Zeronese, Inc.
Home
Help & Support
Contact Us
Website Templates Web Hosting Reseller Hosting Web Design Web Directory Article Directory Webmaster Tools Make Money Marketing SEO
  economic web hosting Browse Webmasters Article Directory  
 


Log in - Submit Your Article Here

Browse Article Directory

Advice and Reviews Articles Advice and Reviews
Domain Names Articles Domain Names
ecommerce Articles ecommerce
HTML and CSS Articles HTML and CSS
Internet Search Engines Related Articles Internet Search Engines Related
Make Money Online Articles Make Money Online
Other Web Subjects Articles Other Web Subjects
Web Design Articles Web Design
Web Design Software Articles Web Design Software
Web Development Articles Web Development
Web Hosting Articles Web Hosting
web publishing content Articles web publishing content
Website Marketing Articles Website Marketing
web content article categories View all Categories

Article Directory News Letter

 


 
     

 


  By: Ryan Grabenstein  
 

Cascading Style Sheets, or CSS, is a method of website design that allows for the separation of content and design. By incorporating CSS into the design of your small business website, you can increase the ability of search engines to spider your website, reduce your small business website page load time, make your site more user-friendly, and easily edit the appearance of your web site.

CSS and Search Engine Friendly Design
The use of CSS for web page design allows search engines to more easily "spider" or read the content of your site. By using a "tableless" design, the amount of HTML code is reduced substantially, and links to other pages in your site are readily visible to search engine spiders. JavaScript, Flash and DHTML navigation can prevent spiders from following your navigation links, unless special code is included to allow search engines to see your link structure.

CSS and Reduced Page Load Time
Since the CSS file can be linked to an external file, the browser can "cache" or store this file in memory. The file can then be accessed without having to reload the data. In a tables-based design, the table structure must be reloaded with every page, resulting in longer page download times for your small business website. Since website visitors have increasingly less patience with download times, the quicker your server can display the page, the better the chance site visitors will stick around and read your content.

CSS and the User Experience
Cascading Style Sheets also allow you to serve a different page layout based on the browser or device used to view the page. The number of internet users browsing the web through handheld devices such as PDAs and cellular phones in increasing quickly. The ability to display a page layout compatible with the small screens of these devices is an easy task for CSS.

CSS also allows you to control the page structure based on the resolution of the user’s screen. For example, If your small business website is optimally viewed at 1024x768 resolution with a 3-column layout, you can create a separate CSS file designed for 800x600 resolution with only two columns. This allows your small business to maximize the user experience and tailor your content delivery to their personal settings.

CSS also gives you the ability to let the user control the font size of the document viewed. A simple click of the user’s mouse can increase or decrease the font size as long as the controlling CSS code is not set to a fixed pixel size. When printing a page, CSS can control the page content and layout to eliminate specific parts of the page, such as banner ads or navigation, so the user can print just the relevant content.

Conclusion
Using Cascading Style Sheets to control your small business website layout is an excellent way to increase search engine traffic, decrease page load times to keep the user focused on your site, and custom-tailor the user’s experience based on their preferences. If you design your own small business website, there is a slight learning curve to mastering CSS, but once you take the time to understand the flexibility and enormous potential of CSS, you won’t ever go back to a table-based layout.

The author's Nebraska website design company specializes in building dynamic content-driven small business websites. His experience in designing small business websites and effective promotion and advertising techniques give small business owners a distinct advantage when developing their small business website.
http://www.empoweradvertising.com/

Article Source: zeronese.net article directory.
Article Word Count Appx. : 577
Article Category: Articles » HTML-and-CSS » CSS
See all articles by Ryan Grabenstein


Note: Copying of article contents in whole is permitted provided that article body and article author by-lines are kept intact and unchanged. Hyperlinks and/or URLs including article source link provided by authors and/or zeronese must remain active at all times.

     
The views and opinions of authors expressed on Zeronese Article Directory web sites do not necessarily state or reflect those of the Zeronese.net .


Feedback News Letter Site Map Terms and Policies About Us All copyrights reserved 2008 Zeronese, Inc.©