THE
PROCESS
One of the most common questions
we're asked is to explain the process of developing a professional
Website. In this
article, we'll be covering what is involved in producing and managing
a large Web project. Although the process is more about large projects,
most of this information will pertain to smaller Websites as well. The
process would also pertain to an online ad banner or marketing campaign,
but with fewer planing documents.
Stage 1: Research and Planning
The first part of any new project is discovery; which involves researching
a client's business and/or product. This can involve meetings and interviews
with key individuals, as well as researching the marketplace and competitors.
The amount of time it takes depends on the complexity of the business
or the budget allowed. Without the discovery process, a designer cannot
design a Web site that communicates effectively.
Although important, the discovery phase is not restricted to large
budget projects. For lower budget sites we guide the client
into providing their own market research and competitor activity via
questionnaires and meetings. This can greatly reduce the amount of time
and costs needed to put a strong plan in place.
Planning documents
The actual documents produced by Dragonfly can vary depending
on size, complexity, components and budget. A project with a content
management system, four categories of products, online ad campaign
and several sub-brands will obviously require more planning that a
eight page Web site that introduces a new business service to a limited
market. No matter how large or small, there are some basic planning
documents that we develop for all of our Web projects.
Proposal: A bid document that outlines
that basics of the project, rough time frame,
budget and tasks. The proposal is just a
guide, and the parameters of the project can grow beyond what is
outlined.
Letter of Agreement: Outlines the exact details
of the project up to the date and is signed by all parties involved
-similar to a contract.
Project Questionnaire: A basic series of
questions used to help us write a more effective creative brief and/or
technical brief. The questionnaire is typically answered by the client.
Marketing/Creative Brief: A simple, one-page
document that outlines the creative and marketing objectives of the
project. The end rersult will guide the Website design.
Flow Chart (site map): A visual planning element
that shows all of the site’s major architecture and page relationships.
The flow chart will visualize the page hierarchy and any back-end data
development. The end result is a document that shows where
a user will travel for content and the source from which it's published. (see
sample)
Wire frames: Document shows the rough mock-up of
page content in relationship to positioning and emphasis. This is a
rough visual representation of what to expect on a page not a design
document. Some projects will have multiple wire frames for various
sections, depending on complexity.
Design Comps: Visual designs that illustrate the
look and feel of the site. We produce from two to
four design comps for a project, depending on budget. The
comps will be static representations of Web pages, and can change slightly
once moved into production. A typical comp will consist of a home page
and inside page layout.
Optional Documents, depending on project scope:
Content Plan: Depending on project size and other
variables, this is a plan for how the site’s
content will be developed. When redesigning an existing site with
good content, the needs will be minimal. For most site overhauls, the
required amount of new content can be extensive. Having a plan that
outlines what’s needed, who will develop new content is key to
keeping the production on track.
Back-end development plan: For projects requiring
extensive back-end Web development, we’ll put together a planning
document that shows how the data will be stored, administered and published
to pages within the site. This document is reserved for more
extensive Web projects or when working with data from
a client’s existing system. Development plans have
their own flow chart that illustrates the data paths.
Design Guide: A useful guide for anyone
who needs to add additional pages or content to the Web site. The guide
will list such visual elements as text styles, spacing, color usage,
image usage, page sizes and style sheet parameters. The size and detail
of the design guide will depend on the complexity of the site. This
document is reserved for larger sites where new pages will
be added on a regular basis, especially by persons within the company.
Not every Web site requires a design guide, but it's a must with sites
managed by internal departments or corporations. (see
sample)
Next Page >> Stage
2 - Design
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