Posts Tagged ‘web design’

Flourishing financial websites, but with invalid CSS/HTML November 11th, 2009

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Along with the explosive increase of the Web and flourishing financial websites that deal with a variety of topics such as payday loans, stock exchange, forex and real estate, companies have realized the profits that wait for those eager to build a strong online presence. When they decide to publish a financial website on the Internet, companies are able to build their brand, market their products, support any existing customers, release publicity pieces, and even take orders. However, very often lost in the fast pace of growth has been an eye on the influence that their current web-building business will exert on the bottom line and the perspectives of their online presence. Remember that not only does your website financial content have a significant influence on your company’s income but so does the way your website itself is created.

Preparing your site with necessary commitment to web standards – and continuously testing to ensure it keeps constant compliance to those standards – can save your business much money and possibly increase income generated by your website.

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Pervasive bad habits in designing financial websites November 3rd, 2009

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In the 1990s, the Browser War that broke out between two financial giants Microsoft and Netscape was a cause of the development of many proprietary technologies and techniques that today have spread across the Internet. A great deal of these technologies involved presentation of various types of information (finances, stock exchange, education, entertainment etc.) into the HTML (HyperText Markup Language) markup or implemented interactivity in a browser-specific way. What is more, developers had to deal with many problems to get a profitable design out of technologies that were not prepared to creating flexible and well-designed websites on subjects such as online loans, banking or real estate. Their numerous kluges and techniques soon became habit, then were incorporated into software, and in the end affected the software industry’s comprehension of how financial  websites should be built. Currently, over ten years later, technology and techniques have improved considerably but the specter of those 1990s techniques still remains—and it’s costing everyone a lot of money and potential clients.

Those costs of operating on financial markets online include increased development risk, expenses, and time to market, problems with brand and customer management, unnecessarily high bandwidth costs, staff turnover problems, as well as increased complexity and cost with regard to future financial websites and application of modifications. At the most basic level, these issues are too closely connected with backend software and appear in form of a bloated, technically incorrect and complex code, which does everything from damage the user experience to limit search engine results. Changes in the presentation layer of a financial (or any other) website should not put software at risk and a tiered approach, which has been a popular in the software world for years, is easily accessible by means of a more mature approach on the UI layer.

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