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Responsive Web Design.

True mobile responsiveness is designing and developing the website to change structure based on the device viewing it. Responsive design involves all aspects of the website, including headers, menus, content, and the overall structure.

Being a responsive web design agency in Manchester is very competitive, yet keeping up with the latest digital technologies is a key factor towards business survival these days.

The benefits of launching a section of your business designed to operate online are obvious, and need no explanation here. Instead, we focus more on some of the best ways to design your website. The ever more popular field of responsive web design is taking the online world by storm. By tapping in, you can also take advantage of this incredible technique to maximise the success of your online endeavours and make your website a pleasure to explore.

Benefits of Responsive Web Design

SEO

SEO

Search engines favour sites that are responsive for all devices and they are more user friendly. Mobile devices are becoming the primary way to browse the web.

Wordpress Maintenance

Maintainability

The 'one size fits all' approach means only one version of your website to maintain resulting in reduced development costs, faster time to market and design consistency across all devices.

User experience

User Experience

A responsive website is more user friendly resulting in a reduced bounce rate and higher organic traffic.

What is Responsive Web Design?

Web pages which are said to be ‘responsive’ are those which are able to adapt to the environment in which they are being viewed. These pages are designed using a grid format, which can then be scaled to perfectly fit the window in which it is being viewed. The images found on the page are also designed to be scalable so as to prevent the image from exceeding the size of the container in which it is held. The myriad tools of responsive web design allow web developers to cater for differing screen sizes, browsers and even window sizes; whilst also conferring a higher level of support for mobile devices.

The contrast between a web page based on older design principles, with content nested within tables of varying sizes, and the more modern responsively designed web page is obvious. When viewing the two pages in full-screen mode, there is little difference between the two. The important distinctions arise though, when the user attempts to arrange the windows in the way of their choosing, or when they attempt to view the site on a mobile device. The responsive web page flows effortlessly into the smaller window or onto the screen of the mobile device, scaling pictures and shuffling text to match the dimensions of the viewing window.

Whereas older web pages stutter with text, often introducing an unwieldy scroll bar to facilitate the viewing of the information in its entirety. Images also lurch into place, often losing a section off the edge of the page, or beneath another image found in close proximity. This clumsy interface prompts a quick closure of the window and an important loss of views, clicks and by extension – sales. Without knowing it, users have come to expect responsive web design, so jumping on board and designing your website with these protocols in mind is an intelligent decision.

Responsive Web Design

What Responsive Web Design Means For Business

  • Attract and convert a wider audience
  • Better SEO rankings
  • Consolidate Analytics
  • Recommended by Google
  • Improved Loading Speed
  • Better Page Sharing Experience
  • Future Proof

Lots of websites already in operation have been designed primarily for laptop and desktop computer users. Would it not require a phenomenal investment for a business to begin providing responsive web pages for phones and for computers? Would this investment really be worth it? With the mobile market expanding every day, the portion of views dominated by desktop computers is beginning to dwindle. For this reason, business who were once able to concentrate on making home computers their priority are now having to accept the fact that mobile computing is here to stay.

Although it is tempting for businesses to stick to the tried-and-tested realm of home computing, many are now becoming wise to the fact that their sites must be accessible via mobile devices. Businesses online must be able to provide a comfortable viewing experience on screens of all resolutions and proportions. Making sure that your website is able to fit unobtrusively on any type of device of the user’s choosing will make sure that they come back to your website the next time they need something similar to what you offer. This will put you ahead of the competition who may have unwieldy websites, not designed with the principles of responsive web design in mind.

Tablet User

Why Bother With Mobile Devices?

The answer is quite simple – most companies have thus far dramatically underestimated the actual proportion of time users spend on mobile devices. One recent report has calculated that around 54% of internet usage occurs from mobile devices, with this proportion increasing at a dizzying rate, and showing no sign of stopping. For this reason, support for mobile devices should no longer be an afterthought, but should take up at least an equal amount of time and resources as the design of the desktop site itself. No longer should the desktop site be thought of as the ‘main’ site and the mobile site simply an offshoot. Both should go hand-in-hand to offer the user an all-round experience of the site.

As an addition to this, some experts have speculated that mobile operating systems are becoming so powerful and so user-friendly that people may begin to opt for the likes of Android and iOS on for their PC as well. This revolution would increase the need for web developers and businesses to make use of responsive web design to facilitate access by mobile operating systems, thereby allowing them to keep up with the huge technological leaps forwards experienced every day in the world of digital.

What Responsive Web Design Means For The User

If the code designed to facilitate responsive web design works as it is intended, the user shouldn’t even notice its existence. They should be taken completely into the illusion that there are multiple web pages, one designed for each of their devices. They should see no perceptible adjustment when switching between portrait and landscape, for example, but should be able to view the content in a convenient and user-friendly way in either layout without having to perform manual adjustments. By automatically reading the response of the user, as well as the specifications of the user’s device, a site is able to work around the limitations of the user’s device and give a seamless browsing experience devoid of inconvenient scroll bars and pan views.

Although it is often a thankless addition to a web page, and will likely go unnoticed by the majority of users, the improvement to the browsing experience of those accessing a website designed with responsive elements cannot be overstated. While the transition from the table architecture of websites to responsive elements has escaped the notice of most computer users, so many sites now incorporate this important feature that it has become indispensable to any modern business online. Users will notice the lack of elements in a site designed to interpret and react to their modifications of web pages, even if they failed to notice their implementation. For this reason, it is of key importance that businesses make use of responsive web elements available in abundance today. But just how does responsive web design impact the world of business?

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