KEY Internet Design Rules: Navigation, Hierarchy & Shade



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Thanks for watching the video 3 Rules for higher Internet Design: Navigation, Hierarchy & Shade

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48 thoughts on “KEY Internet Design Rules: Navigation, Hierarchy & Shade”

  1. I liked this 40 seconds in because that is exactly my issue. THank you so much for making it so clear what you will be teaching sio I won't be wasting my time (which I'm not 🙂

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  2. Videos like this is exactly the reason I love the service YouTube provides, and the dedicated YouTubers that upload to it. Incredible breakdown. This is a college level, high level overview of this topic. Thanks!

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  3. To be fair, the first Law Firm has the better headline (not perfect but better).
    The second one "Exceptional Outcomes" is so generic and can be used for everything.
    With the first one I know from the beginning that the firm is focused on Family Law and centered in San Francisco.
    I have hint if the site is the right one for my intentions.

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  4. i mean when you use language the way you do, yeah it seems like the first design was "harder" but actually the hamburger menu is always accessible on every page and has the exact same submenu system.

    i think you're speaking more to convention trends than what is actually "good" or "easy"

    just wanted to point this out because i think changing our perspective on how we present this info brings us closer to an objective look at user experience

    personally, i think both websites suffer from all the same design flaws.

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  5. thanks! helpful tips :] yeah i agree that the first website did too much to grab attention and u ended up losing focus, whereas the second website did a really good job of establishing a hierarchy that actually directs ur attention to a specific main title

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  6. From mi pov, the first web is better designed. Even though the second one is prettier, the first one is focused on converting to sell. So you have a big title telling what they are and where (they are in San Francisco and they provided law services specialized in family), short comments of the services they have already provided, and two buttons, one to talk with someone or maybe send and email and other one to read testimonials from previous clients. Also the logo is there and a phone to call.

    On the other hand, in the other page I only see the logo and text talking about how is their service but you can't know more unless you start navigating the site. I'm pretty sure that the first one produces more sales than the second one

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  7. Great video! Feel like it's going to help me out a lot. Random thought I had- did you make the worse website yourself for the demonstration or did you just pick a random website to talk smack on?😅

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  8. only reason I don't like these videos is because there's a bunch of talking and no note taking or structure, most of it is common sense (at least for me) and I need more like how to actually structure your web design on a paper, like a real example not just a conversation.

    Reply

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