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Jun
17

Website design changes – are you SURE they’re working?

By Andrea J. Stenberg

As you have probably noticed, I recently did a major redesign of my site. I chose a new theme that I hope makes everything look cleaner and easier to read.

However, I made a major mistake when I completed the update; I forgot to check how the changes look in multiple browsers. A rookie mistake I know, but I still completely forgot to check. And this time it really mattered because unbeknownst to me, the new look didn’t work in Microsoft Internet Explorer.

Thankfully my good friend Gillian Pritchett is using IE and checked out my new site. When she noticed the error, she kindly took a screen shot of how it looked and popped it off in an e-mail.

messed-up-header

Needless to say I was less than pleased with myself. I shudder to think how many people saw this messed-up header before Gillian kindly sent me a heads up. A few minutes in tech support from the creator of my theme got me to an update I had missed.  Once I installed the new version, everything worked fine.

But it did teach me an important lesson – one that I already knew but had forgotten. Whenever you make changes to your site – change the theme, add a header, install a plug-in, change the colour – it’s worth checking your site in multiple web browsers. Just because it looks fine in the browser you regularly use, doesn’t mean it does in another browser.

A great tool for checking how your site looks, even in other platforms, is the website BrowserShots. E-mail marketing expert Boris Mahovac sent me the link. Just enter your URL and it shows you how your site looks in a variety of browsers across Windows, Mac and Linux platforms.

browsershots

You can select a variety of browsers – including different versions – in a variety of platforms. You get a page that looks like this. Just hover your mouse over one of the images to get a close-up look.

So repeat after me, “double check your website in multiple browsers after making any changes!” The couple of minutes it takes will be well worth the effort!

Andrea J. Stenberg

Have you ever made a similar faux pas? Kindly let me know I’m not alone by leaving a comment and sharing your experience.

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Comments

  1. Gew says:

    Great Program. Better then having multiple Internet explorers installed which I’ve always had on my PC machine. Helpful for all webmasters.

    Not sure how accurate it is to live browsers, will test and let you know if it 100% exact.

  2. Another thing that I learned is to put titles to all of your pictures. That way those that are visually impaired can hover over the picture and hear the title.

  3. Trisha says:

    yes, I have published on my blog and seen the most ridiculous error in sentence construction. Sometimes another pair of eyes would be good. Usually happens when I am stressed.

  4. Paul Tuggle says:

    Does Amazon allow for marketing on Twitter through an automatic feed?

  5. Philip says:

    Keep posting, don’t let anybody tell you to quit — it’s a way to connect with others.

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