Web Template Blunders To Avoid

Website templates are very easy to afford and can save you a lot of time and effort when you look to create a new layout for your website. Nevertheless, many people make errors in the process of choosing and making use of a web template and sometimes end up with something that was unlike the image that they first had in mind. Below are a few guidelines that will help you to avoid those mistakes.

The first clear mistake you should be aware of is in using a template which is very popular. If many people use a similar template, your website won’t appear as unique at all and your credibility as a solid, different website will be tarnished. More simply, you will appear unspecific and generic, just like your neighbours and competitors.

To main purpose of a web template is to save you time and effort. All you need is just to change the title and appropriate details and then you’re done. The biggest mistake one can make is to customize the template so that it is not recognizable anymore. While that may be good in the sense that you’re making your template more specific, you will also be defying the very purpose of using a web template – which is to save time and effort.

Nevertheless, conversely, if a template you buy is well-adapted but some changes need to be carried out in order to suit your site’s theme, then you will have to take some time in order to make the changes. For instance, you will be able to find a very nice template that fits your hobby site well except the original designer might have put an image of stamps in the header. You will then be able to find images of garden plants and spades to replace the stamps for your gardening hobby site. Nevertheless, try to only make the necessary changes and don’t redesign the entire template.

In some cases, a few people might simply make the wrong choice of templates. This is a matter of subjectivity but you will have to be careful when you selecting templates that will suit your audience. Try to choose a template that will serve your purpose well rather than those which are just esthetically pleasing to the eye.


Michael Beattie is contributing editor at WebDesignArticles.net. This article may be reproduced provided that its complete content, links and author byline are kept intact and unchanged. No additional links permitted. Hyperlinks and/or URLs must remain both human clickable and search engine spiderable.