is ART Iconss

Iconsets26 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

PixeloPhilia2
44 Icons for web design and software

Iconsets66 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

The Ultimate Free Web Designer’s Icon Set (750 icons, incl. PSD sources)
An extensive pack with over 750 free icons (48×48px) for designers and Web developers. The .PSD-sources are available for free download as well. The set consists of web application icons, user interface icons, e-commerce icons, general use icons, desktop icons, blog icons, smiley icons, button icons, keyboard icons, national flags icons, popular online services icons and many others.

Prev Smashing 450 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Icon Pack: 256×256 Business Icons
This icon set contains 26 Business themed icons. Each icon is available in 256×256 .png format. Included in this set are User icons, Warning & Alert icons, Chat & Email icons, Maps & World Icons, and several other icons that are appropriate in business settings.

Iconsets57 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Amplifier Music Player Icons
512×512, 256×256, 128×128 Px, Png & Icnc & Ico

Iconsets76 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Iconorama 7 Pack

Iconsets70 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

This is ART 2

Iconsets72 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Alias Badges
Badget Replacement Icons

Iconsets28 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

House Management Icons
12 House Management Icons

Iconsets67 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Paradise Cherry Icons
Free for personal non-commercial use,

Iconsets68 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Isometrica (Volume 1): A Free Social Media Icon Set
There are 18 “normal” sized icons at an overweight 105×67px (.PNG) and being the sporting chaps that we are, we have even included a set half the size as well as a .PSD file you can mess about with.

Iconsets19 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Weather icons for web
This icon set contains basic icons of weather conditions 24×24 sized and made in web 2.0 style.

Iconsets56 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Designer’s Portfolio Icon Set (12 High Quality Icons)
The set contains icons related to avatar, portfolio, brushes, mail / envelope, color palette, colored pencils, tablet, laptop computer, moleskine notebook, DSLR camera, easel with canvas and coffee cup.

Iconsets85 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Sketchy Web Icons: 30 Hand Drawn Icon Pack
This Icon Pack includes 30 Hand-Drawn Web Design Icons.

Iconsets62 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Favorite Monsters
Set of 9 icons in form of funny, friendly monsters in different sizes.

Iconsets63 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Upojenie
All default iPhone/iPod Touch icons. – Some 3rd party app icons. – Total of 40 icons (+11 alts) – Wallpaper, Dock, Pageindicators, Badge, closebox and info.plist.

Iconsets64 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

ERP General Icon Set
Free for personal non-commercial use, Includes a link back to author site

Iconsets65 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Picasso: A Free Social Media Icon Set
Feel free to use them in any commercial or personal project. The size of each icon ranges from 512px to 16px.

Iconsets18 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Glow|be 2 + Safar

Iconsets69 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Imperial Porcelain: Free Icon Set
A set with 5 beautiful original icons in .png (160×160px), It can be used in various settings — for instance, on hotel and restaurant websites, in e-commerce-sites or even on food-related blogs.

Iconsets86 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Camera Sony Alpha 380
Size available in 512×512, 324×324, 256×256, 128×128, 64×64, 58×58

Iconsets37 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Daft Punk Helmets v2.0

Iconsets39 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Apple Fruit Logo
Apple Logo 512×512 – 256×256 – 128×128 – .Icns and .ICO

Iconsets73 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

PixeloPhilia 32PX Icon Set
66 Icons for Webdesign and Softwares

Iconsets74 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Car Icons Project

Iconsets75 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Nikon D90 Icon

Iconsets77 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Exclusive Google Buzz Icons
This set includes 24 beautiful icons in raster and vector formats.

Iconsets79 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Moleskine Icon Set
They come in 2 sizes each 512px and 256px and are in PNG format. They are free to download, share and use in all your personal and commercial projects.

Iconsets80 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Social icon set moleskin style
Amazing social icon set inspired in the classic moleskin journals

Iconsets81 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Camera icons
A tiny set of photography related icons, very useful for your photo applications

Iconsets82 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Twitter vector icons massive icon set

Iconsets83 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Payment method icon set

Iconsets84 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

The ‘Free Style’ Social Media Icon Set
Both of the icon sets contain 28 icons that cover all of the major social media services and applications, they are all in .PNG format and they come in three sizes: 24x24px, 48x48px and 60x60px.

Iconsets2 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Mobile Icon Set
Mobile Icon Set includes Phone Call, Photos, Messages, Calculator, Wireless, Calendar, Settings, Contacts, Notes, Map.

Iconsets6 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Sketchy Social Media Icons Freebie
Every icon is a .PNG (making them easy to edit) and packaged together, The set includes four sizes for each icon: 16×16, 32×32, 48×48, 57×57, It also includes two sizes for each icon next to its type mark: 32px tall, 57px tall.

Iconsets8 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

NIXUS Icon Pack: 60 Beautiful Premium Icons
Each icon comes in transparent .png format in 64x64px, 48x48px, and 32x32px.

Iconsets11 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

New exclusive icon set: Copenhagen
The 25 icons cover many of features shown on web app sites, which include icons for client, payment, download, secure, email and many more.

Iconsets14 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Glass icons
The set contain 11 type icon with total 42 icons.

Iconsets16 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Content Management System Icon Set
A set with 12 high quality icons in 48×48px, available in the .png-format. The set was designed to be used in content management systems, but can also be useful for other user interface designs.

Iconsets21 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Oxe Icons Set
18 64px PNG Icon Set

Iconsets27 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Applications Icons and Extras
Png and Icns

Iconsets29 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Pos Machine Icons

Iconsets30 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

Payment Method Icon Set
This icon sets download package contains the six icons, and include a choice of eight different sizes: 12px, 16px, 24px, 32px, 64px, 128px, 256px and 512px.

Iconsets31 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

IronMan Icon Pack
Pack Content : 2 Helmet Classic and silver, 512×512, 256×256 and 128×128

Iconsets40 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010

OLED social icons
Every icon is 16x16px OLED display, glowing dots & stuff.

Iconsets42 in 50 Remarkable Free Icon Sets Released In 2010


Smart Tips to Help You Create User Friendly Content

A major problem with many new websites today is that their content is geared toward a different topic from what their site initially started up as. For example, let us say a website starts up geared toward gadgets and technology reviews. For the first few months, you are getting exactly what you came for, technology and gadget reviews.

However, as time progresses the reviews begin to widen to internet technologies such as web development, emailing, and the likes immediately.

As a reader, you will not necessarily be interested in reading about web development or emailing as you visit the site for gadget and technology reviews, thus, you will probably begin searching for a new website to call home for your gadget and technology review source. Going back to being a webmaster, we will touch base on six tips that help you produce content geared towards your audience as well as tips to introducing new content away from the initial category or categories.

Content That Meets Your Audience’s Standards

When creating content for your website, you need to make sure it meets your audience’s standards, such as comprehension level, topics in their interest, and the likes. Let us continue with the gadgetry and technology example mentioned earlier. Let us say you own a gadgetry and technology review website and your audience range from teenagers to young adults interested in the technology world.

So for example, the content on your website should be written in a rather casual style without much sophistication based on the information provided about your audience. The content should as well be fully geared towards useful gadgetry and new technologies that your audience can make use of or fit right in their alley.

Due to your targeted audience being a young group in addition to the category you cover, your content should not generally be composed in a business-like manner but rather casual as mentioned earlier. With that said, by approaching your audience in a different monotone than expected, your audience will lose interest in the content and or website altogether.

Complimenting Your Website

Your content should compliment your website, which means that your content should be relevant to and or supplement the topics you cover. Think of your website as the introduction to, or the summary of, a book. The introduction gives the reader a general idea of what to expect throughout the book.

However, if the introduction does not compliment the contents of the book, it leaves the readers unhappy and rather confused about the entire book. Thus, your content should supplement or compliment your website to assure it is user friendly.

Skimmable Content

Most users never read your content thoroughly or completely but rather skim through it to get to where they may find it interesting and applicable to what they were searching for. Furthermore, by breaking down your content into short and understandable paragraphs or bullets, you make it easier for them to find what they were possibly looking for.

Additional enhancements to making your content skimmable are to highlight keywords that may possibly be in their interest or to create separate titles for several topics throughout. For example, let us say you have an article on the top ten friendly dog breeds.

To make the article easier to skim through, you would highlight the ten dog breeds you mention so users can easily find the breed they want to read more about or you can provide a title to each paragraph you mention each individual breed in.

Bloated Content

Your content should flow off the tongue naturally as if you are addressing the viewer personally. What this means is, your content should not be stuffed with “filler text” or bloat in order to address your message, but rather be direct and to the point to keep the readers interested in the topic rather than leave or skim through it due to useless and unneeded text.

Strengthen Your Argument

Whether you are reviewing a product, talking about methods to saving time, or how to properly mow your lawn, they are considered arguments, whether you have intended them to be or not. Arguments need to be backed up by other sources or facts.

A lot of times arguments are backed up by imagery or referencing facts your viewers may have never heard of which causes your reader to sometimes doubt about the contents authenticity or correctness.

Therefore, you should occasionally link to outside sources to back your argument to have your readers assure that your facts were not whipped up in a few minutes, but are rather backed up by other reputable sources. Not only does this strengthen your contents correctness, it also assures users that they have chosen the right place to read about certain topics.

Consistent Voice

From page to page, article to article, quote to quote, you want to assure your voice is consistent throughout your website and not contradictory. If users are finding out that you and your content are falling into contradictions throughout your website, it builds a mental image in your viewers mind that your website is covering topics its editors do not quite fully understand which leads to making your website an untrustworthy source to many.

In order to avoid contradictory content, go back and check the content you currently have that relates to what you want to publish, this assures that your voice is consistent and strong throughout.

While making your content user friendly may sometimes be a tricky challenge, it should be something that comes natural if the topic your website covers is something you enjoy and or experience. Additionally, users always tend to love to throw feedback whenever they can, whether be it on the topics you offer, topics you do not offer, your website layout, or even the frequency of how many times a week you post content or the length of the content.

Moreover, taking your users’ feedback and applying it is the best solution to making your content user friendly and targeted while showing your users that you care about their feedback and that your website is built around them rather than for them.


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