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WEBSITE BASEBALL - YOU'RE OUT!
by Bob McElwain
Beethoven was a genius of the first rank. Even if you do not
care for the kind of music he created, you probably agree it is
great.
Fundamental to music is form. There are strict rules
associated with each. To break the rules, is to break the form.
The result will sound odd to the untrained ear. It will be
broken, unacceptable to listeners who understand the form.
The true genius of great musicians is the creativity they
demonstrate within the forms acceptable in their time. Beethoven
faced rules as stringent in his day as Scott Joplin faced in his.
And It's So In Baseball
"Strike three. You're out!" cries the umpire. The form and
rules which guide a baseball game are simpler to see, perhaps,
but no less fundamental to the game than those of the sonata to
Beethoven or ragtime to Joplin.
Form Also Rules The Web
The Web is as close as we can get now, to the wild, wild west
of yesteryear. It's exciting, exhilarating, and seemingly
without bounds. And many believe it to be without form or rules.
But they are quite mistaken.
I built my first website in 1992. While I was not aware of
the rules back then, they were there. And the site failed almost
before I got it finished because I did not follow them.
No, there will be no rehash of the rules just now. I will
settle for one example. The human eye can not correctly register
the image of red text on a dark blue background. It is a matter
of physiology, not opinion. So why put red text on a blue
background? While other rules may not be so soundly based,
break them at your peril.
Commonalities Exist
Reasons for building a website differ greatly. Some are
built just for the fun of it. Others are put together in hopes
of making major bucks. Most fall somewhere between these
extremes. But whatever the purpose, there are common needs
among all sites.
If you want to cheer the NFL, you want visitors to hear your
cheers, to support your efforts, and add their own. If you want
to be the web authority on goldfish, you need visitors who demand
your content and contribute to it, else your authority means
nothing. And if you want to make bucks, you need visitors who
believe in you, who buy, and who return to buy more.
What is common here is the need for visitors. The target
varies with the purpose. If you're cheering the NFL, you don't
want goldfish lovers (unless they also love NFL football). But
all need targeted traffic.
Since people are pretty much the same the world over, what
may offend or annoy one person, will likely do the same to
others. That is, red on a blue background will offend NFL fans,
goldfish enthusiasts, and potential buyers.
Beating The System
The way to win big time on the Web is to tenaciously follow
the rules. And yes, there are lots of them. They range from
those that dictate site design to others which guide a business
to success.
Speak of joy, if you wish. Or sell, sell, sell! But do so
within the constraints of the form. Whatever you present must
flow from the form. Your creativity is tested within the form,
not in violation of it.
Remember the battle for the home run record between Sammy
Sosa and Mark McGuire? It was really something, that's sure.
But as great as these men are, they were out on a call strike
three. Them's the rules.
Your website may strike out too, even if you know the rules,
and follow them. But if you don't follow them, it will never
come to bat.
Bob McElwain Want to build a winning site? Improve one you already have? Fix one that's busted? Get ANSWERS. Subscribe to "STAT News" now! join-stat@lists.dundee.net
Web marketing and consulting since 1993
Site: Sitetipsandtricks.com
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