Why Responsive Design Support is the Most Important Feature
You Can Add To Your Website
Different websites will have different needs and will
therefore require different features to be added that are important to the
success of those sites. For instance, an Ecommerce site that sells products may
need some kind of inventory control feature to ensure that the items listed for
sale are actually available and in stock. While critical to the success of an
Ecommerce site, this feature would be pointless on a site for an accounting
firm that is promoting the services they offer, but not actually selling
physical products online. Regardless of a site’s needs, however, one feature
that is critical to all sites’ success is mobile-friendliness and responsive
design support.
What Is Responsive Web Design?
Responsive web design allows a site’s layout to change as
the screen size being used to view that site changes. A wide screen display can
receive a site design with multiple columns of content while a small screen can
have that same content presented in a single column with text and links that
are appropriately sized to be read and used on that smaller display.
So why is responsive web design the most important feature
that you can add to your website? Here are 4 key reasons:
1. Supporting the Multi-Device User
We live in a world where our sites are not only being
visited by a variety of different devices and screen sizes, but the same
customers are returning to our sites at different times using these different
devices. This means that, to best support their experience, our sites must work
well regardless of which device they may be using at a given time. The same
content that they have access to on one devices must be present when they
return on other devices to ensure consistency in the information that they are
seeking.
If a customer is visiting your site looking for information
or using a specific feature, and they return later on a different device but
cannot find that same information (perhaps because you decided to not include
it on a “mobile-only” version of the site), then you run the very likely risk
that that person will simply leave your site and take their business elsewhere.
By ensuring consistency of information across all devices, but with a layout
and experience suited to each individual screen size, you do your best to
support your customers and do not give them any reason to abandon your site
halfway through their overall experience.
2. One Site to Rule Them All
It’s hard enough to keep one website updated and relevant.
Trying to keep multiple sites up to date and consistent with messaging is even
more of a challenge. This is why a responsive website is much preferred over
separate websites for desktop displays and mobile phones.
Commonly known as the “mobile-only” approach, this is where
your site detects whether or not a visitors is using a mobile device and, if
so, send them to a separate, mobile-optimized version of the site. This is
problematic for a number of reasons. First off, you now have two sites to keep
updated, which means you have just doubled your workload. Second, most “mobile-only”
sites feature a small subset of content and features found on the “normal” site
version. As we covered in our first point, this content and feature disparity
between versions of the site will frustrate multi-device users who expect
access to the same information across the various devices they may choose to
use to visit your site. If you decide to eliminate some of that content on the
mobile version, your audience may decide to eliminate your site from their
browsing history.
Having one website to manage and one place to manage that
site from will make it easier to keep the site updated. If you build your
websites using a platform like the cloud-based Webydo and leverage their Pixel
Perfect Responsive Editor, you will be able to centralize all management of
that site while still having total control over how that site displays for
different screens.
3. Improved Search Engine Rankings
Google has long recommended using responsive web design to
support different devices and screen sizes, but the search engine took this
recommendation a step further in 2014 when they began adding a “Mobile
Friendly” label to websites that used this approach when those sites appeared
in a search results page on a mobile device.
While this designation was a nice to have, Google said at
the time that they envisioned using mobile-friendliness as a ranking signal in
the future. Well, as of April 21st 2015, that came to fruition and Google began
rewarding sites that were built responsively for multi-device support.
By rewarding sites that are mobile-friendly, Google is
effectively penalizing those that are not, making responsive web design an
important factor in SEO (search engine optimization) strategy plans!
4. Future Scalability
One of the best things about a responsive website is that
this approach gives you the best chance to support newer devices and screens in
the future. Responsive sites are fluid, scaling up or down as needed to best
fit the screens being used to access the site. This means that as new devices
hit the market with screen sizes unlike what we have seen before, our
responsive websites will already be prepared to meet those new devices with a
design and experience best suited to whatever screen sizes they throw at us.
In Closing
Every website, regardless of that site’s goals
or the audience that it serves, will benefit from a display that works great
across different screen sizes and on various devices. By ensuring that
responsive web design is feature that you make a priority on all website
projects.Best Regards,
DWD Solutions
+2773 996 4696
info@dwdsolutions.co.za
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