Skip to content

A podcast for those who design, develop and run websites.

Boagworld is the personal website of Paul (the Wurzel) Boag who lives in the heart of rural Dorset. He produces a weekly podcast along with Marcus (pop star) Lillington on all things relating to building and running websites.

Latest shows

127. Context
In this week's show we discuss taking context into consideration when designing websites and we answer your questions about video for an elderly audience and the most influential books in the industry. 
126. Scaling
In this weeks show we learn lessons from the botched iPhone launch here in the UK. We chat to Jeff Veen about the designer / developer relationship and Marcus talks about adding jingles to your website.
125. Copy
In this weeks show we discuss how to give personality to your site copy and we talk with Elliot Jay Stocks about going freelance.
124. HTML 5
In this weeks show we explore how to create better online surveys and Lachlan Hunt joins us to discuss HTML5
123. Plight
In this weeks show we review Textmate and the Top 5 Tips for Web Designers and we discuss the plight of in-house designers.

or view all shows

Have your say

Leave a message for the show...

Buy my book: The website owners manual. A book for all those involved in designing, developing or running websites on a daily basis.

The missing pillar of web design

Published on: October 7, 2005 by Paul Boag

After listening to the various podcasts coming out the Web Essentials conference this year, it has made me think a lot about the nature of web design and the current state of the industry. Although there are some very exciting developments, I am concerned that we may be in danger of loosing some perspective.

Six Pillars of web design

For fear of stretching an analogy, I believe that there are six pillars of web design. Each pillar represents a fundamental part of any website development project and a successful site has an equal balance between all pillars.

These pillars are:

Usability

Usability is a well-recognised sphere of web development with many champions such as Steve Krug and Jacob Nielsen. Sites with bad usability suffer from poor rates of repeat traffic and failure by users to complete calls to action.

Accessibility

For the sake of this article, web accessibility refers to making your site accessible to the widest possible audience whether they are disabled, using old technology or alternative devices. This is a particularly popular area at the moment within the web design community, with a lot of effort being put into developing techniques to improve site accessibility.

Aesthetics

Aesthetics refers to the branded look and feel for a site. Covering colour schemes, styling and interface, aesthetics has a huge impact on how a users perceives a site. For a long time this was my far the most dominant pillar of web design but now it is seen by many as secondary.

Development

This pillar of web design is experiencing phenomenal growth, with ever more powerful "web applications" emerging. It covers web standards and AJAX as well as more traditional server side scripting.

Content

In many ways, this pillar is ignored by many web designers being considered "the clients problem". The reality is that content can make or break a website. Well-written, easy to read content combined with useful applications can go a long way to supporting an otherwise weak site.

Objectives

This is the missing pillar of web design. Often overlooked in the web design process and yet fundamental to any sites success. Why does the site exist? What is it trying to achieve? What returns on investment are required? These are all essential questions that are easy to ignore. Fundermentally this is the "business model" behind the site.

Since initially writing this article Alist Apart have published an excellent article on site objectives and strategies. It is definately worth a read.

Maintaining the balance

Problems arise when these pillars are not in balance. If one pillar is removed, or even if one pillar becomes greater than another does, then the whole structure becomes unstable.

Like in every other area of life, web design goes through "trends". From brochureware to flash, from web standards to AJAX, we are all prone to jumping on the bandwagon. Of course, in once sense this is a good thing. When we see other people's groundbreaking work, it inspires us to innovate ourselves. We are seeing this with AJAX and Web 2.0. There is a lot of innovation happening around the "development pillar" and that is good to see. It should be applauded. However, we must be careful to ensure that this pillar does not become unbalanced with the others. I am seeing many web 2.0 applications that function wonderfully, degrade nicely, look stunning, but are at the end of the day are pointless, lacking a clear objective!

The sixth pillar

I hear a lot of grumbling in the web design community about clients. Our clients aren't interested in accessibility or AJAX or web standards. Many see their clients as being ignorant and a barrier to progress. Although I am sure there is the odd ignorant client out there, I think the main problem is that they focus most heavily on the one pillar of web design we largely ignore... objectives.

They are concerned with the sites return on investment, whether that is in sales, leads, or brand awareness. They don't care about accessibility unless it will help them achieve their objectives. They are not interested in the underlying technology if it won't solve their business problems.

The holistic approach

So who is right? Are our client's right to obsess about objectives and goals, or are we right focusing on accessibility and applications? The reality is that we should be taking a holistic approach to web design where we all at least keep an eye on the other pillars. Even if you specialise in accessibility you should not be blind to technology and equally if you specialise in technology it should not be at the expense of all else.

By maintaining an overview of all the pillars of web design, we are sure to keep them in balance and prevent too much bias towards any one area.

Comments

Comments are for the discussion of this post. If you have other questions / comments then post them to the forum or send me an email

  • Post by Dennis on October 7, 2005 7:47 PM

    Great points, Paul! And thanks for the usability links. Here's my podcast on accessibility for anyone interested: http://webaxe.blogspot.com.

  • Post by Marston on October 7, 2005 8:59 PM

    Great points indeed. I was thinking about this today myself actually, especially point 6. Outside and even within the standards community I see it out of balance and more ephasis put on aesthetics, which is cool to a certain extent. I know sometimes there isn't the luxury of balancing every aspect into every site, especially with picky clients but I definitely agree with a holistic approach.

  • Post by Paul Boag on October 8, 2005 8:54 AM

    See that is strange, because my impression at the moment is that aesthetics arent getting much attention anymore. It seems to me that development (AJAX, web 2.0. ect) and accessibility are the darlings of the web design community at the moment.

  • Post by Mark on October 10, 2005 3:24 PM

    You're absolutely right Paul, at the end of the day commercial projects are ultimately to be judged by the criteria the customer has set out (with the help of our expert advice), and not the academic extremism it's easy for those of us who are passionate about such things to fall into.

    Clearly there is a line here, and some aspects of web standards etc should always be taken into consideration - but at the end of the day, a commercial site usually has both a deadline and a fixed cost, which must come first. Furthermore to the average site user it is the usability/design/aesthetics of a site that matter most, not the underlying code.

  • Post by adult, movies on December 26, 2007 10:06 AM

    Great points, Paul! And thanks for the usability links..

  • Post by din on December 26, 2007 10:09 AM

    thank you for sharing paul

  • Post by film,indir on December 26, 2007 10:10 AM

    great point, thank you paul. good sharing

  • Post by porno izle on March 24, 2008 12:11 PM

    thanks...

Leave a comment

Additional Information

Supporting boagworld

Boagworld only exists thanks to the kind support of the following people. Check them out.

Speaking and writing

Supported by feed.informer.com