Saturday, 31 July 2010

Reasons to choose us

We Provide High Level Bespoke support
Near Perfect Media supports very large clients who request constant and high volume support, and small clients who only need the occasional job doing.

Recent Client Testimonials

Gemini Tec Ltd

"We engaged with Near Perfect  Media to produce a new corporate logo and website. The quality of products and services they supplied has been instrumental in moving our company forward. I would recommend Near Perfect Media to anyone who needs class leading media company who deliver results and value for money."

Adam Harsant - Gemini Tec Ltd

When do I need a new website
"Our website is a few years old and some aspects are outdated. But it's hard for me to justify to the board (and me) the expense of redoing it in a major way. Should we just bite the bullet?"

Imagine a huge store like Harrods that has a wonderful collection of merchandise, beautiful interior decorating, superior customer service, and a winning overall shopping experience.

harrods

Now  imagine the store manager letting its storefront deteriorate to this?

old

That’s ludicrous of course. Yet all too many companies operate this way. They concentrate on their program delivery, organisational growth, staff expertise, and impact measurement. But they skimp on their website, tolerating an outdated look, amateurish design, and limited functionality.

A website is your storefront, plain and simple. Most of your audiences will derive their first impression from it. A potential funder, program partner, volunteer, and customer will naturally go to your site first.
So when do you need a new site? Here are five tests to find out.

The pride test
Do you and your staff like to show it off? Is there any feeling of embarrassment or any excuse you have to make when someone says, “I looked you up on the site.”

The random viewer test

Ask a staff member to recruit 3-5 of their friends/neighbours who don’t know anything about your company. Have these individuals take 5 minutes to look at your site. Then ask them these four questions:

1. What does the company do?
2. Why does that matter?
3. What does the company want me to do?
4. How would you grade the overall quality of the company based on the website (A-F)?

If the answers don’t match up with how you would answer the questions, that’s a big red flag.

The benchmark test

Look at the websites of 2-3 of the best competitors working in your field. Compare them side by side with your own site. If there’s a big disjunction in the viewing experience, you need to ask yourself, “Why?”

The expiration date test

Feathered hair cuts. big loud exhausts on cars. Boy George. Things go out of style and it is an embarrassment to not notice and adjust. Websites are no different. In some cases, any individual style change may not be obvious, but the overall combination of aspects like font type, colour scheme, graphics can communicate just how up to date the site is – and by extension, the organisation is. If you haven’t had a major redesign of your site in the last 3-4 years, it’s time to take a look.

The features test

Does your site have the following features:

▪ Flash display (moving images) on the home page
▪ Content management system enabling you to update key content (i.e. a News page) by yourself
▪ Viewer comments or some other way people can interact with your site
▪ “Extensible” design, meaning it is built on commonly accepted developer frameworks (such as PHP) and thus can incorporate new functions easily

In the Western world, these features are all pretty much the standard. The developing world may have different benchmarks, but the reality is that the web tends to make all viewing standards increasingly the same.

At this point, some readers may be responding, “Sounds nice, but I can’t afford to get a updated site?” I’ll try to address the expense issue in future entries. There are ways to look good without breaking the bank.

However, if your appeal to new customers and overall brand quality is suffering from a poor storefront, the question is really, “How can you afford not to?”

 
1. Credentials
Does the agency have professional qualifications in Web Design, Digital Media and the Internet? Are they certified in any particular area of Web Design and Digital Media? If they have taken the time to gain the qualifications, then you know they are serious about their business.
2. Experience
How long has the person or agency been designing websites or digital media? If it is only a short time then they may not be familiar with all the technologies available and how to provide your company with much needed ROI.
3. Vision

We always ask customers to create a basic plan of the type of website they want or search the web for inspiration, so we both gain ideas and understand what type of site you are looking for. Sketch your ideas out on paper, so that when you contact your designer, you already have a good idea of what you have in mind.

Decide what kind of Web Site it should be for example will it be an informational website, a website that will continue to expand as you develop your business, or an e-commerce web site with a number of products for which you accept online payments?

4. Technology
If need the latest web technologies on your site, such as flash, After Effects, Streaming large media etc, make sure your designer is familiar with them and how this may affect your site. They are often expensive to implement and may not be needed for you to set up your business on the Web.
5. Contact
When you contact your designer by phone or email, see how long it takes for them to get back to you. If it takes a long time, then this may be an insight of what type of relationship you will have with them. Are they helpful, professional, polite and friendly? I find this always makes it easier to do business and creates less stress on yourself, since you will want it to be a strong and stable working relationship.
6. Free Consultation
Once you have a plan of what you want on your web site (or even if you dont know where to begin), contact your designer for a free consultation before you set up any contract. Most web designers will give you a free consultation if they want your business. This will help you clarify what is expected in the design process. Near Perfect Media go one step further and also provide a free design mock of what your site could look like.
7. Contract
Make sure you have a contract drawn up before you make any payments. It should state clearly what is included in the contract e.g. how many pages, links, graphics? Does it include marketing and maintenance of your web site? If not, then ask what does it cost for the extras. This can include domain name registration, scanning and optimisation of graphics and hosting.
8. Pricing and Payment
Surf around the Web to compare prices, so you have a ballpark figure of what to expect for your site design. You can expect to pay half of the full price up front. If they are professional, they will accept credit cards for online payments. Do the prices include submitting your site to the main search engines? (SEO)
9. Testing
Your designer should test your site before its completed. Is it compatible in all browsers such as Internet Explorer, Firefox and Safari and can it be viewed at all resolutions. Without extensive testing, your site may not look good to a large number of your customers.
10. Ongoing Support
Support means that you know you can contact them to get a fast and courteous answer to any question or concerns you may have. Can the designer grow with your website? You may want to make additions or changes to your site in the future especially if your business is expanding. Does your designer have other ideas for driving traffic to your site (since this is the lifeblood of a successful web site)?

Quick Links

Contact Details

Email: getintouch@nearperfect.co.uk

Tel/Fax: +44 (0) 1420 556108

Registered Address:
18 College Street, Petersfield, 
Hampshire, GU31 4AD

 

 

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