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Published byRaymond Anthony Modified over 9 years ago
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Designing and Producing a Website for a New Band Planning and Designing your production
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Stage 1: Genre You must decide upon the genre of music and its audience Your research will have been centred on this genre You will know the conventions used in this genre You will know the methods used to target the audience
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Stage 2: Content You will first have to decide upon the content that you will include in your site This will depend upon the generic conventions of the site and the target audience but might include some or all of the following:
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Content List Samples of audio tracks Behind-the-scenes videos (only for website release) News of the band Tour dates Reviews of recent concerts Fan zone (for fans to communicate to band and for insider information) Biographies Discography News of TV/personal appearances Games Animations Artwork by the band Gallery of photographs Concert photos Behind-the-scene photos Message board for fans to communicate with fans Merchandise for sale CDs/DVDs Interview tracks (audio & video) Posters T-shirts/caps/clothing Books Mugs Badges & novelties Links to other similar bands or ‘friends’ (i.e. same label)
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Stage 3: USP The USP or Unique Selling Point is vital Why are fans of this band going to come to your site Why are fans of this band going to return again and again to this site? The concept of ‘ stickiness ’ is key here; you need to make visitors stick around and return as if they were stuck to the site You need to make them not just fans of the band but fans of the site How are you going to achieve this?
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Stage 4: Target Audience and ‘stickiness’ ‘Content is king’ is a relatively old cliché for websites If you don’t have constantly changing and updated content then why should visitors bother to return? Interactivity: you need to make your visitors included in your site and interactivity of some sort is vital Ease of use (or functionality!): if it’s easy to find what you want, then visitors will enjoy the experience Design, colour scheme and layout: it must also be aesthetically pleasing; who wants to go back to a poorly designed, badly planned site? USP: what is yours? How is your site different to or better than others?
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Stage 5: Design thoughts You should start gathering together pictures, pages from magazines and print- outs from websites to help you start your design decisions Annotate these and put them in your notebook Start sketching designs of what your pages are going to look like Draw designs of photographs you are going to take Take some test photos (and always keep a copy of them) Do some experiments in Photoshop with some of these (and keep copies of all the stages) Design some CD covers Take some practice video footage (and keep the original unedited version) Sketch ideas for logos for the band to convey their band/brand image Print out some different type-faces to experiment with the typography Suggest possible structures for your site For all these experiments, annotate them and suggest reasons why they work (or not) and how they work (or not) and suggest reasons for changes and improvements Keep a detailed record of all decisions/revisions/changes and reasons for them This will all go into your notebook to build up to a comprehensive record of the decisions and revisions that you have made during your project This will be a big part of the mark given to your final coursework (25%)
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Conclusions You should be starting work on this now Your deadline is about half-term in the Spring Term for your whole project to be finished You will have a day in January where you will be taken out of lessons to work on your website; your aim is to finish your site that day Each individual element should have detailed care and attention paid to it Planning and forward thinking are vital before you start the actual work; making changes after you have started can be very, very time-consuming Get help at all stages from not only Simon, Matt and me, but also any member of the Media Department (although probably not very technical help!) For technical help: Simon for Photoshop; Matt for Flash; Charles for DreamWeaver (but all of us can do all these things to some extent) Still and video cameras from Matt/Simon (and booking of the photo studio) Tell your friends about your plans (they might be your target audience) and listen (and note) their comments
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