50 Questions to Evaluate the Quality of Your Website
How good is the quality of your website,
really? Here is a pretty detailed list of questions every website owner
should asked themselves. If the answer to every question below
is yes, give yourself a big ole pat on the back. Most websites have
flaws for a number of different reasons, mostly related to the limitation of
resources.
This 50
questions long questionnaire might trigger something here and there for some of
you or maybe brings some forgotten item from the long to-do list back into your
mind.
Accessibility
1.
Is content structurally separate from
navigational elements?
2.
Is the website cross-browser compatible?
3.
How compliant is the website with W3C
coding standards? Valid HTML/CSS?
4.
Are ‘alt’ tags in place on all significant
images?
5.
Are text-based alternatives in place to
convey essential information if this is featured within images or multimedia
files?
Navigation
1.
Are links labeled with anchor text that
provides a clear indication of where they lead without over using
exact match anchor text?
2.
Depth – what is the maximum number of
clicks it takes to reach a page within the depths of the site?
3.
If a splash screen or navigation feature is
provided in a Java/JavaScript/Flash format, is a text-based alternative also
available?
4.
Responsive on click feedback – Is a
response given immediately (0.1 seconds) after a click is made on a hyperlink?
5.
Do clickable items stylistically indicate
that they are clickable?
6.
How intuitive is it to navigate? Are signs
obvious or obscured? Buttons/Links Like Text, that are not clickable and vice
versa, links/buttons that cannot be identified as such
7.
Is it readable? Consider type
face, font size, color contrast.
8.
Is there a clear statement of PURPOSE of
the site? Purpose must be clear within a few seconds.
9.
Do you have clear call to action on each
page?
10.Is a logical
site map available?, If not, is a keyword-based search feature available? Note:
Large (multi-thousands of pages) sites should have a search form.
Design
1.
Is the site’s design aesthetically
appealing?
2.
Are the colors used harmonious and
logically related?
3.
Are the color choices visually accessible?
(For example high enough in contrast to assist the colorblind and visually
impaired in reading the site appropriately)
4.
Is the design audience appropriate?- The
standard text size should be readable for visitors who don’t know how to adjust
their browsers.
5.
Are the fonts easy to read on various
screen resolutions?
Content
1.
Is the website copy succinct but
informative?
2.
Does the copywriting style suit the
website’s purpose and ‘speak’ to its target audience?
3.
Are bodies of text constrained to <80 characters="" line="" o:p="" per="">80>
4.
Can text be resized through the browser or
do CSS settings restrict size alteration?
5.
Is the contrast between text and its
background color sufficient to make reading easy on the eyes?
6.
Is text broken into small, readable chunks
and highlighted using headings, sub-headings, and emphasis features where
appropriate to assist in skimming?
7.
Within articles, are there links to
more detailed explanations of subjects, or definitions of jargon terms?
8.
Do you have an “about page” that identifies
the author of the content, credits to source for content that was not written
by the site owner himself?
9.
Do you have testimonials and publish them
on the site?
10.Do you update
the content regularly and don’t live by the phrase “set it and forget it”?
Security
1.
Any obvious security flaws?
2.
How resilient are forms to special
characters?
3.
Are private directories password protected
via .htaccess?
4.
Are public non-document directories
(cgi-bin, images, etc) indexable or are blank index.html pages or appropriate
permission settings in place to block access?
5.
Is customer data stored online? If so, is
this database appropriately safeguarded against external access?
Other Technical Considerations
1.
Does the site load quickly – even for
mobile users?
2.
Are all links (internal and external) valid
and active?
3.
Are scripts free from errors?
4.
Is the website free from server side
errors?
Other Marketing Considerations
1.
Is the website properly optimized for
search engines (essential text emphasized, title tags relevant, title text
presented in H1, outbound links reliable and contextually related, etc)
2.
Does the index page entice a visitor deeper
into the site or shopping cart?
3.
Does the website contain elements designed
to encourage future or viral visitation (i.e. a contest, newsletter,
tell-a-friend feature, and forum with subscription option, downloadable
toolbar, RSS feed or similar)?
4.
Robots.txt configured?
5.
Site Map available?
6.
Is every page accessible at least via a
single plain HTML Link (no JavaScript or Flash Link)?
7.
Does every page have at least some text in
the content? (How much Text remains on the Page if you remove all Images,
Videos, Flash, Java Applets and JavaScript Code? Anything? Does the
remainder still states the pages purpose?)
8.
Is every individual page only accessible
via a single URL or are several URLs available (and worse, used) to access the
same page? Duplicate Content Issue, Canonical URLs.
Legal
Stuff/Re-Assurance/Legitimization
1.
Did you include a Contact Us page with
real address, phone number (toll free for businesses) and contact form or email
available, basically a clear and easy to use feedback/contact mechanism?
2.
DMCA Notice up? Terms of Use page available
where you specify what you do and why and what visitors have to agree on if
they want to use your site? This is to protect yourself from complains or worse
regarding things that you cannot control properly, such as links to
third party websites or ads from automated systems such as Google AdSense
etc.
3.
Privacy Policy up (especially if you
collect data, email, names, and web analytics tracking cookies)?
Cheers!
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