This question might seem silly. You wouldn’t have bought
this book if you didn’t already have some idea of what you want to put online.
But maybe you don’t really know what you want to put on the web, or you have a
vague idea but nothing concrete. Maybe it has suddenly become your job to put a
page for your company on the web, and someone handed you this book and said,
“here, this will help”,. Maybe you just want to do something similar to some
other web page you’ve seen and thought was particularly cool.
What you want to put on the web is what I’ll refer to
throughout this book as your content. Content is a general term that can refer
to text, graphics, media, interactive forms, and so on. If you tell someone
what your web pages are about, you’re describing your content.
·
Stuff for work- perhaps you work in the
accounting department and you need to publish the procedure for filing expense
reports on your company’s intranet. Or you’re a software developer and you need
to publish the test plan for your company’s next software release on an
internal web server. Chances are that you can publish some information on a web
page at work that will save you from having to type it into an email every time
someone asks you about it. Try it!
·
Personal information- You can create pages
describing everything anyone could every want to know account you and how
incredibly marvelous you are _ your resume, your picture, things you’ve done.
·
Weblogs and journals – many people use the web
to publish their journals or their opinions on a weblog. Many people use
content management applications to publish their journals or weblogs, but
knowing HTML is still helpful for changing the look and feel of your site and
sprucing up your individual entries or articles.
·
Hobbies or special interests – a web page can
contain information about a particular topic, hobby, or something you’re
interested in; for example, music , star trek, upcoming jazz concerts in your
city.
·
Publications – newspapers, magazines, and other
publications lend themselves particularly well to the web, and websites have
the advantage of being more immediate and easier to update than their print
counterparts. Delivery is a lot simpler as well.
·
Company profiles _ you could offer information
about what a company does, where it’s located, job openings data sheets, white
papers, marketing collateral, product demonstrations, and whom to contact.
·
Online documentation – the term online
documentation can refer to everything from quick – reference cards to full
reference documentation to interactive tutorials or training modules. Anything
task-oriented (changing the oil in your car, making a soufflé, creating
landscape portraits in oil, learning HTML) could be described as online
documentation.
·
Shopping catalogs – if your company offers items
for sale, making your products available on the web is a quick and easy way to let your customers know what you
have available as well as your prices.
If prices change, you can just update your web documents to reflect that
new information.
·
Online stores – it’s turned out that the web is
a great place to sell things. There are any number of sites that let just about
any body sell their stuff online. You can auction your goods off at eBay or
sell them for a fixed price at half.com. Amazon. Com lets you do both. You can
also create your own online store if you things online a lot easier than it
used to be.
·
Polling and opinion gathering – forms on the web
enable you to get feedback from your visitors via opinion polls. Suggestion
boxes, comments on your web pages or your products, or through interactive
discussion groups.
·
Online education – the low cost of information
delivery to people anywhere with an internet connection via the web makes it an
attractive medium for delivery of distance-learning programs. Already, numerous
traditional universities, as well as new online schools and universities, have
begun offering distance learning on the web. For example, the Massachusetts
Institute of technology is placing teaching materials online for public used at
http://ocw.mit.edu/.
·
Anything else that comes to mind – hypertext fiction,
online toys, media archives, collaborative art…..anything!
The only thing that limits what you can publish on the web
is your own imagination. In fact, if what you want to do with it isn’t in this
list or seems especially wild or half-backed, that’s an excellent reason to try
it. The most interesting web pages are the ones that stretch the boundaries of
what the web is supposed to be capable of.
You might also find inspiration in looking at other websites
similar to the one you have in mind. If you’re building a corporate site, look
at the sites belonging to your competitors and see what they have to offer. If
you’re working on a personal site, visit sites that you admire and see if you
can if and inspiration of r building your own site. Decide what you like about
those sites and you wish to emulate, and where you can improve upon those sites
when you build your own.
If you really have no idea of what to put up on the web,
don’t feel that you have to stop here; put this nook away, and come up with
something before continuing. Maybe by reading through this book, you’ll get
some ideas (and this book will be useful even if you don’t have ideas). I’ve
personally found that the best way to come up with ideas is to spend as
afternoon browsing on the web and exploring what other people have done.
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