The second step in our development process is defining and refining the navigation and page elements needed for the website. Navigation models, methods, and examples are discussed and reviewed and actual examples are provided for client review. Generally, we have worked out the style, location and appearance of such elements in the early design process with the client.
Your site’s navigation can make (or break) your visitor’s experience.
Approval of a “menu system” — the navigation used by the website — is key to moving forward with the project. We typically build-out default pages for each menu item, using “dummy” text and temporary images where needed rather than actual final content. This gives the client the opportunity to use the navigation and to experience what the site visitor will experience — an easy-to-use, friendly system for finding your content.
We’ll ask you to have people test your menus and give you feedback for making decisions. We can set up this kind of test for you, if needed. There’s nothing better than real users to tell if a project is a success. We then incorporate changes (if needed) to navigation to reflect the visitor experience and to make your site the best it can be.
From navigation to content, graphics to code, and organization to presentation, we work with you and build on our proven experience to make your site the best it can possibly be. We know how to build useful websites and user-friendly interfaces.
At SYNCBOX, we get all the pieces in the right places.

