How To Make Sure Your Site Looks Good To Everyone
Here’s a nightmare that you want to avoid at all costs. You create a few pages for your site, or you create a brand new site. You lay out the graphics just the right way, and you dress up your text so it flows and is easy to read.
Then you preview your site in your browser, like what you see, and upload your site. And then, after a few days, you’re not getting the results you expected. You check your statistics, and yes, you’re getting traffic. But you’re not making sales or getting new subscribers,
What can happen is your website does not look the same in all browsers. For example, let’s say you use Internet Explorer, and your site looks fine before you upload it. So naturally, you think everything is okay. You upload your site and get on with other tasks.
What you may not realize is that your site does not look good in Firefox or Google Chrome. Your header may not look right, or your tables may not line up correctly, or graphics may be missing. Maybe your links aren’t working correctly. These are all things that you can test and fix easily.
So the first thing you should do every time you create a new page for your site is to make sure it looks good in several different browsers. Firefox and Google chrome along with Internet Explorer are all free to download and use. So it’s easy to preview your sites before they go live. If you’re using scripts on your pages, you may have to wait until you upload your pages before you can view them.
It’s a good idea to view every page as soon as you upload it to make sure it looks okay. If not, you’re going to have to do a little work to find out what’s causing the problem. Make sure to check that all of your internal links work correctly, and all your external links are going where you want them to go. It doesn’t take much for a webpage to be faulty.
There might be missing tag, missing angle bracket, graphics put in the wrong directory, a misspelled link, or a graphic that’s too large for the table that is inserted into. Another potential problem is using tables and fixing their width as a percentage instead of as a pixel width. What you see your screen resolution will not be what your visitors will see if they use a different screen resolution. Try to keep your table widths fixed at pixels instead of percentages.
The good news is that this is an easy thing to fix. The bad news is that if you don’t fix it, you could be losing sales and subscribers without even knowing it. Wasted traffic. Wasted time. Wasted effort. Make your life a lot easier by previewing your webpages in a few different browsers so you can rest assured that your websites are working for you. To your success.
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