Chapter 7: The first step in recovery is admitting that the Home page is beyond your control
There are many items that are accommodating on the homepage. They are the site identity and mission, site hierarchy, search, teases, content promos, feature promos, timely content, deals, shortcuts, and registration. When creating a homepage you want to use as much space as necessary.
There are a few ways to get the message across on a homepage. First is the tagline. This is the most valuable bit of piece that is important on a homepage. If the phrase is right next to the Site ID, it is considered to be the tagline. Second is the welcome blurb. The welcome blurb is a brief description that tells about the site. The blurb is visible without scrolling on the homepage.
http://www.kaneworks.com/the-good-the-bad-and-the-ugly-homepage-that-is/
Kane Works shows the bad, the ugly, and a good homepage.
http://uxmovement.com/content/bad-design-practices-to-avoid-on-your-home-page/
Website discusses seven bad design practices to avoid on a homepage.
http://www.topdesignmag.com/20-examples-of-bad-web-design/
This website has twenty examples of bad web design for a homepage. Most of these examples have too much information for the homepage.
http://blog.hubspot.com/blog/tabid/6307/bid/34006/15-Examples-of-Brilliant-Homepage-Design.aspx
Hub Spot showed fifteen examples of brilliant homepages.
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