Luko 2.0

July 15, 2010

7 Basics of Good Web Design

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , — admin @ 4:19 am

Use these 7 Basics of Good Web Design to improve your web site and make it stand out from the competition.

Whether you are just starting a web design project, looking at revamping an existing site, or just wanting to double check the usability of your current web site you should consider these 7 Basics of Good Web Design.

These Basics are aimed at new visitors/customers, your repeat customers will be judging your web site on different values. Just like wearing the appropriate clothes for a job interview, these basics will help you pick out the “look” of your web site so that you make a good first impression.

1. Fast Loading Web Site – Any way you look at it, a fast loading page should be your number 1 concern. The web is all about speed, fast searches, fast purchases, fast information. You can’t have any of that with a slow loading page. Ask yourself this question, have you ever been on Google doing a search for something important and a link you clicked on didn’t open up immediately? What did you do? Patiently wait for the page to open or move onto the next link on the list? My favorite sites open almost immediately.

So, a few suggestions: Make sure that your images are properly optimized. Don’t use very many large images, save those for a different page. Keep any auto-running multimedia to a minimum, offer links to run media instead. Check your code for anything else that could affect your page loading times. Since text loads almost instantly go ahead and use all the text you want, just keep everything else under control.

2. No Meaningless Splash Page – Do you appreciate a fancy animation page that doesn’t tell you anything and you have to wait for before the web site will open? Neither do I. The last thing I want once I find an interesting site is to wait through some animation before getting to the first page. This doesn’t mean that I don’t want multimedia on a site, I do. I just don’t want an animation before the first page that forces me to wait for it to finish before getting onto the site. Its like having to wait for a salesperson to finish their memorized speech before you can ask them a question. No thanks! I like animation, just in the right place and at the right time. Plus if I am a returning customer I will have already seen that animation and don’t need to see it again.

My recommendation is to use a smaller animation contained in your main landing page which also includes your main message and links to the rest of your site. It will make for a faster loading page (smaller file) and your visitors can go ahead with accessing your site without having to wait for the animation to finish.

One final note, never, ever put your logo as the only content on your landing page with a link that says “Enter Site”. This just screams Unprofessional and will drive away potential visitors in droves. The last thing I want to do is to click on another link just to get into the site. This is a total waste of my time. I usually will skip a site if I see this.

3. No Annoying Web Gimmicks – Now that you have your visitor on your site quickly the one thing you don’t want to do is to drive them away just as quickly. So, don’t put anything annoying on that first page. No loud background music that makes them quickly hit the volume control or the back button on their browser. No flashing animations while they are trying to read your content. No popup, flyout, expanding ads that cover your home page. Basically leave the gimmicks alone until you are sure that your visitor will stay on your site. Most casual visitors will leave your site in just a few seconds, no sense on driving them away more quickly.

Multimedia is great on a web site, just don’t bombard your visitor with it first thing. If you want audio then put in a nice picture with a link, like a picture of yourself with text saying something like “Let me tell you how to make $50,000 this month!” If they are interested they will click on the link and listen to your message, if they are not interested in audio then you should be using a different pitch anyway.

Also, monitor what advertisers are putting on your site if you sell ad space. I am sure you have seen those ads with the animated dancing figure, cute the first time you see it. But after seeing it 10,000 times with every imaginable character I have added the company to a list I keep of companies I will never do business with. So their animation has gone from “look at me” to “you annoy me” in my mind. Ads like these will impact your visitor’s experience. So even if your site is perfectly designed, one misplaced ad can ruin all of your hard work.

4. Have a Clear Message – Too many web sites are a mish-mash of content. This is especially true of blog pages. Certain types of sites lend themselves to stream of consciousness content, but most don’t. Make it easy for your viewer to understand what your web site is about, don’t make them guess. Have a clear topic headline, followed by clear and concise text. This is also where a picture is worth a thousand words, but only if the picture directly pertains to your message.

You want your visitor to be able to quickly understand what your message is. If they like your message they will take the time to read the rest of your page and look around your web site. If they don’t like your page, then it won’t do you any good having them stay on your site anyway. So, don’t make your visitors guess, let them know what you are about quickly and cleanly and you will have happy visitors. And when thinking about a sales page, a happy customer is a buying customer.

5. Coordinated Design – This one should be self evident, but it is surprising how many sites change their design for every page. You want your visitor to be comfortable in your site and one way to achieve that is by having a coordinated web design. Having a consistent logo, using a consistent color scheme, keeping your navigation in the same place. All of these help to create a coordinated design. This does not mean that you can’t change colors or the “Look” on different segments of your site, but if you do, the changes should not be so drastic that it feels like you have moved on to a different site.

If you select one place for your logo, one place for your navigation, one look for your buttons or other common graphic elements and stick with those then you will be well on your way to a coordinated design. If you change colors for a different section, but keep the same logo location, the same navigation location, the same button shape then your visitors will not become lost as they move from page to page.

6. Easy Navigation – Once you have grabbed your visitors attention you want them to be able to easily move around the different areas of your web site. This is done with easy to use navigation. There are three standard, accepted locations for navigation elements on a web page: along the top, on the left side, and at the bottom. I will usually put my main navigation either along the top or along the left side. I will then put text based navigation at the bottom of the page, this text based navigation is more for the search engines than anything else, but it also makes it easy for your visitors to move to the next page when they have reached the bottom of the current page.

Most people start reading a page from the top left and then read towards the bottom right. So navigation at the left or top will be seen as soon as someone enters your page. Also navigation at the left or top will not move or change position if the browser window is adjusted in size. The worst thing you can do is to put your main navigation on the right side of the page and have your page set for a large screen size. Let’s say that your page is set for 1024 across with the navigation on the right, and someone v
iews your page at 800 across, they will not see your navigation at all. The left side of your page will show perfectly, but the right side will be hidden outside of their viewing area. Of course by using floating or popup menus you can overcome some of these design limitations and keep your navigation visible at all times.

Unless you know that your audience will enjoy it, don’t use Mystery Navigation. This is where your navigation is hidden within images, or spaced around the web page in some mysterious random order. This can be fun on gaming sites, or social networking sites, but in most cases the navigation should be easy to see and easy to use. If you do want to use Mystery Navigation I would recommend keeping the text based navigation at the bottom of the page, just in case.

7. Have a “Complete” web site – And finally, no one wants to go to a web site only to find that the site is “Under Construction” and the content they are looking for is not there. These are words that you should never use. If a section of your web site is not ready for prime time yet, then simply don’t show it yet. It is better to have your site look complete and professional, then to have it look like a work in progress that should not be up on the web yet.

You can easily tell your visitors that you will be having more content in the future without looking like your site is unfinished. Just use phrases like “Content Updated Weekly” or “New Products Added Monthly”. Both of these will tell your visitors that it would be worth their time to come back and visit at later, but neither one will make your site look unfinished. So no matter how small your web site is, give the impression that you have taken the time to complete the site before putting it up on the internet, this makes for a more professional presentation and a better visitor experience.

In Closing – By following these simple 7 Basics of Good Web Design you will be well on your way to having an easy to use and successful web presence. Just keep in mind what you look for when you first land on a web page after doing a web search in Google or Yahoo, or other search engine. If you want fast loading pages, make sure your pages load fast. If you want to be able to find what you are looking for quickly and easily then make sure you have easy navigation. Just keep your first time visitor in mind, put yourself in their web shoes and make your web site an enjoyable place to visit and success should follow.

George Peirson is a successful Entrepreneur and Internet Trainer. He is the author of over 40 multimedia based tutorial training titles covering such topics as Photoshop, Flash and Dreamweaver. To see his training sets visit http://www.howtogurus.com

Article copyright 2008 George Peirson


Related Blogs

    June 12, 2010

    Web Design Articles – Practical Web Designing Basics:

    The following are the key aspects which would help you practically craft a web design that would deliver results in terms of your audience visibility

    Part 1: The Unavoidables

    Definition of a good Web site: A site that delivers quality and eshaustive information for its target audience and does so with elegance and style.

    The rule of “Keep it Simple, Sober” is tried and tested, but it’s not a be-all end-all of Web design. Gamers, for example, expect a busy page with a lot of sophisticated graphics, flash effects, and the like. The usual understated page with the off-white background and the typical menu of links sedately trundling down the left side of the display leaves this audience cold; obviously the people who designed this Website aren’t on their wavelength — these guys like plenty of whizz-bang in the pages they visit.

    On the other hand, when a middle aged lady goes on the Web to hunt down some nice crockery for kitchen, she isn’t going to want jazzy Flash effects, purple-on-black color styles, and a raft of animated graphics doing gymnastics in front of her rheumy old eyes. She’s been known to take a stick to the monitor to make it all stop. Corporate users expect something that might not necessarily be “buttoned-down,” but certainly something solid and professional that reflects positively on their business and compares well with the competition. Personal home pages want an emphasis on the personal — the site should reflect the interests and personality of the owner.

    Attract Your Audience – Visually

    The key here is to know who is going to be using your page, and to design with their needs and desires in mind. The KISS rule generally holds good in most cases. If you don’t need something — a frame, an animated graphic, a Flash animation, a fancy DHTML effect, don’t use it. After all you don’t want an uninteresting page full of unbroken blocks of text with a dull color scheme and dreary graphics won’t attract anyone’s attention. Use everything moderately. Keep your audience in mind and design your site accordingly.

    Every image that moves or blinks draws your visitors’ attention to itself. Be sure that it doesn’t distract them from your message. Whatever your site’s reason for being, you want to portray an image that conveys what your site is all about as well as the feelings you want to implant in your audience. It’s no coincidence that most financial sites use design and graphical tactics to give a feeling of safety and stability. No matter what the stock market does, this site won’t have its feathers ruffled. In contrast, the ultra-hyper site design of the Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network sites appeal to their sugared-up audience of pre-teens and teenagers; you can’t overstimulate that crowd. A site selling luxurious designer ware isn’t going to use the same design scheme as a site selling automobile spares! One will go for a colourful shades in the design, while the other will use a rough-and tough looking design scheme.

    A good Web designer will be able to design all four sites, and others as well. Don’t forget, if you’re designing a Website for a corporation or business, that they very likely have trademarks, logos, color themes, and other elements that will need to be included in your design scheme. Colour speaks volumes about your company even before the surfer reads your content of the web site.

    Appealing to Multiple Audiences

    If you’re trying to design a page that will appeal to both the middle aged ones and their hyperactive, TV& Gamestation addicted grandsons and granddaughters, then you’re going to have to make some compromises that could possibly alienate both audiences. You may want to consider refining your site to appeal to a narrower audience, or you may even choose to mount separate pages with different design approach for different audiences. In this case, you might do well to produce an introductory, or “doorway,” page with links to the “whizz-bang” and the “sedate” pages — the content might essentially be the same, but the design style would be dramatically different.

    Connections Options

    And don’t forget what your audience uses to access your site. Not everyone has a broadband or T1 connection; most of the world still limps along with slow dial-up connections, or must flounder around the Net through a maze of network connections. These folks appreciate your limiting your usage of big, slow-loading graphics, or at the least, providing thumbnails that automatically load and allow them to click for a bigger (and slower-loading) display. Remember, .JPG graphics are generally bigger than either .GIFs or .PNGs (Flash animations, surprisingly enough, load fairly quickly considering their complexity, but they can slow down a page, particularly one accessed over a dial-up connection). Complex table structures can take a while to load, too, especially if they’re loaded with graphics. Slow servers cause slow downloads; if your provider can’t get your site up to speed, switch to someone who can.

    Design for the World Wide Web is the smart balancing act between the graphic “wow” and the real-time “now.”

    “Elegance” is a favorite term to describe good, clean Web design, but what it actually means is up to the interpretation of the designer and the site user. It actuallu should mean using a decent design, with well-chosen colors and graphical choices that don’t stress the eye, but instead induce the visitor to relax and enjoy the content. It’s the difference between being wooed over a candlelight dinner and being juggled in the overloaded elevator!

    What type of HTML Should You Choose?

    Every Web page conforms to a version of HTML (or XHTML, or even XML, though we’re not going into those here), and is determined by the DOCTYPE (document type) code. The line:

    at the top of your page (above the initial tag) covers your bases in most cases. It supports many of the elements of the latest version of HTML, 4.01 Strict, supports style sheets for the most part, but also supports most deprecated or no longer current HTML elements, frames, link targets, and other attributes not allowed in by-the book HTML 4.01. This document type also keeps older browsers such as Netscape 4.x in the game. If you’re designing to the latest HTML standards and/or using sophisticated style sheets, then this doctype:

    “http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd”>

    should be used, but be aware that a lot of older browsers won’t display your page properly. Neither can you use frames unless you use the “frameset” version of this doctype. Note, too, that the “transitional” DOCTYPE I cite doesn’t include the URL of a DTD, or document type declaration. This is because using URLs in a DOCTYPE element sends some browsers, including IE into Strict mode, defeating the purpose of the “transitional” DOCTYPE.

    Of course, you could just slide bare-cheeked on the ice and use no doctype in your pages at all (just use the tag), but that’s not a good solution. That leaves the individual’s browser to choose how to display the page, and while most browsers will cope just fine with the situation, some will gag. Besides, you need to get into the habit of using a DOCTYPE element. If you don’t know a DOCTYPE from a typewriter, use the “transitional” doctype at the beginning of this section. If you know about the various doctypes, or if you’re coding in XHTML, then make your own choice. The decision to use the “transitional” doctype is safe and conservative, but it’s certainly not an up-to-date choice. If you want to ensure that your Web page is ready for modern browsing and will be compliant with current and upcoming Web standards, you’ll need to learn about CSS (Cascading Style Sheets), HTML 4.01, and XHTML.

    Note: You can visit the W3C Validator to check your document for compliance with W3C standards, or use Dave Raggett’s acclaimed HTML Tidy program, now an open-source projec
    t.

    Browser Compatibility

    During the initial days when the web was still a tabu among the users the novice Web developers designed the pages with Netscape for Windows in mind; as that was by far the most popular browser in use, designing the site for Netscape/PC users was “good enough” to satisfy the majority of users, and never mind the rest. Nowadays the same lot of designers make their pages for Windows and Internet Explorer, for the same reasons. This is where they lack in approach.

    Millions of Windows users still employ Netscape (or the open-source Mozilla). Many others use Opera. Some AOL users are still trundling along with their out-of-date AOL browsers, and some hard-core folks still swear by Lynx, the text-only browser (there’s also the surprisingly large contingent of users who keep graphics switched off and read only text). Then, there’s WebTV to be reckoned with. And there are differences between the Mac browsers and the Windows browsers of the same name, not to mention the Mac browsers Cyberdog, OmniWeb, Chimera, iCab, and others. There are the browsers for Linux such as Konqueror, Opera for Linux, Mozilla for Linux, and others. According to the Browser Archive at Evolt, there are well over 100 browsers out there being used by someone and many of them are obsolete now. Why should the Web designer care? Because your page won’t display the same from one browser to the next. The more plugged-in designer uses one method or another, either client-side or server-side, to detect what browser his/her visitor is using, and “tailors” the code they send to that particular browser. But if you don’t want or can’t do something so slick, what can you do to meet the needs of your various visitors with their options of browsers?

    Basically, the best thing to do is to be aware of the HTML tags and other features and protocols that one browser will support and others won’t, and avoid them whenever possible: the infamous “marquee” and “blink” tags come to mind, as do iFrames, layers, JavaScript, style sheets, plug-ins, DHTML, and others. Some of these, such as “blink” tags and layers, are long out-of-date; others such as DHTML and JavaScript are quite current. If you do use something that is browser-specific, choose a function that isn’t critical to your visitors’ ability to view your site: an example is the neat color schemes for the horizontal and vertical scrollbars that IE provides for. Netscape users will just get the plain-Jane grey bars, but it doesn’t hurt them to not have the colored scrollbars — it doesn’t affect the way your site presents its message and handles its content.

    Page Features compatibility Across Browsers?

    There are plenty of page features that will cause problems for one browser or another. Forms come quickly to mind, as do text size and display size. The way you code a link can be a problem: for example, the following link will work in most versions of IE, because the browser will process the code, but most versions of Netscape will report it as a broken link:

    Go Here

    Why? Because of the white space between “go” and “here.” IE will deal with it, but Netscape won’t. If you want it to work in Netscape or anything else, you have to write it as such:

    Go Here

    If it’s your file, go one better by renaming the file GOHERE.HTML and avoiding the whole issue.

    Another example is the site that looks good in IE, Netscape/Mozilla, and even Konqueror, except that the fonts render badly in the latter. Konqueror users should be able to fix the problem on their end easily enough by clicking “Zoom In” on their browser. Your response can be to rework your page to look as good in Konqueror as in the Windows/Mac browsers, or you can let the Konqueror users handle it themselves. If you’re working on a broad-based audience of mostly Mac and Windows users, your best bet might be to let well enough alone and let the Konqueror users handle it for themselves. If you have a large component of Linux users, you might want to fix the problem so that Konqueror users don’t have to deal with the issue. It’s your call, and your audience.

    As Compatible as Possible

    Browser incompatibility is a huge issue, and one that’s being grappled with at all levels of the Internet. Meanwhile, you can cope by becoming aware of the plethora of HTML tags that work in one browser but don’t work in another. You can decide whether or not to use extensions, plug-ins such as ActiveX, JavaScript, and even style sheets, which don’t work well in older browsers (and can be iffy in some current browsers) but are essential in modern HTML coding. You can decide whether or not to use more up-to-date graphics such as .PNGs, which will one day become a Web standard but for now don’t work in older browsers.

    Quick and dirty fix: make sure your page looks good in Internet Explorer, Netscape 4.x, Netscape 6/Mozilla, and Opera — that means downloading these browsers to your machine and testing your site in them (find the older Netscape browsers available for download at the Netscape Archive). Use features such as style sheets, JavaScript, and DHTML sparingly; if you use these features for critical elements of your page such as a navigational scheme, provide your less up-to-date visitors with a more technologically conservative alternative. Don’t use browser-specific code and expect your visitors without that particular browser to just “get over it,” and don’t skirt the issue with a craven “Works best in XXX browser” label. Try to address the needs of every member of your audience, and be aware that you can’t create a site that works wonders for everyone everywhere!

    Head SEO, Marketing at AIT India

    March 5, 2010

    The Basics of Web Design

    Filed under: Web Design — Tags: , , , , — admin @ 3:27 am

    When you are into web design either for a career or as a hobby there are some essential facts that you must remember if you want all of your websites to look great. Web design is something that is continually changing, but despite those changes you can create many a great website with a few simple rules. Of course, the rules that you work by may increase as you go or they may change a bit but this is a good starting place.

    First, always remember that what you see is not what you get when you are designing a website. You cannot design a website and assume that the way you see it is the way that everyone else will see it. How a website appears is dependent upon what web browser you use, and you can bet that not everyone who views you website uses the same web browser as you. Remember with web design that you must keep everyone is mind, not just you and your web browser.

    Another important element to get web design is HTML. Many web designers mistakenly assume that HTML is simply a page description language. The fact is that HTML is a structural markup language, meaning that you are creating the structure of a document not just creating a layout. Even if you think you understand HTML quite well you will be well served to go back and review some of the basic rules that apply to HTML to be sure that you are not using it wrong. So many web design specialists use HTML in the wrong way and it affects the overall appeal of their web site.

    Web design is not the same thing as word processing even if you are putting content on the website. This is a sanity saving rule that you should follow because when you word process you have control over how the page appears. When you put content on a website you have a lot less control over how the content will appear because of differences in computers, computer settings, and web browsers. While you have some control over the layout of the content you simply have to put your faith in the ability of each browser to display your content to the best of its ability.

    It’s also important to remember when you are into web design that graphics are not always better than simple links or content. Graphics can really make your web design pop, but you have to remember that an astonishing number of people simply do not like web graphics and will not utilize them. If you want to use graphics that is fine, but it is important in web design to also build web pages that can be navigated easily, with or without the use of graphics.

    Along the same vein as using graphics in web design you should also be careful not to use too many gimmicks when you design a web page. While some of the gimmicks are really cool and fun to use, most web browsers would rather that you had a straight forward web set up that would allow them to use the website easily and in their own way. You can use some flashy gimmicks if you must, but remember that more isn’t necessarily better. When it comes to web design, simple is often better. Learn to temper the fun gimmicks with true usability.

    Probably the most important rule of web design is to remember that original content makes a great website. You can have all of the flashy gimmicks and graphics that you want on a web page, but without original, quality content your web design will fall flat every time. It seems almost too easy when you look at web design in this manner, but it is true. The thing is that most of us make web design more difficult and complicated than it needs to be. If you have original content you will find that your web page does quite well and there is no need to add any of the extras to your already successful web design. When it comes to web design simple is almost always better.

    Boca Raton Web Design

    October 15, 2009

    Basics of Web Design

    Filed under: Web Design — Tags: , , , , , — admin @ 3:37 pm

    Web design today is as basic a business necessity as a visiting card is but many folds significant. A visiting card can convey only so much but a well done Website with an appealing design can say much more. It can make a modest business appear like a big corporation and vice versa.

    Right from those yesteryears when Internet first touched our lives and till date, hosts of Web design techniques and tools have emerged which can achieve anything for you on your Website. It would not be an exaggeration to say that there are more ways to do Web design than the colors an Adobe Photoshop pallet has to offer.

    And in line with above, there are as many Web design and development companies as there are Web sites on the Net.

    So, what should you go in for and who?

    Which Web design company is best for you and which technologies should you choose for your Website design?

    One World Technologies is a good choice and this article would show you how.

    All Web design companies promise the world and though most of them really mean to deliver a very small percentage actually does. Yes, it’s possible to deliver the world to you through a well designed Website but it takes a lot to achieve the correct balance between Web design, Web programming and search engine optimization that will first enable your Website to be found on the Net and then found on a position that is feasible number of notches among the list of millions of other Websites that belong to your competitors.

    It’s no point showing up on the 50th page of Google search because no one is going to go searching till the 50th page. Most searching visitors would click two pages worth of links, three at the most. And the desperate ones would click the fourth but that would be only because what they were searching for could not be found on the previous three and chances are that their object of search has not appeared on Net so far.

    So, search engine ranking is indispensable to Web design and the chaps at One World Technologies know how to make your Website win in the wake of that extremely tough competition.

    After search engine ranking comes keyword optimization and content management. A Website that has these two aspects in control shows up not only in the right place but also to the right people. After all if you are selling flowers on your Website and you keep showing up to people who are searching for cheapest machine lubricant, your site would hardly have any visitors, no matter how good your Web design is.

    Then comes the question of making visitors spend time on your Website. A million dollar question indeed!

    This is where Web design steps in.

    Web design isn’t just limited to imparting your site a high cosmetic value. It goes much beyond that. A balanced Web design is that which provides visitors exact information with ease while pleasing them visually throughout their browsing time.

    A site that has excessive Web design elements ends up frustrating the visitors because they would get in their way of seeking information for which they were invited to your Website. A simile to this would be an overly polite waiter who keeps coming to your table every two minutes and ends up spoiling your dining experience.

    One World Technologies provides designs that are Web 2.0 ready and accommodate for the Web design considerations mentioned above.

    Then comes the issue of information that can be available on your Website. Now, information is what is sought but few Web design companies or site owners to be exact, realize that information can also act as an effective Website visitor repellant. For more details go to www.handy-color-schemer.com .The fact is that no one wants to listen to stories when one is looking to purchase something. If you effectively convey to the visitors the details of your product and how your product can be useful to them, it’s great. But try walking them through the intricacies of your manufacturing process and the hard work you have put in to make it available to them and you will see them yawing already.

    So, the key is to provide to the Website visitors just what they want and how it will benefit them.

    Website content is such a delicate matter in Web design that even valid and important information should be processed and formatted by the Web designer in a way that the visitors find it useful and not overwhelming.

    Our content writers at One World Technologies make sure that all the text that goes in our Web design is formatted in a manner that it provides your site visitor the precise and the right kind of information.

    Finally the cosmetic aspect of Web design.

    Just like a building is designed and constructed with the residents’ comfort in view, a good Web design should beautify the site to enhance the visitors’ browsing experience. Cosmetic aspect of Web design should be attended to in such a manner that every image, every icon and every Flash element should point and guide the visitors to the information that is sought by them.

    In a poor Web design these elements act in a counter productive way and would engross the Website visitors at wrong points and for wrong reasons and would distract them. They would overshadow the information the site has to deliver and would use up the visitors’ browsing time at wrong places. This would result in visitors leaving your site with compliments for the Web designer but less aware of your products and services. For more details go to www.impacts-audio.com .Web design is almost an art. A good designer needs to meet and satisfy a Web design at all levels in an optimal way. And if any Web design company is able to meet all of the above for a Website, then yes, it can deliver the world to you by bringing it to the door steps of your Website. And One World Technologies takes pride in doing just that for her clients.

    www.15-ways-to-boost-website-response.com
    www.instant-audio-mastery.com

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