Forrester Evaluates Top Web Designers

Forrester Research recently evaluated web design capabilities of top interactive marketing agencies across 18 criteria, and reported that Sapient, imc2, Razorfish, IconNicholson, and IBM Interactive led the pack for transaction-led projects.

This was due in large part to the “high usability scores earned by the client reference sites they supplied.”

Organic, just shy of the leaders’ circle for transaction-led projects, received impressive scores for its online branding work, which boosted it into the leaders’ circle for image-led projects.

New to Forrester’s rankings this year, Ascentium, Blast Radius, iCrossing, OgilvyInteractive, Resource Interactive, and Rosetta emerged as strong performers, a category rounded out by returning agencies Critical Mass, Molecular, R/GA, VML, and Whittmanhart. Arc Worldwide completed the research firm’s list of evaluated web design and development firms.

Don’t have half a million dollars to invest in your website? Don’t get discouraged.

While these web design and development agencies are out of reach for most small businesses, there are many reputable smaller scale web designers and developers that deliver high-quality websites that perform well.

In fact, if you do your due diligence, you can get a basic website professionally designed and developed for as little as $5,000 to $15,000.

Flash Intros Not Dead Yet

Flash intros not dead yet

A client in the HR field asked this week about the value of a Flash intro on a website to set themselves apart from competitors.

I explained strategic positioning and good design is what effectively differentiates a business from its competitors. In fact, if you do a really good job, you can actually make your competition look dull and unimportant.

As I recently noted on Web Designer Wall, Flash intros were tolerated in the ’90s when the Web was a novelty. People were excited about this new thing called the World Wide Web, and many of us spent countless hours surfing it. Spinning images and assorted gimmicks were tolerated, and even considered cool.

Not today. Now people just want to get the information they’re looking for, and get things done quickly and easily.

Still, some business owners think they’ll “wow” people with Flash intros. In fact,  a web designer recently told me about an architecture company that spent tens of thousands of dollars on a Flash intro.

Unfortunately, they wasted their money on something that will only get in the way of their visitors. They could have spent that money on search engine optimization, or a host of other marketing and sales tools and campaigns, which would actually generate leads and sales, and promote growth.

While it can take web designers and developers several weeks to design and develop a Flash intro, it takes visitors just a fraction of a second to click their way to the competition.

Bing Bing Bing!

Microsoft launched the new version of its search engine called Bing earlier this month.

Is it a Google killer? Unlikely, given Googling is a deep-seated habit amongst the majority of Internet users. But it’s certainly chasing #2 search engine Yahoo.

Bing represents the third rebranding of MSN’s search engine products, preceded by MSN Search and to Live Search.

StatCounter analyzed search engine market share two weeks before and after the formal launch of Bing on May 28 (May 14 to May 27 and May 28 to June 10). For the US market it found:

  • Google decreased from 78.68% to 77.94% (-0.74%)
  • Yahoo decreased from 11.46% to 10.76% (-0.7%)
  • Microsoft (Bing, MSN Search and Live Search) increased from 7.4% to 9% (+1.6%)

Google Wave Promises to Make a Big Splash

It’s like Twitter on steroids. The new Google Wave is a fusion of productivity tools, social networks, and micro-blogging.

You can communicate and collaborate on the Web platform with both private and public messages. In fact, some believe Google Wave will reinvent e-mail.

Check out the Google Wave demo now.

Who’s King of the Web?

Web Designer Wall recently featured an article surrounding a Webcopyplus web poll, which indicated more users are demanding good web design. It sparked a debate at a recent workshop, where web writers, designers and developers started debating which is the king of the Web: web content or design.

While I’m on record for suggesting web content is the king of the Web, I believe both are royally important. In fact, if you dig deeper, I’d have to say consumers are the true ‘kings of the Web’ because they ultimately dictate what succeeds and fails on the Internet.

As web specialists, we need to keep reminding ourselves that a website is critical in how people perceive, understand and interpret a company and its offerings. And everything counts. Quality web writing can’t compensate for poor design, and good design can’t save poor web copy.

Web designers, developers, web writers – and anyone else involved in creating websites – need to respect what others bring to the table. It’s best to put egos aside and collaborate. That way, everyone involved wins – especially the client.

A Consistent Title Helps

The Globe and Mail once again noted Webcopyplus in its Report on Business section. While we’re definitely grateful for the coverage, the recent write-up demonstrates the importance of getting the right title beside your name.

Almost always, I use the title Senior Web Copywriter. However, the Globe and Mail referred to me as a communications consultant. While this is accurate in a general sense, it lead to a couple of enquiries surrounding media relations and PR consulting, which are not a part of our core service offerings.

Had my official web copywriter title been used, perhaps others would have reached out for web writing-related projects.

I’ve noticed several top consultants are incredibly consistent when referring to themselves. Take Rob Frankel; he religiously brands himself as a branding expert. And it pays off! When people need a branding expert – whether they’re CEOs or reporters – Frankel is often top of mind, or at least at the top of Google.

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