Archives For Design

Yes, I can build WordPress themes from scratch. But I prefer to use pre-built themes, such as Standard or Basic, when starting a new WordPress site.

Why?

When content is the focus of a site, as it is with this blog and WPToronto.com, the uniqueness of the design is a secondary requirement to the information being presented.

The ability for users to consume the content they want is your top priority. Pre-built themes, either free or commercial, can step in to handle the design while content gets worked on.

And if it turns out that nobody gives a poop about the content, there’s less loss. You didn’t invest tons of time, or money, in creating a custom design for a site nobody wants to visit.

But what if the site turns out to be a hit? Great content, growing audience. You need something unique, a brandable experience.

No problem there, either. The delightful thing about themes like Standard and Basic is that they also act as a framework to build on top of. The underlying code is maintained by a dedicated team (8BIT or Themify), so the design/development focus shifts from core functionality to user experience and branding.

TL;DR = Minimum Viable Product applies to content-driven websites just as much as it applies to software development.

Enhanced by Zemanta

People like pretty things.

via Big Ideas from Dave Watson, the Award-Winning Creative Director of TAXI – Techvibes.com.

A very simple statement. Painfully obvious, even. But it’s something that aspiring small businesses, entrepreneurs, etc. should take to heart more often.

Customer experience is defined by many of things. Aesthetics is one of them. Admittedly, I’m no designer… but I know what I like, and I know there’s an emotional connection that draws us to things we find visually appealing.

Design shouldn’t be an afterthought for your business. Whether you’re building an app or opening a coffee shop, the appearance of your company — branding, fixtures, UI, stationary — will say a lot. And folks will jump to conclusions based on those first impressions.

Advice from TAXI’s Creative Director

When I’m working on fun personal projects, or projects for clients that aren’t likely to be offended, I turn to Samuel L Ipsum – alternatively known as slipsum - for some badass placeholder text.

This text generator pumps out three flavours of placeholder content: Slipsum Lite (less offensive), Classic Ipsum (standard stuff), and all-out Slipsum (fully offensive Samuel L. Jackson mode).

Continue Reading…