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  • Designing To Maximize Conversion Rate: 14 Designers Talk Ecommerce Strategy

    Designing To Maximize Conversion Rate: 14 Designers Talk Ecommerce Strategy

    Ecommerce design is a unique beast in the web design world. Multiple factors–aesthetics, usability, brand message, and value proposition–must come together to create conversions.

    That’s hard.

    How can web designers serve their ecommerce clients better? How can designers work strategically, with conversion rate in mind? We asked 14 expert ecommerce designers to share their best tips through four questions. Here are the questions. Their insightful answers follow.

    1. Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    2. Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    3. Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    4. Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    1. Justin Metros –– Radiator Studios

    justin-metros-headshot-color_1024

    radiatorstudios.com | @radiatorstudios

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    Typefaces communicate feeling and emotion through their glyphs. This emotion is what gives a visual design character and a sense of purpose. The ‘web-safe’ (default fonts installed on windows / OS X) are limited and leave much to be desired when compared to what is available elsewhere.

    [clickToTweet tweet=”Typefaces communicate feeling and emotion through their glyphs. #designthinking @radiatorstudios @216_digital” quote=”Typefaces communicate feeling and emotion through their glyphs. #designthinking”]

    If great typography is an art, then typefaces are your palette. The typeface is the design of the lettering. The font is the implementation of that typeface for use (for the web or in print). And learning how to pair typefaces and use fonts correctly is an important skill for every designer to have. Understanding the nature of typefaces and how they play together will make or break a design, regardless of the source of the font. There are plenty of great fundamental resources out there that can help train your eye on what to look for in typeface, its weight, its x-height, etc. I like this article from back in 2009 on Smashing because the fundamentals of typography have been consistent for a long time. Trends have changed, not concepts.

    Google Fonts are a great resource for designers, as many of their typefaces are wonderfully designed, and the fonts are optimized really nicely for the web. Google Fonts abstract away a lot of the complexity of implementing and managing font files for use on the web. As we know, different browsers / devices prefer different formats and Google Fonts makes this invisible to the designer. No more @font-face, just a one-line script and you’re good to go.

    As Google Fonts has grown, so have the number of beautiful combinations. There is no shortage of resources available for great google font pairings. A few of my favorites are http://fontpair.co/, http://hellohappy.org/beautiful-web-type/ and https://femmebot.github.io/google-type/

    Once the typefaces are chosen and the fonts are technically implemented, the fun is just getting started. It’s important to have legible design, especially in a responsive context. Use of modular scale for meaningful hierarchy is a good place to start to determine the relationships between headings, subheadings and paragraphs http://www.modularscale.com/. For more complex control, there are concepts like vertical rhythm which are a bit more involved to implement, but do a great job of maintaining consistency in your overall design. http://zellwk.com/blog/why-vertical-rhythms/ And also, for responsive design, using relative units (rems or ems) can help your hierarchy and rhythm flow and resize nicely across various screen sizes and devices.

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    Cart abandonment is always an issue when it comes to ecommerce. We’re out there fishing for customers on the web and an abandoned cart is the one that got away.

    [clickToTweet tweet=”Cart abandonment is always an issue when it comes to #ecommerce. #designthinking @radiatorstudios @216_digital” quote=”Cart abandonment is always an issue when it comes to #ecommerce. #designthinking”]

    Our first bit of advice is simple: relax. Many users add to cart with no intention to purchase. Sad but true, better to get over that early on and focus on customers that did have intent to purchase. Users who made it to checkout then hesitated. These are the ones we want to try and recover, and there are some good and not-so-good ways to approach this.

    The first step is to identify what you consider to be cart abandonment. We want this to be a meaningful metric. Adding to cart is not a good place to look, necessarily, as mentioned above. A better place to look is someone who added to cart, clicked checkout, and gave you some information—hopefully at least an email address, something we can respond to.

    Many ecommerce platforms have their own way of determining what defines an “abandoned cart,” and for custom implementations, it’s up for you to decide. Now we’re talking about what to do once we A) know a user made it to a point we consider a potential customer and B) our response to that.

    Sending out a friendly reminder can be very useful. Keep it light and simple. “Looks like you left something in your cart, we’re holding these items for you if you’d like to come back.” Try not to be pushy in your abandonment reminder emails. Use the tone and voice of your brand. It also helps to show what was in their cart to give them a reminder of what they almost bought. Take the time to apply your branding and design to these templates so that it is a direct reflection of your site.

    The timing of the cart abandonment email is also important. This is something I urge shop owners to experiment with. But we’ve found that 4-6 hours after abandonment is the sweet spot. And please don’t try and hammer them multiple times at 4hrs, 12hrs, 24hrs all in a row—that can have the reverse affect, and may actually deter people who don’t want to buy today but may have bought in the future. Knowing a site is going to blow up your inbox every time you browse is not a good look.

    Then there is abandonment prevention. Keeping users in the checkout flow through conversion. This is where the UX of the checkout flow really plays an important part.

    There are many great philosophical discussions around the web on what converts best, a one-page checkout, a multi-step checkout, etc. Regardless of your preference (or limitations your ecommerce platform), we have always believed it’s more about how information is presented to make the process seem as simple as possible. If you have a one-page checkout, don’t show every field at once, because it looks like a lot of work. Try using an accordion style so users can focus on one thing at a time—billing info, shipping info, payment info and review. For a multi-step checkout, keep it clean with a clear view of the steps involved so people can understand the process as a whole from the get-go.

    Having multiple payment options also helps. By having your preferred gateway plus another option (like PayPal, Apple Pay, etc.), you give users an opportunity to use a method that may require less work. They may have autofill for their PayPal, for example, which makes it easier for them to checkout.

    There will always be abandoned carts, but using beautiful cart abandonment reminder emails, proper timing of those emails, and having a clean checkout flow will help to reduce your drop-off rate.

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    Category pages are as much a utility for the user to browse your catalog as they are an opportunity to tell your brand story.

    [clickToTweet tweet=”Category pages are a chance to tell your brand’s story. #designthinking for #ecommerce @radiatorstudios @216_digital” quote=”Category pages are a chance to tell your brand’s story. #designthinking for #ecommerce”]

    Having meaningful filtering that fits your brand is important. If you have thousands of products in dozens of collections, a faceted filter can help users find what they are looking for quickly. Amazon, albeit not the best design in the world, does faceted filtering very well, and that pattern fits because of the sheer size of the site.

    If your site has only a few collections with a couple dozen products each, try a simpler filtering UX like a dropdown for size or color, as well as a sort so users can re-arrange the category page by what’s new, best sellers, etc.

    Product grids don’t have to be boring, either. If applicable to your brand, try inserting some brand of lifestyle content into your category pages. Maybe after 4 rows of products there is a sales proposition or entry point to another similar collection. Done well, this can make a boring product grid turn into a brand experience.

    With the products themselves, above all else, try to have the best photography you can. And don’t try to cram 10 thumbnails into one row. Space them out and let the users see your thumbnails clearly. If a product is on sale, is new or is a best seller, try designing a little badge or icon that indicates this. Keep your typography clear and your pricing visible. If a product comes in multiple colors, try adding swatches to show that it comes in multiple colors. Whether that is appropriate depends of course on the nature of your catalog. Often times, it’s best to show each color way in the product grid so users don’t have to have an extra click to see it in another color.

    Also, keep your page length manageable. Infinite scrolling makes a lot of sense on sites like Instagram and Pinterest, but when you’re scrolling through products, clicking on them, and clicking back, infinite scroll can cause some headaches unless you put your user back to exactly where they were. Try 30-40 products per page with clear, easy to understand pagination. This helps to give users a sense of direction in your site.

    Last but not least, the header of your collection page is a great opportunity to design a banner that explains the collection, provides a lifestyle image, or adds some additional information about that collection.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    Above all else, I would have to go with something higher level than educating on a particular topic and recommend establishing meaningful trust with your client. They came to you to help them solve a problem because they do not have the time or expertise to do so. They chose to work with you because they like your portfolio, your personality, your track record, etc. By building trust, you can work with your client more efficiently to help guide them through many of the moving parts of an ecommerce site. When the client trusts you, they will listen to you and your advice, and gives you the ability to educate them in all areas from UX, UI, design, content strategy, and marketing.

    2. Sarah Yeager –– Lead Web Designer, 216digital

    sarah-portrait-stylized-216

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google fonts to create great typography?

    When designing for a website, everything comes down to brand message and legibility.

    [clickToTweet tweet=”In web design, everything comes down to brand message and legibility. #designthinking from @sarahmyeager @216_digital” quote=”In web design, everything comes down to brand message and legibility. #designthinking from @sarahmyeager”]

    Your first objective is for your audience to be able to read what you have to say. I get so frustrated when I come across a beautiful website design but I have to squint in order to read their content. A nice rounded sans-serif font like Open Sans is a great go-to for body copy.

    As far as brand message goes, what kind of story are you telling with your typographic choices? Find a font that reflects your brand and then find a great contrasting font. Some examples of contrasting fonts are condensed paired with expanded or italic paired with normal. The key is to find a font that carries contrast out elegantly while reflecting your overall message.

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    Take down a barrier to entry. Creating an account before they purchase items in their cart creates more time spent on not buying the item. Let them achieve their goal first and then invite them to create an account.

    [clickToTweet tweet=”Want to reduce #ecommerce cart abandonment? Take down a barrier to entry. #designthinking @sarahmyeager @216_digital” quote=”Want to reduce #ecommerce cart abandonment? Take down a barrier to entry. #designthinking @sarahmyeager”]

    Limit the amount of steps to achieve a purchase. The simpler the transaction, the faster it takes to purchase the item, the happier customer. This means, pair down the steps it takes to get from visitor to newly paid customer.

    Include trust builders. People are more likely to be hesitant to purchase from an ecommerce store that does not prove their value. Reassure that they are in good hands.

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    As far as user experience goes, you want the user to find what they need as quickly as possible. Sometimes I play around with the number of categories that I feature on a page or highlight a larger section to show off featured products. Know your users’ analytics to see how they navigate or click around on the page and adjust accordingly.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be.

    Know that a designer’s role isn’t just to make things look pretty – it’s about telling your brand’s story, to achieve your business goals, and to create something elegantly functional.

    216-Design-CTA

    3. Carrie Cousins –– Designer, Writer, & Editor

    2-Carrie

    @carriecousins | about.me/carriecousins | carriecousins.com

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    Google Fonts is a great tool because it opens up a world of typeface options to you for website design. I start with browsing typefaces, pick the pair that I like for a project, and insert the code. It’s easy and provides a great workflow option.

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    The first step is to reduce clicks. Make the site almost too easy to use. Why do I have to log in to view my cart? Poor UX is the reason I abandon the cart more often than not. It happens when something just does not work. If you aren’t sure how to structure your cart, look at some of the most successful ecommerce sites—Amazon, Nike, Gap—and note how flawless the process seems to be.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    Go back to the basics: “Show, Don’t tell.” Use great pictures to sell online. If your imagery is not good, and I mean absolutely professional, I won’t shop on your site. Everything about your site needs to be clean, crisp and polished. There can’t be spacing or grammar mistakes. Handing over my credit card information is about more than what you are selling, it’s about trust in you as a business and in your interface.

    4. Dirkjan Vis –– Founder and Owner, Zietuwel.nl

    1-Dirkjan

    Zietuwel.nl | Ecommercenews.eu

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    The way we see it, Google Fonts are very popular and commonly accepted. Ecommerce sites use them freely. Backup fonts are addressed, but that’s basically it. Fresh fonts are very popular these days!

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    There are a zillion reasons why carts are left abandoned. Many of these reasons are hard to fix. Think of shipping expenses, the use of shopping carts as a wish list, or comparing total expenses in two shopping carts on different stores. With that said, web designers see a lot of shopping carts! Thus they should be experts on the best experience. Many web designers limit themselves to just the styling, but web designing companies should have specialists in usability. Cart abandonment is one of the top priorities when concerning cart usability. The specialists should be in house if the agency wants to serve the bigger ecommerce companies.

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    Category pages are often used as high performance SEO landing pages. They are often optimized for search traffic or for distributing search engine ‘juice’ to the right pages. With these priorities in mind, category pages are hard to master as a UX engineer. The conflicts of interest make these pages hard to optimize. Personally we do have some demands. For example, category pages often have many products. Will you use lazy-load, view more buttons, or split them in several pages?

    Another thing to think about is to give category pages extra user info. Often these pages only contain an overview of products, but category pages are ideal to publish some extra general information on about the kind of products. For example, if you show fishing products: show the intro of a blog about fishing, write about what kind of fishing your shop has expertise in and have nice images for eye candy and inspiration instead of just a plain grid of products.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    Inspiration is king. Many ecommerce companies look at statistics. What works in SEO? What brings views and how to get the conversion percentage to a higher level? In the short term these two factors are always top of mind, but in the long term you should be working on inspiration. Without inspiration you cannot be a brand. Without a brand your company won’t become top of mind. Not being “top of mind” means you have to keep on spending money on marketing and on getting sales because customers will never come back by themselves.

    5. DJ Bradley –– UX Designer, Digital Telepathy

    3-DJ

    http://twitter.com/dtelepathy | http://dtelepathy.com

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    There are over 650 Google Fonts available. These are an excellent source for web designers to create free, web-safe font combinations. I pair Google Fonts the same way I would pair any font combination. I tend to choose complementary fonts, like serifs and sans serifs, to create contrast. I also prefer sans serifs for paragraphs, due to their simplified letterforms that display clearer at various screen resolutions. There are great online resources like Typewolf for inspiration and font recommendations as well.

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    Looking at user analytics throughout the checkout process can give some insight into areas or pages where users seem to be dropping off. However, analytics won’t tell you the reason “why” users are dropping off in specific areas. This is where user-testing, interviews, and research can really help find those pain points and allow you as the web designer to design solutions to reduce that friction.

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    To spruce category pages up, add a category specific header image with the category title as well as some form of “bread crumbs.” You can also add a “Featured” or “New” section at the top of each category page.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    It has become crucial for ecommerce sites to have a great mobile experience. The amount of time spent on mobile devices as well as the number of people who own mobile devices continues to increase every year when compared to desktop. If you are not able to reach your user audience through mobile displays, you will miss out in comparison to competitors who are.

    6. Meg Quigg –– Designer, Groove

    4-Meg

    http://gotgroove.com/

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    When approaching the design phase of a site, we incorporate our client’s existing brand standards and carefully select web-safe fonts that align with any current brand assets and fonts to ensure the web experience aligns with every brand touch point. Google Fonts are our preferred font library, but it’s easy for designers to fall into the rut of using their favorite 5 Google Fonts. To capture the essence of the brand and create a unique digital experience, we select fonts (style, sans-serif vs. serif, weight) based on several facets (e.g. the client’s brand mark/logo, target audience, industry trends, the brand’s personality and voice).

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    Many of our clients come to us with the issue of cart abandonment. When enhancing the user experience (UX) of a current or new site, our approach is to reduce the number of clicks to cart. We ask ourselves, “What does the buyer’s journey to conversion look like?” One way we do this is by implementing a one-page checkout with a reduced header and footer to eliminate any distractions that can cause cart abandonment. We ensure that all pertinent information has a place within the UX. We encourage store owners to show shipping costs and customer testimonials which add trust and assurance.

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    We often add marketing banners that feature the storeowner’s various promotions/deals at the top of the page to entice the user to convert. We create and/or utilize high impact custom imagery that enhances the user experience and captures the brand’s essence. By including any other relative content, whether video or animation, we help differentiate from the standard category grid. These micro-conversions offer additional ways for users to experience and interact with the brand.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be? 


    Less is more. What we mean by that is, the buyer’s journey through the UX needs to be clear and concise. Our overall goal with an ecommerce design is to increase traffic, average order value, and conversion rate. Utilizing white space and page layout, we make sure content and imagery is displayed in an easily digestible format that drives users to conversion while maintaining the integrity of the brand.

    7. Ben Johnson –– Founder and Creative Director, Elegant Seagulls Inc.

    5-Ben

    www.elegantseagulls.com | Dribbble | Twitter

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    Fonts are key to communicating a brand’s personality. Your design should work with almost any decent font pairing. The fonts really just elevate the overall design. Font size relationships and details can have just as much impact as the actual selected typography.

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    First look at data to see when and where the carts are being abandoned, then try to work backwards and adjust your design to better convert. Simple changes can often make a huge impact.

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    Attention to detail on these pages is key. You want a simple seamless experience. The right balance of white space, subtle design elements, interaction and motion can elevate these pages.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    Break the mold! There are a ton of best practices we can use as guideposts, but tell your own story. There needs to be a balance between users’ expectations and making something memorable.

    8. Martijn van der Does –– Managing Director, Wonderland

    6-Martijn

    wonderlandindustry.com

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    When it comes to fonts, we’re a big fan of mixing a classic serif with a more relaxed sans serif—although the most important factor is ensuring the combination aligns with the brand we are designing for. We actually don’t really use Google Fonts. We find it quite limited and there’s not much space for creativity. However, if we were to use it, the process is all about making a selection that aesthetically complements the brand. There are also a lot of external articles about the best fonts Google has to offer.

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    It’s all about immersing yourself in each step your user takes and paying close attention to how they approach the cart/checkout process. Checking out should take a minimal amount of action from the user. The process should be as effortless as possible. From a web design point of view, we like ecommerce sites that play with hover interactions. For example, when hovering over your basket with the mouse you are given two clear options: view the bag or checkout. At this stage the user hasn’t even clicked their mouse and the option to checkout is already accessible.

    The checkout process itself should require as few steps as possible, we’d say no more than three. Also, be sure to guide your users through each one and indicate the subsequent steps at each stage. We also suggest indicating the progress of your customer throughout the process. Don’t force them to register with your site, either. If they’re interested enough, they’ll do it themselves.

    Check out our own checkout process at http://thewonderlandstore.com/ for inspiration!

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    We love sites that use innovative interactions and animations to bring the content to life within each category. Spice things up and don’t be afraid to stand out—you want to create a site that people want to visit every day.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    A lot of clients come to us and simply say, “We need a website.” Our standard response is to ask, “how do you know you need a website?” We like to start with our clients’ business goals and what they want to accomplish. It’s far more than just design.

    We want clients to realize how the role that strategy plays in achieving their goals. Design alone is rarely enough. Yes, you can have a fly website built with all the latest trends and techniques, but you need to innovate within your strategy if you really want to stand out. If users are faced with a pretty website but no clue how to approach it, they are likely to turn to competitors instead.

    9. Steve Krueger –– Co-Founder and Creative Director, The Jibe

    7-Steve

    http://thejibe.com/

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    Google Fonts are a great resource for clients on a budget who still want the benefit of not having a site look like it was built in the 90s. While most Google Fonts have pairing recommendations, they’re not always the most complimentary. We’ve used http://fontpair.co/ in the past, which is a beautiful collection of user-contributed Google font pairings for any application.

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    You need to think like a user. Make the experience as engaging and simple to use as possible. Check out our helpful tips on how to reduce cart abandonment.

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    You want to let your content shine but still be easily digestible and accessible. Don’t overpower the page with sidebars or alternative call-to-actions. Outlining content in a grid or by using a masonry style layout allows you to retain style while still providing links to category specific content.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    Keep it simple and stay in the mindset of the client. It’s easy to want all the latest and greatest visual features, but if they are too overpowering and distracting, it will quickly deter your client to look elsewhere.

    10. Sarah Cottle –– Experience Designer, HomeAway

    8-Sarah

    http://sarahmakes.it/ | http://thesixbees.com/ | https://www.homeaway.com/

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    Google Fonts have been a game changer for designers! With hundreds of font options, we can finally have great typography without sacrificing SEO. Before Google Fonts, designers would have to flatten non web-safe fonts into images, which of course are not “readable” by search engines. Google Fonts allow us to keep text as HTML helping keywords be found by search engines. With all the different font options available on Google Fonts, designers have been able to push the boundaries of typography. My current favorite font combination is Lora and Open Sans Condensed!

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    Getting your customers to hit that Place Order button is an ecommerce web designer’s main goal! Here are a few tips to help get the customer to purchase by reducing cart abandonment:

    1. Eliminate Distractions—Make sure your checkout process is simple, easy, and fast. Don’t have the user fill out unnecessary form fields—if the information isn’t vital for completing the transaction, don’t include it! Remove anything that is not relevant to the user completing their purchase.

    2. Allow Guest Checkout—Users already have online accounts for so many different products (banks, email, schools, etc.)—don’t frustrate them by forcing them to create an account with you just so they can purchase your products. Eliminate all roadblocks getting in the way of allowing your user to checkout.

    3. Design for Mobile—At the very least, your site should be responsive. More and more users are shopping directly from their mobile or tablet device. A responsive site allows your content to be shown easily on different devices. If your site isn’t responsive, you are missing out on a large audience of potential customers. Go a little further and audit your content and the behavior of your site to really cater for the mobile user. For example, BBD Dakota adjusted their ‘Buy Now’ button to stick to the bottom of the mobile device to users can easily add to cart no matter where they are on the product page.

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    1. Display Extra Information on Hover—Don’t force your users to click on a product page to get additional information on your products. Why not let them have extra details appear on a hover while they remain on your category page? For example, on Nixon you can view different styles of the same watch while remaining on the category page. Even having simple hover that shows an alternate image of a product will go a long way in the user’s experience, like Cute+Broke Just remember to think through how you want this to behave on mobile devices as there is no hover—maybe using the tap behavior?

    2. Provide a Good Filtering Experience—Help your users explore your products by providing clear and commonsense filtering options while they shop. For example, make sure you have category-specific filters so users can filter within the chosen category (i.e. Having a “style” filter when a user is shopping a bathing suit category.) Another good practice for filtering is providing recommended/common filtering choices on top of the product list on the category page. I really like how 3 Sixteen shows the category filters at the top of the page.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    I think it would be the importance of product photography. Don’t just take photos of your products with your camera phone and expect users to appreciate your products. Hire a professional! If a local photographer isn’t available, there are many online sites that allow you to ship your products to them and they will take great photos. Make sure you get different angles so your user can truly understand your product. Shooting on a white background will also make your designers lives a lot easier when they want to create promotional graphics with your photos.

    11. The Hezy Team

    10-Hezy

    http://hezy.org/

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    We do not use only Google Fonts. Therefore, such problems do not exist. However, before using the font, you need to check out how it works in the environment and how it looks like on the website.

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients? 

    We work with BASOVDESIGN BUREAU. They have an extensive experience in ecommerce. An individual approach to design makes it possible to reduce all the anxiety to a minimum. Abandoned carts are a worry not only the owners of sites, but to buyers as well. Using proven technologies helps ecommerce owners, clear and easy for understanding design solutions simplify the life of customers.

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up? 

    Ecommerce does not give a variety of options. And it’s not the best place for experiments. There are proven solutions that work. If there is a choice between an unusual artistic decor of the page and familiar and user-friendly page, preference goes to the latter, although there are exceptions. It already depends on the specifics of the site and type of activity.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    Do not spoil it. Usually, the client is given a good ready-made solution. The goal is to use it. There is nothing to “overthink.” The client needs to understand that everything has a purpose. If the item is there, so it should be there and nowhere else, so it has some semantic or decorative role.

    12. Viacheslav Ponomarov and Yvette Mosiichuk –– UI/UX, SteelKiwi

    11-SteelKiwi

    http://steelkiwi.com/ | https://dribbble.com/steelkiwi | https://www.behance.net/steelkiwi

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography? 

    Google Fonts are great and they give us a lot of possible combinations to try. You can just check this resource to see how beautiful web type can be: http://hellohappy.org/beautiful-web-type/

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients? 

    Ecommerce store users are unstable. They often need to check a lot of different resources to find the product which they want to buy. Often, they add some products to their cart on the website, forget about this and go away. If you don’t remind them about yourself, they could never return to your website. So, if you have an opportunity, always send them reminder emails (and ask for email during the checkout process, of course).

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up? 

    Make a clear call-to-action on category pages for the user to understand what actions are available to do. Always keep left-hand column navigation. Show feature banner and introduce the tastiest products, sale offers, and new arrivals.

    Also, mobile view is one of the biggest challenges for a category page. Now a lot of users use their smartphones for online shopping, so you need to think about them.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be? 

    If we could educate ecommerce clients to think about their customers, and not about their own preferences, it would be great.

    13. Ekrem Ates –– Product Designer, Hurriyet

    12-Ekrem

    dribbble.com/ekremates | be.net/ekremates | www.hurriyet.com.tr/

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography? 

    In years past, we didn’t have many font choices to use from Google Fonts. But nowadays, I believe there are plenty of good fonts. They come with various different styles. I try to use the most suitable fonts for each new project and I usually use Google Fonts in terms of saving the client from additional spending and making the product faster.

    I generally try to make a stylish combination by using two or at most three different fonts or font styles for visual diversity. I always keep in mind that readability is the key. So I test my font choices on many font sizes.

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients? 

    Cart abandonment is a common problem these days and I recommend a few easy solutions to my clients about this issue. Do not distract users with meaningless popups or messy design. Give users clear and correct information. Nobody wants to be confused or cheated. Offer free advantages, such as free shipping or small gifts. In case of abandonment, remind them that they added products to their cart but did not buy them yet. Always optimize your site.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be? 

    I’ve worked in this field for a few years now. As a newbie, I was so upset when a client criticized my work badly or told me some illogical things about the process. Years have taught me one thing: that everyone can be persuaded. You just have to trust your knowledge and make them listen to you. But sometimes their know-it-all personalities are a big obstacle for us.

    14. James-Lee Rudd (Designer) & Marilena Rudd (Web Developer) –– Hoohaa Design

    13-HooHaa

    www.hoohaadesign.co.uk | @HoohaaDesign

    Let’s face it, web-safe fonts don’t give us many options. How do you use Google Fonts to create great typography?

    We use a combination of Google Fonts, Typekit, and also purchased fonts if the project requires it, where they are hosted on the server and used via Font-face. We try not to limit ourselves with typography as we are a design studio first and foremost. We like to have as much freedom and creativity as possible.

    Google Fonts collection has improved over the years with a greater diversity. We try to limit a site’s use to no more than 2 complimentary typefaces.

    Ecommerce store owners are always stressing about cart abandonment. How can web designers reduce cart abandonment for their clients?

    We always strive to streamline and simplify the checkout process for users with as few steps as possible, simple instructions and clarity of delivery costs. We always make the next step in the process have the greatest hierarchy and dominate in tone or color, with as little distraction as possible.

    Category pages can be a bit of a no-man’s land as far as UX. What are your favorite techniques for sprucing them up?

    When products are listed on a page, we have found that section dividers work well. Within the parameters of the dividers, we have the design freedom to create something that is in-tune with the site’s design and tailored to be clear and informative. Imagery can be used to great effect, particularly to show the context of a product in use. Image-based category dividers define product ranges and help bring them alive.

    Let’s be honest—design clients don’t always know as much as we wish they did. If you could educate ecommerce clients on one thing, what would it be?

    Content is key. Content and product ranges need to be defined before the design process. Otherwise, the design is compromised and as designers, we are flying blind, hoping that the site we design will work with the unknown content and imagery supplied at the final stages. Content needs to come before the design process can begin. Product descriptions need to have consistent sections, dimensions, descriptions and specifications. Photography as content is hugely important. It needs to be a true reflection of the product and consistent in style and tone. Professional photography is a must.

    Greg McNeil

    June 14, 2016
    216digital, Design Trendsetters, Digital Marketing, Digital Movers, Web Design
  • The Top 26 Women Designers Working Today

    The Top 26 Women Designers Working Today

    In the early days, like everything else, design was a male-dominated profession. Today, women designers are changing the face of design with incredible innovation. At 216digital, we’re design connoisseurs. We thrive on innovative design thinking. We keep a pulse on the design industry, and we take note when someone creates something amazing. In this blog post, we wanted to talk about our favorite women designers and their work.

    You’ll see an incredible amount of innovation in these designers’ portfolios. In the disciplines of graphic design, illustration, typography, and more, these 26 designers are pushing the boundaries of convention and creating new visual expressions.

    We’ve organized our favorite designers into several specialty areas. But let’s be clear—these designers aren’t ranked in any kind of order. They’re all great, and no two are alike.

    Let’s get started!

    I. Graphic Design

    II. Branding Design

    III. Web Design

    IV. Illustration and Photography

    V. Typography, Calligraphy, and Typeface Design

    VI. Art and Art Direction

    I. Graphic Design

    1. Jiani Lu

    jiani-lu-portrait

    Jiani Lu practices groundbreaking graphic design in Taipei, Taiwan. Her work integrates all aspects of visual communication—imagery, graphic elements, and typography—with a new kind of flair that we haven’t seen before.

    Shown: To My Future Self. Used by permission of Jiani Lu.
    Shown: To My Future Self. Used by permission of Jiani Lu.

    Jiani is a Canadian designer working in multiple disciplines. She has won awards from AIGA, Graphis, Adobe, and others.

    https://twitter.com/Jaicca

    http://jianimakesthings.tumblr.com/

    https://www.instagram.com/jianilu/

    2. Fanny Öhlund

    fanny-ohlund-portrait

    Fanny Öhlund is forging a career in cutting-edge design. Her work features beautiful graphics and typography integrated into a unique whole. She has done work in print design, album cover design, branding, and more.

    fanny-ohlund-ahpi

    Fanny’s sense of pattern, contrast, and color is truly beautiful. For this writer, her work is often more than the sum of its parts. For more of Fanny’s work, see her website or Behance page.

    www.behance.net/fohlund

    www.instagram.com/fohlund/

    www.pinterest.com/garconette

    3. Teresa Sdralevich

    teresa-sdralevich-portrait

    Teresa Sdralevich has forged a remarkable career in illustration, poster design, and cover design. Her work utilizes large blocks of color and bold typography. She often engages social, political, and cultural issues, and her approach draws the most out of a simple collection of elements.

    Book cover: Vota Larry, by Janet Tashjian. Used by permission of Teresa Sdralevich.
    Book cover: Vota Larry, by Janet Tashjian. Used by permission of Teresa Sdralevich.

    Teresa was born in Milan in 1969. She currently lives and works in Brussels, where she practices silkscreen printing in a collaborative space shared with other artists.

    https://www.facebook.com/Teresa-Sdralevich-433513896776490/

    4. Fanette Mellier

    fannette-mellier

    Fanette Mellier has built a remarkable career in graphic design, typography, and print design. Her work uses simple geometric shapes arranged in strategic placement. Her strong eye for color transforms her minimal geometry into vibrant, cohesive works.

    Fanette completed her education at the Graduate School of Decorative Arts in Strasbourg. She learned from masters such as Pierre Di Sciullo and Pierre Bernard. With this background, she has contributed significantly to the world of typography and intellectual communication.

    https://www.facebook.com/fanettemelliergraphiste/

    5. Anna Kuts

    anna-kuts-portrait

    Anna Kuts is a graphic designer, photographer, and calligrapher from Kharkiv, Ukraine. Her work marries a strong emphasis on texture with a nuanced approach to color. She is passionate about logo design in particular. She often combines unique textures with clear vector elements, and the results are beautiful.

    Print

    We see a little Soviet Constructivist influence in this poster, but the overall effect is unmistakably contemporary. The piece contains excellent contrast, and the overall look is quite balanced.

    https://www.pinterest.com/anya_kuts/

    https://dribbble.com/Kuts

    https://www.instagram.com/kustec007/

    6. Mercedes Bazan

    mercedes-bazan-portrait

    Mercedes Bazan specializes in UI, UX, and editorial design. She lives in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Her work features strong graphic elements, complex alignments, and refreshing color palettes. Her editorial designs in the magazine field are fresh, contemporary, and surprising.

    Shown: Nikola Tesla Pressbook. Used by permission of Mercedes Bazan.
    Shown: Nikola Tesla Pressbook. Used by permission of Mercedes Bazan.

    For more of Mercedes’ work, see her profile on Behance, or follow her on social media.

    https://www.instagram.com/mechibaz/

    https://twitter.com/mechibaz

    7. Cristina Pagnoncelli

    cristina-pagnoncelli-portrait

    Cristina Pagnoncelli’s work utilizes great typography, balanced composition, and a clear sense of cohesiveness. Cristina shows an ability to weave seemingly unrelated elements into a total composition. Her use of type and lettering is particularly inspiring. Facebook asked her to create 10 letterings inspired by American cities. Now Facebook users can use these letterings on their photos.

    Shown: Orlando lettering. Used by permission of Cristina Pagnoncelli.
    Shown: Orlando lettering. Used by permission of Cristina Pagnoncelli.

    With her sister, Raquel Pagnoncelli, she runs Des Figure, a communication studio. Cristina’s work shows an intuitive understanding of diverse graphic disciplines. She is one to watch.

    https://www.pinterest.com/crispagnoncelli/

    https://twitter.com/CrisPagnoncelli

    8. Sue Doeksen

    sue-doeksen-portrait

    Sue Doeksen is a graphic designer based in Amsterdam. She often focuses on bold color, eye-popping texture, and a fun approach to high-concept design. Her work is thoroughly contemporary, yet it knows its roots in great European design.

    Shown: Landmark Pins. Used by permission of Sue Doeksen.
    Shown: Landmark Pins. Used by permission of Sue Doeksen.

    Sue describes herself as a “visual adventurer.” This approach shows in all her work. Sue’s designs are not static works; they seem to transform themselves as you look at them—even those that aren’t animated. Sue has collaborated multiple times with fellow Dutch designer Marta Veludo (see below).

    9. Marta Veludo

    marta-veludo-portrait

    Marta Veludo is an Amsterdam-based graphic designer, artist, and visual thinker. She works in a wide variety of design fields, including art direction, graphic design, brand communication, and set design. Her work regularly features playful colors and visual relationships.

    Shown: D & R Wedding Invitation. Used by permission of Marta Veludo.
    Shown: D & R Wedding Invitation. Used by permission of Marta Veludo.

    Marta’s work is truly unmistakable. She marries a quirky eye to a strong sense of formalism. The result is a dynamic visual language that is contemporary, yet knows its history. She has collaborated multiple times with fellow Dutch designer Sue Doeksen (see above).

    https://twitter.com/whiteponey

    https://www.facebook.com/martaveludostudio/

    https://www.instagram.com/martaveludo/

    10. Nora Demeczky

     

    nora-demeczky-portrait

    Along with Enikő Deri (see below), Nora Demeczky runs De-Form, a design agency based in Budapest. Her work features a strong graphic impact and carefully-constructed balance across a cohesive whole. She achieves a great balance between form and content.

    Shown: mome+ 1.0. Used by permission of De Form.
    Shown: mome+ 1.0. Used by permission of De Form.

    http://nora-demeczky.tumblr.com/

    11. Enikő Deri

    eniko-deri-portrait

    Enikő Deri runs De Form, a Hungarian design agency, along with Nora Demeczky (see above). Her work often features dramatic use of geometry in strict black-and-white. Her shapes and organization are incredibly fresh, and the overall effect she creates is mesmerizing.

    Shown: Albert. Used by permission of De Form.
    Shown: Albert. Used by permission of De Form.

    II. Branding Design

    12. Kelsy Stromski

    Photograph by Kyle Caldwell.
    Photograph by Kyle Caldwell.

    Kelsy Stromski founded Refinery 43 to design cohesive visual identities for her clients. She has designed unique branding for interior design studios, personal brands, nonprofits, food products, and more. Her design expertise is highly fluid and adaptable.

    Shown: Bouchard Family Farms Ployes pancake mix packaging. Used by permission of Kelsy Stromski.
    Shown: Bouchard Family Farms Ployes pancake mix packaging. Used by permission of Kelsy Stromski.

    Kelsy’s work is firmly grounded in a thorough knowledge of her clients. She combines this knowledge with a deep understanding of the intended audience for the brand. The result is highly-targeted branding.

    https://www.facebook.com/Refinery43

    https://www.instagram.com/refinery43/

    https://www.pinterest.com/Refinery43/

    13. Ipek Eris

    ipek-eris-portrait

    Ipek Eris is a freelance designer working in the fields of branding, logo design, and corporate identity. She has lived in Kenya, France, Germany, and England. This experience has given her an eclectic visual sense, and it shows in her work.

    Shown: Rumeli70 Pharmacy branding package. Used by permission of Ipek Eris.
    Shown: Rumeli70 Pharmacy branding package. Used by permission of Ipek Eris.

    Ipek’s work shows a keen awareness of her client’s needs, married to a great visual sense. She establishes unity between separate elements by repeating motifs with variation.

    https://www.facebook.com/ipekerisdesign/

    https://www.instagram.com/ipekerisdesign/

    III. Web Design

    14. Sarah Yeager

     

    sarah-portrait-stylized-216

    We didn’t have to look far to find this designer. Sarah Yeager works for us! And while you may chuckle at the fact that we included our own designer in this list, wait till you see her work. It’s why we hired her.

    Shown: MatVacay app design.
    Shown: MatVacay app design.
    Shown: Textbookly.com website.
    Shown: Textbookly.com website.
    Pink, Aqua, Black, Silver, And Gold Empowerings.
    Shown: Sarah’s award-winning design of EmpoweRING, a piece of jewelry that lets the wearer send a distress signal to emergency contacts if he or she is in danger.
    Shown: #BrainCandies branding for WedoWE.
    Shown: #BrainCandies branding for WedoWE.

    Sarah received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Visual Communication Design from Kent State University. Aside from her design education, Sarah’s wide range of interests also informs her design process. She has worked in entrepreneurship, videography, photography, and painting. She finds these experiences invaluable as she designs websites, logos, and creatives for our clients.

    https://twitter.com/sarahmyeager

    https://www.facebook.com/sarahyeagerdesign

    IV. Illustration and Photography

    15. Lola Dupré

    Shown: John French with Hasselblad, paper collage on panel, 18x12.5 inches. Used by permission of Lola Dupré.
    Shown: John French with Hasselblad, paper collage on panel, 18×12.5 inches. Used by permission of Lola Dupré.

    Lola Dupré has created an incredible illustration style. Working exclusively with paper and scissors, she makes surreal, distorted images, often using the human body as her subject. In enlarging some parts of her source image, she criticizes cultural assumptions about gender and beauty. Her work is beautiful, disturbing, and unmistakable.

    https://www.facebook.com/dupre.lola/

    https://twitter.com/loladupre

    16. Nina Geometrieva

    nina-geometrieva-portrait

    Nina Geometrieva is a rising star in photography, graphic design, and branding. She brings a strong sense of geometry to her design as well as her photojournalism. For this writer, her most incredible work is the stunning photoshoot of Tokyo which she produced with Damjan Cvetkov-Dimitrov—including the capsule hotel photos which you’ve probably seen somewhere on the internet already.

    Shown: Tōkyō desu. Used by permission of Nina Geometrieva.
    Shown: Tōkyō desu. Used by permission of Nina Geometrieva.

    Nina and Damjan documented their Tokyo trip in this Medium post. Check it out for more incredible animated GIFs.

    https://www.instagram.com/geometrieva/

    https://www.facebook.com/geometrieva

    17. Nadzeya Makeyeva

    nadzeya-portrait

    Nadzeya Makeyeva is an illustrator and designer based in Minsk, Belarus. Her work features ingenious use of texture and line, and each piece seems to create and inhabit its own world. Check out her Psilocybin Rabbit:

    Shown: Psilocybin Rabbit. Used by permission of Nadzeya Makeyeva.
    Shown: Psilocybin Rabbit. Used by permission of Nadzeya Makeyeva.

    Nadzeya attended College of Arts #26 in Minsk. She has worked as a concept artist, illustrator, designer, and UI/UX designer, at multiple firms and as a freelancer. Her work shows a remarkable fluidity and ability to adapt to different purposes, styles, and materials.

    https://www.facebook.com/nadzeya.makeyeva.illustrations

    https://www.instagram.com/tonnel/

    18. Vicki Turner

    Vick-Turner-portrait

    Vicki Turner is a British designer and illustrator with a strong eye for color, shape, and line. Her work features incredible geometric representations of common shapes. Vicki has developed her own consistent style, almost an iconographic language which is easily understood by anyone.

    Shown: Misty Morning Commute, shortlisted for the AOI & TFL Prize for Illustration. Used by permission of Vicki Turner.
    Shown: Misty Morning Commute, shortlisted for the AOI & TFL Prize for Illustration. Used by permission of Vicki Turner.

    Vicki has worked with non-profits, startups, and everything in between. She brings a problem-solving mindset to the client relationship, and she offers insight on product and branding. She is also the founder of Feist Forest, a boutique builder of fine wooden tables for creatives.

    https://twitter.com/vickimturner

    https://www.pinterest.com/vickimturner/

    https://www.instagram.com/vickimturner/

    19. Erin Zingré

    erin-zingre-ern1_800px

    Erin Zingré started her illustration career in style, at age 4, with a preschool drawing of the Headless Horseman, a Guillotine, and Death Himself. As she puts it, this drawing still captures the essence of her work: “kinda cute, kinda creepy, and altogether not-quite-right.” It’s a beautiful kind of not-quite-right.

    Shown: Coloring Book for Grownups. Used by permission of Erin Zingré.
    Shown: Coloring Book for Grownups. Used by permission of Erin Zingré.

    Erin is a multidisciplinary designer now working out of Seattle. She is not taking freelance work at this time, due to her work designing at Amazon. With this talent, it’s no surprise she’s been snatched up.

    https://www.instagram.com/ernzinger/

    https://www.behance.net/erinzingre

    http://erinzingre.tumblr.com/

    20. Anna Grosh

    anna-grosh-portrait

    Anna Grosh is a Siberian designer working in San Francisco, CA. She specializes in illustration, typography and lettering, and design. Her illustration shows a nuanced touch and a powerful expression of emotion.

    Shown Circus D'Hiver Bouglion poster. Used by permission of Anna Grosh.
    Shown Circus D’Hiver Bouglion poster. Used by permission of Anna Grosh.

    Anna also excels at highly ornamented work and calligraphy. In the digital age, it’s refreshing to see a human touch and detailed hand work. Anna is one to watch.

    V. Typography, Calligraphy, and Typeface Design

    21. Marian Bantjes

    marian-bantjes-twitter

    Marian Bantjes has forged a remarkable career. Her work spans graphic design, typography, calligraphy, and lettering, and it has won her international acclaim. In the following piece, which she created for AGI’s annual special project, she used dirt and sand from around the world to create a Coexistence poster. Note the obsessive attention to detail—and the transience: she didn’t glue the sand down, and she wiped the poster away after photographing it.

    Shown: AGI: Coexistence. Used by permission of Marian Bantjes.
    Shown: AGI: Coexistence. Used by permission of Marian Bantjes.

    Marian worked as a book typesetter from 1984-1994. From 1994-2003, she ran Digitopolis, a graphic design studio which she cofounded. From 2003 to the present, she has pursued freelance work in design, art, and lettering.

    https://twitter.com/bantjes

    https://www.instagram.com/bantjes/

    22. Laura Pol

    laura-pol-portrait2

    Laura Pol is a designer, photographer, and videographer based in Venice, CA. As a designer, she has created a wide variety of logos, both type-based and graphic, in which she integrates clean typography with an overall aesthetic. She has also created several fonts, which are available for free (donation suggested) on her website.

    Shown: Tyde Font sample. Used by permission of Laura Pol.
    Shown: Tyde Font sample. Used by permission of Laura Pol.

    Typography and typeface design aren’t Laura’s only pursuits. She has also collaborated on editorial designs, art direction, branding, and more.

    https://twitter.com/laura_pol

    https://www.instagram.com/laurapol/

    https://www.pinterest.com/laurapol415/

    23. Lisa Pan

    lisa-pan-1

    Lisa Pan (Pan, Yi) is a graphic designer based in Taipei, Taiwan. She has developed an incredible illustration style, and she also excels at creating beautiful typography. She often combines lettering with illustrative work. Her pieces are truly jaw-dropping.

    Shown: Typoholic Zoology Collection. Used by permission of Lisa Pan.
    Shown: Typoholic Zoology Collection. Used by permission of Lisa Pan.

    Lisa shows an incredible ability to adapt her illustration style and her typographic sense to any project. Her work also shows a great balance between complex and simple textures.

    https://www.behance.net/Lisa_Pan

     

    VI. Art and Art Direction

    24. Louise Mertens

    louisemertens-portrait

    Louise Mertens received bachelor’s and master’s degrees in graphic design at Sint-Lucas Antwerpen. While in school, she interned at Mirror Mirror. After an internship at Sagmeister and Walsh, she launched Louise Mertens Studio in 2014. She now specializes in art and art direction, with a strong emphasis on collage. In the work below, she achieves a dynamic unity from several competing elements.

    Above: Jiyu 4. Used by permission of Louise Mertens.
    Shown: Jiyu 4. Used by permission of Louise Mertens.

    Louise’s use of color and her carefully-combined textures are unmistakable. As she says on her website, she is “inspired by the female body, the mysterious, and the incomprehensible.” She has developed a truly unique style.

    https://www.facebook.com/mertenslouise

    https://twitter.com/mertenslouise

    https://www.instagram.com/louise_mertens/

    25. Marta Gawin

    marta-gawin-portrait

    Marta Gawin practices design in Katowice, Poland. She specializes in editorial, poster, exhibition, and visual identity design. Her work features strong contrast between graphic elements, plus incredible typography.

    Shown: JazzArt Festival 2015. Used by permission of Marta Gawin.
    Shown: JazzArt Festival 2015. Used by permission of Marta Gawin.

    Marta earned her MA in Graphic Design from the Academy of Fine Arts, Katowice, in 2011. She works as a freelancer now, and she is regularly hired by both commercial organizations and cultural institutions. Her work is high-concept, with a heavy emphasis on unique content.

    https://www.behance.net/martagawin

    https://vimeo.com/48397655

    26. Candy Chang

    candy-chang-sidewalk

    Candy Chang takes her background in urban planning, her expressive sense, and her training in design and combines them to create beautiful public art installations. Among many incredible works, she created the Before I Die phenomenon—a black wall stenciled with the phrase, “Before I die _____”.

    Shown: Before I Die. Used by permission of Candy Chang.
    Shown: Before I Die. Used by permission of Candy Chang.

    This is a participatory public artwork which invites passersby to share their deepest longings in public. The original Before I Die wall in New Orleans gained international attention, and now there are over 1,000 Before I Die walls in 70 countries around the globe.

    https://twitter.com/candychang

    https://www.instagram.com/candychangland/

    https://www.facebook.com/candychangland

    The Bottom Line

    Design is changing faster than ever. New trends are always emerging, and in our opinion, things just keep getting better and better. These 26 women are pushing design to new places we’ve never seen before. This is truly a golden age of design, whether in web, branding, typography, illustration, or photography.

    From 216digital, a hearty THANK YOU to these designers for their willingness to share their work. Keep at it!

    Greg McNeil

    January 13, 2016
    216digital, Design Trendsetters, Digital Movers, Web Design
  • The Whole Content Marketing Package: Using WordPress To The Fullest

    The Whole Content Marketing Package: Using WordPress To The Fullest
    WordPress has only gotten more powerful in the last few years. The range of functionality and design that’s available in WordPress themes has increased dramatically. Gone are the days of WordPress blogs that are obviously “just another WordPress blog.” Today, WordPress can support any kind of website. The sky really is the limit—and for ecommerce stores, an integrated WordPress blog is a more powerful content marketing tool than ever. Of course, it all depends on your chosen theme. The internet abounds with free WordPress themes. While these themes work for many webmasters, they often don’t provide the level of control which owners of serious ecommerce stores require. Even among the paid themes, you can wade through hundreds of options without finding what you’re looking for. At 216digital, we insist on creating WordPress blogs that fit the aesthetics of our clients’ main sites. That could mean a WordPress blog with styling that’s identical to the client’s ecommerce store—or it could mean a blog that has its own look, but is still part of a cohesive brand. For clients who don’t require identical styling, we’ve had great success adapting the Avada WordPress theme (from Envato Market) to each client’s requirements. In this post, we’ll show off a few of our blogs.

    1. D’Andre New York: High-Fashion Content Marketing

    Image of D'andre New York's Homepage D’Andre New York sells gorgeous shearling coats. Their products are stylish, innovative, and incredibly elegant, and they cater to the high-fashion market. We wanted to take D’Andre’s content marketing efforts to the next level. We knew we needed a WordPress blog to match—something that would nail it in D’Andre’s market. When we installed the Avada theme on D’Andre’s blog, we selected a preloaded Fashion-oriented installation. This provided gorgeous typography and overall design. We replaced the stock imagery with our own images, created the appropriate pages, and voila, we had a beautiful blog about shearling coats and fashion. We chose Avada for its incredible versatility. With the Fusion Page Builder, Avada allowed us to build custom pages without getting too deep into code. This freed up our developers’ time to do what they do best—built great ecommerce stores. Here’s an example of a custom page built in the Fusion Builder. We’re pretty proud of it—check out the Ultimate Guide to Shearling Style.

    2. Quick220 Systems: A Blog That Fits The Market

    Quick 220 Mobile Homepage
    Quick220 Systems sells voltage converters that create 220v from two out-of-phase 110v outlets. The Quick220 Voltage Converter can power 220v appliances. It can also charge electric vehicles in half the time required to charge them at 110v. It’s a great product, and we thought Quick220’s content marketing efforts deserved a blog that matched the excellence of their products. Check out the Quick220 blog. You wouldn’t even know it was built on the same theme as the D’Andre blog we shared above—but it is! The Avada theme is incredibly flexible. In the case of Quick220, we configured the typography, color scheme, and layout to convey the Quick220 brand as cleanly as possible. We especially appreciated the animations that are available in the Avada theme. Again, this pre-built functionality allowed our content marketing team to build the blog themselves, leaving our developers to tackle the big work on our clients’ custom ecommerce stores.

    3. Berg Engineering: A Blog To Catch 2 Segments of Readers

    Berg Engineering's Homepage Berg Engineering sells NDT (nondestructive testing) equipment to the engineering sector. NDT technicians find invisible faults in materials, potentially averting disaster before it strikes. In aerospace, oil & gas, construction, and other sectors, NDT plays a critical role in public safety—yet almost no one outside of these industries knows about NDT. As we embarked on Berg’s content marketing campaign, we realized the Berg blog could play a critical role in public thought: it could bring NDT into the public eye. The Berg blog was a tough one. It had to look like something in the engineering space, but ideally, it would also look accessible to the general internet reader. After all, we were trying to make NDT accessible to a wider audience—and educate the public in the process. The Avada theme delivered on all our demands. The clean layout and clear typography were perfect for the engineering space, and the custom page builder allowed us to include beautiful imagery and headlines on the homepage. With these tools, we created an impressive and inviting look for the average reader. The Avada theme also played well with an infographic which we published on the Berg blog—Everyday NDT Infographic: How Nondestructive Testing Creates a Safer World. Publishing and promoting the infographic was a snap, and thanks to the Social Warfare plugin, we could easily display share counts for this groundbreaking infographic.

    4. Wunderlich America: A Niche Blog with Perfect Styling

    Wunderlich America's Mobile Website
    Wunderlich America sells European-built accessories for BMW motorcycles. As well as offering parts from the original equipment manufacturers, Wunderlich develops their own accessories for BMW motorcycles. These accessories are innovative and incredibly well-engineered. Wunderlich is iconic in the BMW community, and we realized immediately that their content marketing campaign would require a blog that was just as iconic. In the motorcycle community, content trumps design. We wanted a clean, simple blog design that wouldn’t distract readers from the goods—namely, awesome photos and writing about BMW motorcycles. Again, the Avada theme delivered. With the theme’s built-in styling options, we were able to choose colors that fit Wunderlich’s overall brand. The available iconography gave us great options for the four content boxes at the top of the blog homepage (see the Wunderlich America blog). The theme also played well with our custom development. On this page, The Top 93 BMW Motorcycles Sites for Amazing Rides, our design team produced a custom mockup, and our developers built it in WordPress. Avada gave us no hassle when we built custom styling.

    The Bottom Line

    Content marketing success depends on many factors. At the highest level, you need to understand your audience and their content expectations. At the writing level, you need to develop a killer voice. At the packaging level, you need a publishing tool that looks great, functions great, and doesn’t require a lot of help from developers. WordPress delivers, and for these four clients, the Avada theme was a great choice. If you’re looking to launch a content marketing campaign or improve your existing efforts, get in touch today. Our team specializes in analyzing new content markets and building successful voices. Drop us a line, and let’s start talking about your next big thing.

    Greg McNeil

    December 14, 2015
    216digital, Content Marketing, Digital Marketing, Responsive, Web Design
  • Miva Customization: Retro ReadyTheme

    Miva Customization: Retro ReadyTheme

    Miva Retro ReadyTheme Customization: Tailored To Your Needs!

    Miva users know that Miva is the ecommerce world’s best-kept secret. With Miva now offering responsive ReadyThemes free with every license, it’s easier than ever to put a functional, beautiful skin on your Miva store. In fact, most of our clients agree: Miva ReadyThemes really nail it after just a little customization. Bee Bald Man Care Products sells skin care products for the head. Their products offer incredible value for bald and non-bald men alike. But men aren’t the only ones who love Bee Bald; women use their products, too. Bee Bald has a developed a great brand. Clearly, they needed a great website to match. When Bee Bald came to us for a redesign, we knew that the Miva Retro ReadyTheme was perfect—well, nearly perfect. Bee Bald founder Dennis Fisher wanted to make a few changes to the theme. He had some ideas on how to optimize this theme for his business, and we were happy to help. The fact is, a pre-loaded theme is rarely a perfect fit for a business owner’s vision. Every business is unique, and themes are designed to please a wide user base. Bee Bald needed something unique. We agreed that Dennis had some great ideas to take his online store to the next level. So how did we take the Bee Bald store to the next level? Let’s dive right in.

    Miva Retro ReadyTheme Customization: Homepage Layout

    Dennis liked the Retro ReadyTheme overall. “As a template, it was great,” he says. “But it’s not all things to all people.” Specifically, he wasn’t happy with the theme’s homepage layout. The stock layout was functional and looked great, but that functionality didn’t quite fit his product line. We adjusted the homepage product offering template, replacing the stock configuration with a product carousel. We also tweaked the colors and the copy to match Dennis’s specifications. As you can see, the resulting Bee Bald homepage looks stunning. Dennis has developed an amazingly cohesive brand—one that really sells his product to his niche. Clearly, Dennis’s design decisions were one key part of building that awesome brand. Honestly, we think a lot of marketers could take a cue from Dennis. It’s obvious that a great ecommerce design appeals to online shoppers. However, a great design coupled to a cohesive brand also makes a great impression on other businesses. In Dennis’s case, as he hammered out relationships with distributors the old-fashioned way, his website turned into a stellar asset. Dennis could throw someone a link with confidence, knowing his website design would showcase the excellent quality of his product line.

    Responsive Web Design: Critical In Today’s Ecommerce Market

    Ouch. Looks like non-responsive design. (Original photo courtesy of Jan Vašek; modified by 216digital.)
    Ouch. Looks like non-responsive design. (Original photo courtesy of Jan Vašek; modified by 216digital.)
    Dennis was getting a lot of mobile traffic on his old site, but mobile users weren’t converting. Dennis thought that mobile users were leaving the site because it wasn’t resizing to the small screens of phones. We agreed—and the same is true for all non-responsive sites today. If you’re not serving pages optimized for mobile devices you’re losing sales. For ecommerce store owners, mobile website design isn’t an option. It’s a necessity. The Retro ReadyTheme is fully mobile responsive out of the box. However, when you add custom extensions to a responsive theme, you have to ensure that the customizations look great on mobile, too. Dennis needed a store locator module for his site. We integrated a powerful store locator module into the new Bee Bald site—but we knew that that alone wasn’t enough. We made sure the store locator module was fully mobile responsive and integrated into the look and feel of the theme. That way, customers could find a Bee Bald store on the go—and they wouldn’t be distracted by a clunky store locator experience.
    Bee Bald looks great on mobile.
    Bee Bald looks great on mobile.
    We believe it’s the little things that count, so we also tightened up the overall look of Dennis’s Retro ReadyTheme installation. These incremental changes added up to a great overall brand impression—on mobile and on desktop.

    The Cleveland Connection: A Local B2B Partnership

    photo by: Rick Harris 1
    photo by: Rick Harris
    An entrepreneur often wears all the hats. When Dennis started gearing up for the launch of Bee Bald, he was learning about the ecommerce world from scratch. Since the technical aspect of ecommerce was so new to him, he realized only shortly before launch that he needed to make changes to the proposal he’d submitted to his developer. The developer was local to the Cleveland, OH area, but they weren’t quite prepared to deal with the nuances of changing a Miva project on the fly. While Dennis’s relationship with his original developer had showed initial promise, he began to realize it wasn’t till-death-do-us-part. He needed a dedicated Miva developer. Enter 216digital. Justin Sims, our lead web developer, took over Dennis’s project. When we asked Dennis to reflect on his experience with us, we could hear the genuine appreciation in his voice. “Justin did a terrific job,” Dennis said. “He was accessible and responsive. He helped streamline the process.”  Now that’s an aspect of responsive web design that you don’t hear about every day—responding right away to a client’s needs and concerns. In the process of working with us, Dennis learned a lot about Miva. We didn’t keep any secrets from him. Dennis can now perform many store updates himself, meaning we’re billing him less. A lot of companies wouldn’t do that. Why give away the secrets that build value into your services? We simply don’t see it that way. Dennis is our client, and it was our job to build the best ecommerce tool we could for him. Dennis was equipped to learn Miva, and we were happy to teach him.

    The Bottom Line

    At 216digital, we have a passion for all things Cleveland. Cleveland beers, Cleveland sports teams, we’re 216 all the way. (That’s the area code around here, by the way.) It was exciting to help a Cleveland-area entrepreneur achieve his business goals. Of course, our clients come from all over. If you aren’t from the Cleveland area, we’ll show you the Cleveland work ethic as we create a stellar ecommerce site for you. So, when you’re ready to start that next project, remember 216digital. With 15 years of experience as a Miva certified partner, we can make your Miva ReadyTheme nail it!

    Greg McNeil

    August 5, 2015
    216digital, Applied Ecommerce, Digital Marketing, Ecommerce Platforms, Miva, Responsive, Responsive, Web Design
  • Choosing The Right Ecommerce Platform – Pt. 2 of 5 – Shopify

    Choosing The Right Ecommerce Platform – Pt. 2 of 5 – Shopify

    Best Ecommerce Platforms for 2015 – Pt. 2 – Shopify

    If you search Google for “ecommerce platforms,” you’ll find a lot about WooCommerce, Shopify, Magento, and Bigcommerce. If you do a little digging, you might find Miva, a longstanding ecommerce platform that’s not as well-known. Each platform has its own selling points and drawbacks. For some businesses, hidden drawbacks to any given platform may eventually overshadow that platform’s selling points. In this in-depth series, we’re examining the benefits and drawbacks of 5 major ecommerce platforms. In Part 1, we talked about WooCommerce. In Part 2, we’ll look at Shopify. Let’s dive in!

    Shopify:

    Shopify is a major player in the ecommerce game. With 150,000 active stores, Shopify is responsible for an incredible amount of online commerce. Shopify offers a range of responsive themes, Paypal integration, blogging functionality, a CMS (content management system) and a fairly basic abandoned cart email integration. In that regard, Shopify is generally competitive among ecommerce platforms. However, Shopify has some serious drawbacks which entrepreneurs should consider before committing.

    Watch out for those transaction fees!
    Watch out for those transaction fees!

    The biggest problem with Shopify is its transaction fee schedule. This is tied to your choice of payment gateway. If you go with Shopify’s own gateway, Shopify Payments, you’ll be charged 1.8%-2.4% plus $0.30 on every transaction. The percentage charge depends on your plan tier. If you want to use Shopify Payments, you’re in luck. But if you want to integrate with a 3rd party payment gateway, you’ll pay two transaction fees every time you make a sale: one to your 3rd party, and one to Shopify itself. In this scenario, Shopify’s fee goes down to 0.5%-2.0%, depending on your plan tier. Keep in mind that you’re already paying Shopify for the software and hosting. If you’re considering Shopify, you should really crunch the numbers on your projected sales and margins and see how this all adds up.

    Shopify’s discount functionality is also limited. The only discounts you can apply are percent off, dollars off, and free shipping. Clearly, these are the most common discount types; but what about scenarios where you need a different type of discount solution? Miva’s built-in discount functionality is far more robust. Without add-ons, Miva offers volume pricing, add-on products, basket discounts, buy product X and get product Y, product discounts, and two types of shipping discounts—entire order, or per-product.

    Some developers have claimed that Shopify’s code is not lightweight. Shopify contains in-line javascript at the beginning of the page. Experts generally recommend using external javascript or putting it at the end of the page. Note that Miva in stock configuration has no in-line javascript at the beginning of the source code.

    Shopify gives you two shipping methods out of the box. However, carrier-calculated shipping rates aren’t available in any plan below the $179/month tier. This puts smaller operations at a disadvantage. In Miva, shipping options are in no way tied to your website hosting setup.

    Overall, Shopify provides a good value to startups and small online stores that don’t need unlimited functionality and have big enough margins to take the transaction fees. Shopify is feature-rich, and those features will work just fine for many smaller operations. However, the limitations we discussed could hamper a store that starts to take off. That’s a key question that entrepreneurs should ask themselves when considering an ecommerce platform: will this software still serve me well in 3 years? In 5 years? In 10 years? And in the case of Shopify, as business grows, how will those transaction fees add up over the years?

    The Bottom Line

    Shopify offers excellent functionality and features. However, its transaction fee schedule represents a serious drawback for businesses doing larger sales volumes. In this regard, Shopify is more suited to small operations that will stay small. For larger operations, or for fast-growing stores, Miva and Magento offer more freedom and flexibility and have no inherent transaction fees. Note, however, that they may be more expensive than Shopify to get off the ground.

    Greg McNeil

    August 3, 2015
    216digital, Applied Ecommerce, Digital Marketing, Ecommerce Platforms, Responsive, Web Design
  • Choosing The Right Ecommerce Platform – Pt. 1 of 5 – WooCommerce

    Choosing The Right Ecommerce Platform – Pt. 1 of 5 – WooCommerce

    Best Ecommerce Platforms for 2015 – Pt. 1 – WooCommerce

    Google “eCommerce platforms,” and you’ll probably find a lot about WooCommerce, Shopify, Magento, and Bigcommerce. Dig a little deeper, and you might find a longstanding platform called Miva. Each of these platforms has its strengths and weaknesses. For some businesses, the weaknesses of any given platform may heavily outweigh that platform’s strengths. In this in-depth series, we’ll take a look at the benefits and drawbacks of 5 major eCommerce platforms. We’ll also look at what kind of business each platform is most suited for. As one of the Top WooCommerce Developers, we’ll be kicking things off with our analysis of the WooCommerce platform.

    WooCommerce: Great For Startups With Small Budgets

    WooCommerce is an online shopping cart plugin for WordPress. As such, WooCommerce can only run on WordPress installations. WordPress is the web’s most popular blogging platform and content management system, and it’s only gotten better in the last few years. With the WooCommerce plugin installed, it’s a great option for anyone just starting out in online selling.

    Choosing The Right Ecommerce Platform

    The WooCommerce plugin itself is free, making it even more optimized for startups with low budgets. However, the free plugin lacks some extensions. Certain shipping options, payment gateways, extension of product fields, and other functions require add-ons. Some of these plugins are free, but most require a purchase. For more complex online stores, WooCommerce isn’t free at all, due to the number of plugins that must be licensed.

    Because WooCommerce was developed by WooThemes, it allegedly runs best on one of their WordPress themes. Most of those aren’t free. Because the plugin is open-source, WooCommerce users do not have access to phone or social media support. However, users who purchase a WordPress template from WooThemes do have access to the company’s support forums.

    For simple operations, and for entrepreneurs with simple requirements and zero budget, WooCommerce can’t be beat. However, for larger stores and established operations, WooCommerce can’t provide the full functionality and flexibility of Miva or Magento. Magento requires extensive 3rd party development to reach the level of functionality that larger ecommerce firms will require. Miva requires less development to get a new store to market, but it may still require some, depending on the new store’s business model. Though development costs more than plugins, larger stores see the value in having storefronts, checkout procedures, and product features optimized to their exact market needs. Because WooCommerce is WordPress-based, WooCommerce users depend on existing plugins to modify site functionality. In Miva and Magento, the possibilities are almost endless.

    The Bottom Line:

    WooCommerce is great for simple operations and low-budget startups. However, it doesn’t have the extensibility of larger and more expensive platforms like Miva and Magento. As such, it may not be suitable for low-budget startups with complex storefront needs. But for bloggers who already use WordPress and want to start a basic online store on the same domain as their blog, WooCommerce is perfect.

    Next up: in Part 2, Shopify is in the hot seat!

    Greg McNeil

    July 27, 2015
    216digital, Applied Ecommerce, Digital Marketing, Ecommerce Platforms, Web Design
  • Miva Customization: Suivant ReadyTheme

    Miva Customization: Suivant ReadyTheme

    Miva Suivant ReadyTheme Customization: The Sky’s The Limit!

    If you use the Miva shopping cart platform, or if you’re looking to start a Miva store, you’ve probably heard of Miva ReadyThemes. These themes offer beautiful, functional styling right out of the box. However, they look even better with a little customization. Here at 216digital, we regularly customize Miva ReadyThemes for our clients. One of our favorite recent projects was a redesign via ReadyTheme for D’Andre New York, a seller of fine shearling coats. In this post, we’ll talk about that project and explain the Miva Suivant ReadyTheme customization that we performed.

    D’Andre New York: A Great Product Deserves a Great Website

    D’Andre New York sells fine shearling coats. These jackets feature beautiful, understated styling. Since they’re made of real wool, the moisture-wicking property of the material gives the wearer natural climate control. That means shearling coats can be worn comfortably in summer or winter. With this natural flexibility and their finely-tailored lines, shearling jackets are the pinnacle of outerwear style. Of course, high quality comes with a price tag. Shearling jackets typically range in price from $1000 to $3000. D’Andre New York’s target customer is affluent, style-conscious, and expects high quality. If the product itself delivers on all these—which it certainly does—then shouldn’t the website that sells the product display that same excellence? That was our reasoning, and Tatiana, owner of D’Andre, agreed. She wanted a redesign of her website, something that would showcase the beauty, durability, and value of her shearling products.

    D’Andre’s Legacy Site

    Image of Dandreny Legacy Website D’Andre New York’s old site had excellent functionality, and it had served the business well for years. However, the site was built in the days of low-resolution screens, and it looked a little small on today’s larger monitors. Worse, the site was built long before the mobile responsive revolution. It was awkward and cumbersome to use on a mobile device. With more and more customers shopping and purchasing products directly from their phones, D’Andre stood to lose out on potential business. With each sale worth a few thousand dollars, D’Andre needed to convert every prospect who came their way.
    D’Andre New York’s legacy site in mobile simulation. Get ready to zoom and scroll!
    D’Andre New York’s legacy site in mobile simulation. Get ready to zoom and scroll!
    It wasn’t just the resolution and lack of mobile responsiveness that worried us. D’Andre sells a fine product to an affluent market. We believed that D’Andre’s old site didn’t quite convey the level of luxury and comfort that wearers could expect from a shearling jacket. We thought the site ought to display the excellence that D’Andre’s shearling coats provide. Clearly, it was time for a redesign.

    Miva Suivant ReadyTheme: Almost Ready To Rock And Roll

    Miva ReadyThemes give Miva store owners beautiful, functional online stores right out of the box. But as with all cookie-cutter solutions, ReadyThemes leave a bit to be desired in the details. A little customization takes a Miva ReadyTheme to the next level. D’Andre New York had chosen the Miva Suivant ReadyTheme. We agreed that this theme was perfect for a retailer of fine shearling jackets. It just needed a few tweaks. For starters, the Miva Suivant ReadyTheme has a large header. This isn’t necessarily a problem—except that by default, that header anchors to the top of the screen when the user scrolls. It’s not too noticeable on desktop, but on a mobile device, that pinned header eats up a lot of real estate. For every client using the Suivant ReadyTheme, we routinely recommend customizing the header. In D’Andre’s case, we changed the header so it wouldn’t stick to the top of the screen. We reasoned that users know where the header is. They know to scroll up if they need to use the navigation bar. This change significantly improved the user experience of D’Andre’s new website. The header wasn’t the only tweak that the Suivant ReadyTheme needed. With the ongoing evolution of SEO (search engine optimization), Google now values good content more than ever, and many web users find value in useful, informative content. Blogs and magazines can display the entirety of a piece of content without compromising other organizational goals. However, in an ecommerce setting, selling product is critical. Too much content on a product or category page could keep the all-important buy buttons hidden from site visitors. Yet content is critical for SEO! What’s a webmaster to do? For all our clients doing customized ReadyThemes, it’s a simple fix. We custom-code an option to display the first 150 characters or so of the content, followed by a “read more” button. This gives us the best of both worlds: 300+ word content for SEO purposes (and for those readers who want to educate themselves fully), and product imagery and buy buttons still displayed above the fold for users who are close to making a purchase. For D’Andre New York, this solution was a no-brainer.

    Optimizing D’Andre’s Onsite Content

    Speaking of content, it’s one of the most important components of branding. Content that doesn’t convey the right brand impression negatively affects marketing. In the case of D’Andre New York, we recognized at once that Tatiana’s great luxury brand needed content that created an opulent, luxurious impression. With Tatiana’s permission, our SEO content writing team began writing new copy for the D’Andre website. Our process was simple. We researched other luxury brands, such as Rolex and Mercedes-Benz, to get a feel for the appropriate voice and tone. We settled on two points of focus for D’Andre. For Tatiana’s women’s collection, our content revolved around the word “elegance.” For the men’s collection, we chose the word “achievement.” These words matched D’Andre’s brand perfectly. With these two ideas in place, the rest of the content flowed. The result was a unique, memorable brand identity in all D’Andre’s onsite content.

    Image Optimization: A Key Element In Ecommerce Marketing

    Customers want to see what they’re buying. In the case of D’Andre’s fine shearling coats, customers want to see not only the overall look of the jacket, but also the elegant details of accents and trim. With D’Andre’s old site, product images looked small on larger screens, preventing customers from getting a complete picture of the jacket they were considering. Every product image on the site existed in two separate files: a tiny thumbnail version, and the full-sized version. Since the thumbnail had to be created manually in an image editor, and since both images had to be uploaded manually, the old system required double the work on catalog updates. Enter the Miva Image Machine. This state-of-the art functionality dynamically creates multiple image sizes from one image file, eliminating the need to create thumbnail sizes manually and upload them separately. The Image Machine also allows alternative images. These show up as thumbnail images below the main image on a product page. Users can click on any of these alternative images and view the full-sized image in a popup. This allows store owners to provide multiple views of a product, giving customers a sense of what the product looks like from different angles.

    The Bottom Line

    We saw at once that Tatiana’s company offered a great product. We wanted to improve the overall value of her brand by optimizing the impression her company made on web visitors. With a little Miva Suivant ReadyTheme customization, Tatiana’s redesign was ready to go, clearly communicating the luxury and style that customers could expect from D’Andre New York. It was a pleasure to work with Tatiana. Through deep market analysis and ongoing communication, we formed a partnership with her to improve the marketability of her brand. We think you’ll agree—the new D’Andre New York website looks beautiful, fully matching the luxury and elegance which D’Andre offers its customers. If you’re considering a responsive Miva design for your ecommerce store, get in touch with us today. We specialize in Miva design and development, and all our work is fully mobile-responsive. Whether you need tweaks to a Miva ReadyTheme or a ground-up custom design, we’ll turn your vision into a reality. Drop us a line, and let’s start talking about your next big thing.

    Greg McNeil

    July 17, 2015
    216digital, Applied Ecommerce, Miva, Responsive, Responsive, SEO, Web Design
  • Future-proofing: Why You Should Go to A Responsive Design

    Future-proofing: Why You Should Go to A Responsive Design

    In case you haven’t heard, having a responsive website is going to be a bigger part of web design moving forward. The common practice in the past was for mobile versions of sites to be given their own subdomain. Essentially, you had two websites with duplicate information and you had twice as much work when you needed to change something. This doubles your development and maintenance costs. It also caused problems when your site was listed in search engines. Now, you could prevent a mobile version of your site from being crawled and listed as a duplicate in search results, then just serve up the mobile version of the site when a mobile browser was detected. However, Google prefers to know exactly what they are serving and a redirect like that is considered bad practice.

    Sites with a “mobile version” also had their limitations. They could only support two screen resolutions: desktop and mobile. Using a tablet, you usually ended up with an over sized smartphone version of the site, or you could end up with a desktop version that was still too small. And if you used the built-in browser on your gaming system, all bets were off. It can be tremendously frustrating not only from the side of usability, but also from a design perspective. Good responsive design practice fixes all of this.

    Google is trying to unify search results and they have been striving for a consistent user experience across all platforms. For the last few months, websites have been eligible for the “mobile-friendly” label within Google Search results if they use a responsive design. The criteria it uses are things like avoidance of flash and other uncommon software on mobile devices, legible text without zooming, automatic horizontal sizing which is scalable to whatever size screen, and “finger friendly” spacing of links.

    This is all great for the end-user, but in the future it could have a big impact on you. Google has been experimenting with the mobile-friendly label in their Search ranking. Sites without a responsive design could be penalized and dropped down the list. It could literally undo the years of hard work on SEO and marketing just by adding a criteria that your site isn’t prepared for.

    Luckily, we at 216digital are experts in responsive design and can quickly and efficiently create a responsive version of your website. If you’d like to read more about the mobile-friendly label and responsive design, Google has provided a few resources to help educate you further and we’ve linked them below.

    Mobile-friendly Test
    Webmasters Mobile Guide
    Mobile usability report
    How-to guide for third-party software

    Greg McNeil

    March 9, 2015
    Responsive, Web Design
    responsive design
  • Selecting the Right Design Agency for Your Project

    Selecting the Right Design Agency for Your Project

    It may seem like selecting a company to design your website is the easy part of making your successful online business a reality. After all, there are tons of different firms out there; it’s just a matter of finding one that meshes well with your business and your personality.  That’s important, but choosing a design team to take on your company’s projects is actually much more complicated than simply selecting the company that fits your fancy. You should look at more than just a Google search when making your decision in order to make your project as successful as possible.

    Ask around. Chances are you have some connections who have worked with designers they prefer. You may have to do a little research, but inevitably someone you know has used a design firm that they would like to recommend at some point or another. There also are probably some firms they would advise you to avoid. These personal references should be taken into account during your search.

    Once you have your list of potential design companies, you should make sure to take a look at each of their portfolios. There, you can begin to assess the quality of their work and prepare to ask pointed questions about why they made certain design choices. From these meetings and “interviews,” you’ll get a better sense for whether or not you’ll work well with a particular candidate. Building off that point, make sure that your designer isn’t a pushover. A designer who is confident in their work and wants the best for your company and the project won’t be afraid to question your direction or methods. In the end, even though you might feel that your ideas are being challenged, your project will probably be more successful if the designer weighs in on big decisions, and you’ll be thankful for their counsel.

    Once you do find and begin working with a designer, make sure you allow them to do their job. This means relinquishing a little bit of control over your company’s project so that your web design experts can be most effective. With that said, your involvement remains critical, and getting the designer acquainted with the company and giving him or her clear expectations for your project will assist them in making the best possible choices.

    Here at 216digital, we employ experience web, graphic, and print designers who are passionate about producing exceptional work. We’ve put together countless websites, attacking each online project with the intensity it deserves. We work with you to understand your company and seek to include you in each step of our pursuit of its goals. Local to Cleveland, hard work runs in our veins, and we know you won’t be disappointed if you choose to partner with us for your next project.

    Greg McNeil

    March 6, 2015
    Web Design
  • Why Magento Might Be the Next Shopping Cart You Use for Your Ecommerce Website

    Why Magento Might Be the Next Shopping Cart You Use for Your Ecommerce Website

    Magento is the most popular shopping cart platform, with around a 26% market share. It’s also used by some of the biggest brands worldwide. But, popularity aside, there are three very strong reasons why you should consider Magento for use on your own ecommerce website.

    1. A Flexible and Open Platform. When a piece of software is open source, that means anyone has access to the inner workings of the system. In the case of Magento, this means that there is a huge development community working behind the scenes, and they create all sorts of plug-in modules for it. This also means that help is everywhere and there are plenty of specialists that can modify Magento in nearly any way you need. You can even integrate it with other platforms like payment gateways, inventory and fulfillment platforms, and accounting software.
    2. Purpose built. You could use another content management system (CMS) like WordPress. WordPress, after all, underpins nearly one-fifth of all websites served to browsers. But in order to run a store with WordPress, you need to add features with third-party plug-ins. Magento on the other hand comes pre-loaded with the features you need in a webstore. It can also be scaled to suit your needs. You can run a single store with thousands of SKU’s or you can even run multiple storefronts all from a single admin interface. I know that earlier I told you to disregard the popularity of the platform, but it should say something that everyone from small local webstores all the way to multi-national brands like Nike, Samsung, Lenovo, and Nestle find Magento perfect for their online commerce.
    3. Optimized for High Performance. Magento is the fastest shopping cart platform available today. Small delays of just a few hundred milliseconds for each customer may seem like nothing, but multiplied over and over with thousands of customers, it can add up and bring a website to its knees. It’s also extremely SEO friendly and supports sitemaps, short URL’s, meta tags, and easily indexable product descriptions. Magento is also optimized for mobile shopping which makes up almost half of all online commerce. HTML5 capabilities and support for responsive design ensure that your site will be future proofed when Google starts to factor in mobile-friendliness in its search engine rankings.

    This is just the tip of the iceberg of what Magento can do for your ecommerce store, though. Give us a call or use the form on our contact page to get in touch. We’ll set-up a consultation and run through the all the capabilities and options built into the Magento shopping cart and see what would work best for you.

    Greg McNeil

    March 4, 2015
    Magento, Web Design
    Magento Design
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