Article Index
10 Easy Ways to Promote Your Website
5 Simple Steps to Accepting Payments
5 Steps to Understanding HTML
5 Ways to Avoid the 1998 Look
6 Reasons Why You Need a Website
7 Ways to Make Your Web Forms Better
A Question of Scroll Bars
Ads Under the Radar Linking to Affiliates
AJAX Should You Believe the Hype
All About Design Principles and Elements
An Introduction to Paint Shop Pro
An Issue of Width the Resolution Problem
Avoiding the Nuts and Bolts Content Management Software
Beware the Stock Photographer Picking Your Pictures
Building a Budget Website
Building Online Communities
Clean Page Structure Headings and Lists
ColdFusion Quicker Scripting at a Price
Column Designs with CSS
Content is King
CSS and the End of Tables
Cut to the Chase How to Make Your Website Load Faster
Designing for Sales
Designing for Search Engines
Dont Be Scared Its Only Code HTML for Beginners
Dreamweaver The Professional Touch
Encryption and Security with SSL
Finding a Good HTML Editor
Focus on the User Task Oriented Websites
Fonts are More Important Than You Think
Free Graphics Alternatives
FrontPage Easy Pages
Hints All the Way
Hiring Professionals 5 Things to Look For
How Databases Work
How the Web Works
How to Get Your Website Talked About on Blogs
How to Install and Configure a Forum
How to Make Visitors Add You to Their Favorites
How to Run Ads Without Driving Visitors Crazy
How to Set Up Your Hosting in 5 Minutes Flat
IIS and ASP Microsofts Server
Image Formats GIF JPEG PNG and More
Its a World Wide Web Going International
JSP Java on Your Server
LAMP The Most Popular Server System Ever
Making Friends and Influencing People the Importance of Links
Making Searches Simple
Offering Free Downloads on Your Website
Opening a Web Shop with E Commerce Software
Perl Cryptic Power
Photoshop a Graphic Designers Dream
PHP Easy Dynamic Websites
Picking a Colour Scheme
Printing and Sending the Two Things Users Want to Do
Putting Multimedia to Good Use
Python and Ruby the Newer Alternatives
Registering a Domain Name
Registering Your Users by Stealth
RSS Really Simple Syndication
Setting Up a Mailing List
Setting up a Test Server on Your Own Computer
Some Places to Go For More Information
Taking HTML Further with Javascript
Taking HTML Further
Taking Your Website Mobile
Text Ads Unobtrusive Advertising
The 5 Principles of Effective Navigation
The Art of the Logo
The Basics of Web Forms
The Basics of Web Servers
The Case Against Flash
The Confusing World of Web Hosting Making Your Decision
The Evils of PDFs
The Importance of Validation
The Many Flavours of HTML
The Smaller the Better Avoiding Graphical Overload
The Top 10 Biggest Web Design Mistakes
The Web Designers Toolbox
The Web is Not Paper
Theres More than One Web Browser
Time for User Testing
Titles and Headlines Its Not a Newspaper
Tracking Your Visitors
Understanding Web Jargon
Uploading Your Website with FTP
Using Flash Sensibly
Using Quizzes and Games to Get Traffic
VBScript Javascript Made Easy
Websites and Weblogs Whats the Difference
What Do You Want Your Website to Do
What You See Isnt Always What You Get
Which Database is Right for You
Why Doing It Yourself is Best
Why Java Will Drive Your Visitors Away
Why Word is Bad for the Web
Why You Should Put Your Content in a Weblog Format
Why You Should Stick to Design Conventions
Working With Templates
Writing for the Web

The Web is Not Paper

The Web is Not Paper.

The web is a relatively new medium – in fact, it's often referred to as just that, 'new media' – and practical graphic design on the web is still less than ten years old, by all accounts. This fact means that plenty of so-called web designers are really just print graphic designers trying to transfer their old ways onto a compuuter screen. What you have to remember though, is that the web is not paper.

Paper Doesn't Scroll.

If you design a site as if it had to fit entirely onto one sheet of A4, you're doing your visitors a disservice. Text on the web has a potential infinite amount of space. Why make me press a button to go to your next page? Are you stupid? Are you just trying to increase your pageviews and ad views, or what? Stick to the rule of one page for one article, and you'll do much better.

Paper Has No Bandwidth Issues.

You can cover a sheet of paper in all the pretty pictures and backgrounds you like, and it still doesn't take any longer to pick it up and read it. That's just not true on the web. I'm sure you abandoned dial-up years ago, no doubt, but there are still plenty of people out there using the web at those kinds of speeds. It's downright rude to make them sit and wait while your design loads, when all they wanted to do was read some text.

Columns Work on Paper.

One of the biggest issues with print designers find it difficult to get over is the web's lack of columns. You really, really can't do columns on the web. You just can't. It doesn't work. You have to spend hours writing a set of custom scripts, only to break functions like text selection and browser resizing that your visitors would rather have seen work properly – not to mention that reading left-to-right on a computer screen is unexpected and altogether quite unpleasant. Get over yourself, and leave your columns on the paper, where they belong.

Paper Isn't Linked.

One of the easiest ways to spot a site designed by a print guy is by looking for the links. If there aren't any, the chances are the designer used to do paper layouts. Even more so if they've added notes like 'go to our downloads page to see...' – you can link to it, you know! Don't be afraid to link far more than you'd think is sensible. Linking is what the web is all about.

Paper Will Only Be Seen One Way.

Web pages, on the other hand, will be seen in a variety of web browsers, at all sorts of sizes, in lots of different fonts... the list goes on. It's daft to think that you can control the way your website looks to every visitor: what you're doing is offering a set of guidelines, for their software to interpret however it wants. If they choose to make all their fonts massive because they have trouble seeing, who are you to set your page to override that? Yet many designers do.

Never forget that your role isn't to make sure that everyone sees the design exactly as you intended – what you're trying to do, really, is let as many people as possible see the site, and make it look as close to the intended design as possible, if it doesn't interfere with their wishes. That's the difference between a user-hostile website and a user-friendly one. If you're not a print designer, you're probably nodding your head – and if you are then, well, I suggest you take some time to think it over.
The End of Paper?

Paper and the web aren't adversaries by any means: the web is highly unlikely to destroy paper layouts as we know them, no matter how many 'technologists' might predict it. The important thing, though, is that paper and the web are different, and you need to realise that their differences are something to be celebrated, not worked around. The best layout for the same content will be very different on the web to the way it is on paper – but, in the end, why is that bad?