HAMG 1319

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HAMG 1319

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Maintain the comfort level of existing customers through online offerings ... companies like BMW, Post, Coke, Pepsi, Burger King and many others invest heavily in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HAMG 1319


1
  • HAMG 1319
  • Computers in Hospitality
  • Planning and Developing Web Pages

Virginia Stipp Lawrence, MHM
This PowerPoint presentation is designed as a
tool to assist you in planning your web page.
Read through this presentation prior to class on
Thursday, October 6th
2
Objectives
  • Determining your Web sites purpose
  • The two primary categories of business Web sites
  • Brochure, account management, content, and direct
    gain Web sites
  • Differences between Web business and traditional
    business
  • Advantages and disadvantages of integrating
    traditional businesses and the Web
  • Target audiences and their impact on site
    construction

3
Getting Started Taking Your Idea Live
  • A Web site is not the business itself
  • The business runs the Web site
  • The business also handles any legal issues,
    marketing issues, investor relations, personnel
    problems, and other daily chores associated with
    running a company

4
Getting Started Taking Your Idea Live
  • Three primary tasks that need to get done just
    to get the business started
  • develop an idea
  • develop an objective
  • develop a needs assessment

5
Honing the Idea
  • If the site being developed is for an established
    marketer, the idea is already there the
    companys products and services will be presented
    on the Web
  • If the business is not already established, the
    idea for a site comes from information or talents
    that the developer already has
  • The site subject should be one that the developer
    not only feels he or she knows better than most
    people, but also that fills a need in the market

6
Defining Your Sites Objective
  • The purpose of building any type of business site
    is to make money or provide information
  • There are other goals to take into consideration
  • What do you expect the company and the site to
    achieve in the short term and the long term
  • Depending upon what the ultimate goal is, the
    site and the company may be developed to reflect
    that goal

7
Needs Assessment
  • Most business plans contain the following
    information
  • Executive summary Overview of what the company
    and its associated Web site will do and how the
    company anticipates growth
  • Market overview A review of market conditions,
    including market size and the life cycle
  • Service A description of the Web site, including
    highlights of any specialized sections,
    explanation of how it will serve the market, what
    it will do, and what opportunities there may be
    for growth and future expansion

8
General Types of Web Sites
  • Although there are seemingly endless ideas and
    products offered on the Web, nearly all sites can
    be grouped into just a few broad categories
  • Business sites pure-com or created by an
    established company
  • Information/help sites Usually organizations
    with a .org domain name suffix that provide
    relevant information to interested readers
  • Vanity/hobby sites For example, people who want
    to display pictures from their family vacation or
    post their resumes for potential employers

9
General Types of Web Sites
10
Brochure Sites
  • Typically static, meaning they do not change on a
    regular basis and do not allow visitors to make
    direct purchases
  • Exist primarily to generate interest in products
  • Expect to generate an e-mail or a phone call from
    the site visitor so that a sales representative
    can follow up the inquiry
  • Maintain the comfort level of existing customers
    through online offerings
  • Alleviate some of the time constraints on human
    employees by answering common questions online
  • Relies on human interaction to close the sale

11
B2C Brochure Sites
  • Large retail-oriented companies like BMW, Post,
    Coke, Pepsi, Burger King and many others invest
    heavily in brochure sites
  • Many of these sites have nothing to sell, dont
    support outside ads, and even go out of their way
    to develop games and interactivity to keep users
    on the site longer
  • For these companies, the Web is an additional
    branding vehicle

12
Content Sites
  • Content sites try to offer unique information or
    content, with regular updates
  • Google, shown in Figure 2-10, is a Web search
    engine that give users information and links to
    other sites on the Web

13
How Web Business Differs From Traditional Business
  • Web/Computer technology changes rapidly
  • Web space is not cheap
  • Web businesses incur all of the costs associated
    with maintaining customer support services
  • High cost of marketing efforts to drive people to
    the site

14
Determining the Target Market
  • It is impossible to have universal appeal to
    every potential shopper, instead, each site,
    depending on its offerings, caters to a specific
    group of people that share common traits

15
Standard Consumer Demographics
  • Age
  • Family size
  • Education level
  • Income (median income and income range)
  • Gender
  • Occupation
  • Nationality
  • Race

16
Audience Psychographics Variables
  • Types of hobbies
  • Vacations
  • Recreational sports played
  • Luxury items owned
  • Number of general-use items (cars, sneakers,
    etc.) purchased last year or over the last 3
    years
  • Minutes per day spent on the Web

17
Gathering Information
  • Researchers employ various methods to collect
    audience data and some of the more popular
    methods include
  • Personal Interviews
  • Mail, Web, or telephone surveys
  • Focus groups

18
Setting up a Survey
  • The general steps taken for survey development
    include the following
  • Determine the objective
  • Develop the question
  • Find survey respondents
  • Analyze the data
  • Another part of the survey is asking the right
    question in such a way that allows the respondent
    to give unbiased and relevant information

19
How Audience Profile Affects a Web Site
  • Knowing your audience from both a demographic and
    psychographics standpoint gives you insight into
    the types of layouts, colors, images, and content
    to which your visitors would best respond
  • Understanding your audience will help shape the
    core message and personality of the brand for
    long-term market penetration

20
  • Web site users want and expect the following
    elements from Web sites
  • Valid, up-to-date content
  • Sound navigation features
  • Quick downloads
  • Entertainment
  • Personalization
  • Security
  • Improved customer service

21
Valid, Up-To-Date Content
  • No set schedule of updates has been established
    for Web sites
  • Unpredictable and delayed updates cause users to
    become skeptical about a site
  • With so many Web sites to choose from, users may
    leave a Web site that does not regularly update
    its content for a Web site that does

22
Valid, Up-To-Date Content
  • General news sites and broad category e-tailers,
    such as MSN, CNN, or Amazon.com, need to update
    content on a daily basis
  • Less-traveled content sites that offer unique
    information can update content on a weekly basis
    (or even less often)
  • Brochure-style sites for smaller companies can do
    quarterly updates

23
Provide Valuable Content
  • Site developers need to determine what kind of
    information to include on the site
  • This may be a difficult decision because most Web
    sites are not created on a topic that has clearly
    defined boundaries

24
Sound Navigation Features
  • Web sites, especially retail and content sites,
    can have layout problems, making the sites
    cumbersome and overwhelming for visitors
  • Links appear as blue underlined text or graphics,
    and can be placed practically anywhere on a Web
    page
  • Even small sites usually have many links on every
    page

25
Sound Navigation Features
  • The value of buttons and button placement as
    navigation tools should not be overlooked due to
    the commercialization of the Web or artistic
    concerns
  • A visitor comes for a specific purpose, and wants
    to achieve that purpose quickly and efficiently
  • The links within a site should help, not hinder,
    that goal

26
Avoid Long Downloads
  • A surfer must wait for all the images on the Web
    site to download, which can be frustrating with a
    slow connection
  • Bored surfers can move on to another site that
    downloads more quickly
  • There is a bandwidth discrepancy between Internet
    connections in peoples homes and in their
    offices
  • This discrepancy translates into huge differences
    in the time it takes to download Web pages

27
Avoid Long Downloads
  • Many developers have started to worry a little
    less about the file size of their sites because
  • More people report that their major use of the
    Internet is from work
  • More Web commerce is conducted for business, not
    consumer purposes
  • Design trends have become more subdued
  • Most developers still try to keep cumulative page
    weights to less than 150 K

28
Entertain Your Visitors
  • The Web has proven to be a haven for instant
    entertainment, with online games and short movies
    acting as growing sources for traffic retention
  • Flash, Shockwave, and 3-D development are the
    leading technologies used for game playing and
    online shows

29
Entertain Your Visitors
  • Shockwave.com, a popular entertainment site,
    allows users to play games and see serialized
    Flash movies

30
Entertain Your Visitors
  • Sites offering entertainment retain traffic
    longer and have better rates of returning
    visitors than sites that do not
  • Both of these facts are important features for
    online brand building

31
Maximize Brand Value
  • Corporate sites also use games to keep traffic on
    their sites
  • The site should work the product into the game
    and keep the company name and logo in front of
    the user

32
Maximize Brand Value
  • The Coca-Cola store site has a game of darts
  • But there is no connection between darts and the
    Coca-Cola name or product

33
Maximize Brand Value
  • NabiscoWorld.com has brand value
  • It keeps the Nabisco name and products in the
    mind of consumers
  • It helps create an association between Nabisco,
    fun, and entertainment

34
Maximize Game Value
  • Besides providing brand value, entertainment can
    also help increase online sales
  • An online game, offering product discounts, free
    shipping, etc. for the points accumulated,
    encourages visitors to buy merchandise from the
    company

35
Simpler Web Entertainment
  • The scenarios described above are expensive to
    implement
  • Entertainment can still be added to a site
    without spending a lot of money
  • Some examples of doing this are
  • Adding a funny quote that is regularly updated
  • Providing a survey

36
Personalization
  • MSN.com offers a lot of personalization
  • Visitors can choose what information they want to
    see, and rearrange the order of the information

37
Using Personalization Properly
  • Amazon.com uses personalization to increase the
    amount of revenue it generates from existing
    customers

38
Using Personalization Properly
  • Although users respond favorably to
    personalization, they are also concerned about
    their privacy
  • Web marketers need to walk a fine line between
    individualizing and prying

39
Keep Visitor Information Private
  • Web users are getting used to the idea of sharing
    certain sensitive information with retail Web
    sites
  • Shoppers are concerned about viruses, system
    breaches, and e-tailers distributing private
    information among themselves
  • For a Web site to succeed, it must constantly
    assure customers that more and better privacy
    controls are being put in place

40
Improve Customer Service
  • Customer service plays an important role in the
    success of a Web site
  • Site developers are beginning to attract
    customers with the promise of better service
  • The concerns of customers can only be addressed
    by quality customer features that are obvious and
    easy to use

41
Planning With Time Lines
  • A time line is a projected schedule that helps to
    organize the many facets of work that go into
    creating a site
  • Many issues, such as time-sensitive content and
    press releases, will be affected by the timely
    development of a Web site
  • The first step in creating a Web site is to
    develop a schematic for the site, which consists
    of a rough sketch that approximates the sites
    various pages and navigation structure

42
Planning with Time Lines
  • The schematic helps the developers understand how
    difficult and large the site will be
  • The schematic gives you a blueprint for
    construction, from which the time line can be
    created
  • You should have a team of people dedicated to
    site development, and all team members should
    have input on the time line
  • Sites are often delayed due to poor planning or
    overly optimistic deadlines

43
Style Guides
  • A style guide is a set of rules that all external
    marketers, print developers, Web developers, and
    others must follow
  • A style guide ensures that the company brand
    identity elements remain the same across various
    media
  • The use of style guides provides consistency,
    which is an important part of brand development
  • The style guide helps the developers in making
    changes later, and prevents confusion

44
Brand Integrity
  • Nothing is more important to the long-term
    success of a company than its brand
  • Not every company spends the time to care for its
    brand image the way that it should
  • Brand issues take time and money to develop
  • Consistency between media makes a company look
    more organized and professional, qualities that
    are important to potential customers

45
The Technical Perspective
  • As time passes, more and better options and
    alternatives become available to make the Web
    more useful, but also more complicated
  • The Web looks and acts differently depending on
    the users equipment and settings
  • Developers need to ensure that the widest
    possible audience can see and use the site

46
The Technical Perspective
  • Programming languages have grown in number
  • Languages and applications need to be chosen and
    tempered by developers based not only on what the
    site needs to do, but also on how many potential
    users will be able to see the site properly
  • Developers also need to consider which language
    will likely remain popular in the future so that
    changes and upgrades can be made

47
Establishing a Lowest Common Denominator
  • Huge connectivity variations exist among visitors
  • This problem is dealt with by developing the
    sites lowest common denominator (LCD), or the
    minimum set of variables that need to be
    programmed so that the largest audience possible
    can see the Web site
  • LCD is a means of establishing some general
    boundaries for design, such as the size limit for
    each page

48
Programs and Languages
  • Today, tools and options available for Web
    creation have gotten so vast that even small
    sites typically require a team of people, or at
    least a division of responsibilities between
    graphic designers and programmers
  • Each sites uses a different combination of
    languages and programs, depending on the desired
    result
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