Web
Design Service
Graphics
Design Centre is professional Web
design company in U.A.E that supplies services of web
design and development, web application development,
professional ecommerce online shopping systems, Flash
multimedia, Website hosting, search engine promotion
(SEO).
We
are giving special offer for this year only.
>> Domain Registration for one year
>> Professional website Design
>> Web Hosting Package for one year
>> Search Engine Submission
>> Updation Service for one year
>> Maintenance Service for one year
at $190 / AED 700 only
Process
of web designing:-
Step 1 - Internet Business Strategy
Online
ventures require more in-depth understandings of a company’s
corporate mission and its preparedness for meeting its
goals. During this
phase, core business
needs are addressed, from market analysis and online brand
building to existing marketing and communication strategies
of the company.
The development process for each project is wrapped in
a management layer responsible for the meeting of deadlines,
schedules, budgets, and the building of teams and relationships
throughout the project. During this phase, members of the
various teams may be involved, but the goals are to create
or respond to a Request for Proposal that succinctly outlines
the needs of the project from the client's views. Included
in this (as a part) may be a simpler Client Brief and some
semblance of a realistic Schedule and Budget should be
developed.
Step 2 - Pre- Website Planning
In this stage, we discuss with our clients important considerations
like most appropriate domain name, content sourcing, point
of contact in the organization and staff required for the
online venture. Hosting and networking requirements are
also discussed in this phase. Finally a requirement document
is made for the concept planning.
Step 3 - Concept Planning
The first real development step toward a solution takes
place during the Concept and Planning phase. This is where
the Goals, Messages, and Audience for the project are explored
and decided. These are the most important questions that
will be addressed throughout the project and have the most
impact. Market Research can sometimes provide parts of
the answers but the overall goals and messages must, at
least, be decided consciously by the client.
The Requirements Document should address all of the design
requirements for the project. Part of the Requirements
Document should address the proposed Technology for the
project, the market and the competition.
Step 4 - Design Prototype Specification
In this phase, the first examples of solutions are derived.
The Requirements Document from the previous phase should
provide all of the answers as to what the project should
accomplish, but it is in this phase that the development
team derives how it will accomplish these things.
This
phase includes the development of many prototypes, often
the first merely in paper and
sketches, while later
ones might be more elaborate. There are often two semi-parallel
tracks of development. In the first, the experience (or
front-end) team is designing the interface for the experience
while a programming team may be prototyping actual technology
solutions. Prototypes, for the most part, are examples
and not the final solution. They are usually hard-coded,
that is, they don’t actually work as intended, only
appear to.
After the front-end interface is mostly finalized, it
is time for the engineering team to integrate it into whatever
technical prototypes they have been building. These technical
prototypes are the results of research and development
that concentrates on the back-end, technical requirements
to make the front-end work properly. It is essential that
the front-end development proceed before the back-end decisions
are finalized.
Step 5 - Site Production
Up to this point, all questions should have been answered
in the previous two phases Any detailed, residual questions
can now be answered by team members, based on the notes
from the previous two phases. The idea is that the careful
planning already completed will prevent any big revelations
from occurring that might change the scope or nature of
the project. If this happens, however, it may send the
project back to the Concept and Planning phase (that is,
if the goals, audience, or messages sufficiently change),
or at least, back into the prototyping stage. This is why
it is so important to get those answers right at the beginning.
When production is finished, the project still isn't yet.
It still needs to be tested and made live. At this point,
everything should be finished and integrated into the Beta
Build.
Step 6 - Testing
However, it is essential that every piece of the project
is tested before it is launched. Testing here does not
refer to User Testing but to component testing or Quality
Assurance (QA). Every element and link must be checked
on every page on every platform in every browser to create
a professional product. Each series of testing, fixing,
and rebuilding is labeled with a new release: Beta 1, 2,
3, etc.
Types of testing include Unit Testing (testing of every
component), Integration Testing (checking the entire system
works), Stress Testing (Testing the whole system under
heavy load conditions), Content Testing (to be sure that
the latest versions of content were used).
The Production Matrix is now reused as a Testing Matrix,
for helping track all of the tested elements and components.
The Test Plan needs to encompass all testing objectives
and coordinate multiple testers working independently.
Step 7 - Maintenance
At
the end of the Testing phase, when all problems have
been fixed, the project can launch.
However,
this is not
the end of the project. In many ways, it is only the beginning
as the site will need to now be maintained with new content
and interactions for as long as it is live. While minor
additions can be added , major ones will need to be added
carefully and may require a new approach to be developed
during a new design cycle (back to Concept + Planning).
Some websites don’t need a lot of updating, but those
which have constant and continuous updating of data (such
as an online news site or store) will need not only a sophisticated
content management system, but the support people necessary
to keep it running.