Karrit wrote:I need soem constructive criticism on the new layout of my website
OK. Let's get on the same page here. You've asked for criticism, and I used to evaluate sites for a living. (In case you wanted to know why I'm saying some of this stuff). Translation: I’m going to nit pick the site. Some of this will come across as mean, but I assure you I’m only point to faults in the site, not you! This is stuff that I've learned the hard way over the last 8+ years that I've been building sites. The overall look of the site appears fairly fluid, but that's not the only thing to consider with a website. When designing a website you really have to keep your target audience in mind at all times. This site appears to have multiple targets, and none of them are really clear. I hit it once and briefly looked it over, and thought it was a personal website. The next time I hit it I went looking a little deeper and realized there was some kind of company idea behind part of it. If you truly wish to get jobs from this site, there are some things you might want to keep in mind.
1. Potential customers are looking for a site that shows them YOU can convey their message to the public. There are plenty of web designers out there, and they are all just a click away. Your site should show your skills, while at the same time proving to them you can get a point across efficiently and effectively, thus separating you from the majority of web builders out there.
2. As tempting as it is, don't try to mix business and personal stuff. This point reflects on point 1, actually. Personal sites tend to have a very different target audience, that being friends, family or potential web buddies. These people care about what is going on in your life, more often than potential customers. Create a separate site for each section. For freelance consultants, this is both really important and fairly tough.
3. Nuke the flashing banner ad. If you are getting $ from it that keeps the site going, at least create a separate site as mentioned above and move it to your personal section. It does it's job, meaning it's pretty much all I saw when I went to your site.
4. Nuke the frames. Despite what everyone else is doing, frames are not really the accepted norm as far as end users are concerned. iFrames are worse, because not all browsers render them correctly yet.
5. The navigation system should let the user know where they are at all times. Each button should take them to page that follows the same navigation structure. The forums and gallery buttons go to a new page that has no return feature. Again, if you create a different site for you personal stuff, that will most likely help eliminate this issue. You may also want to consider some kind of marker to let the user know where they are, perhaps a circle around their current location on the navigation bar.
6. All graphics should flow into/out of each other. The CSP graphic on the top contrasts sharply with the background. It may be that you need to frame it out some way to eliminate this issue.
7. Real estate is precious. You have lost (on my computer screen) roughly half of your usable space due to gaps on the left, right, center and bottom of the screen. You may want to rethink the fixed width bottom of the page. Again, eliminating frames may help with this.
8. Don’t clutter the front page. When someone hits a web page, they are going to leave if you don’t give them a reason to stay. If they know you, they have a reason; if they don’t know you, and they can’t figure out what your site is all about in 3-5 seconds, they probably won’t stick around. Mission statements are good, but they belong in an 'about' area.
9. People don’t want inexperience. If you don’t have a degree, don’t point that out. Build your resume around anything you have accomplished.
10. Decide if you want to present yourself as a consultant or a business and market yourself accordingly. Along these lines, don't switch person in your front page copy. IE, don't have your first paragraph refer to you as "her" and the second as "I".
Whew! I didn't intend to go on like that. Anyway, like I said, the information here reflects my opinion/experiance doing more or less what you state as your goal. Then again, I'm also a programmer by trade, so I've got some biases in that direction too.
HIH