Do You Need A Mobile Website?
In
the last 5 years mobile internet usage
has increased rapidly with the help of
inexpensive mobile devices and more powerful
networks. Personal Digital Assistant
(PDA), are not the only mobile device
that can access the internet, inexpensive
smart phones now have the ability to
browse the internet. Browsing speed has
increased with 3G and 4G networks. Now
much more information can be transferred.
With this surge in mobile browsing should
you be looking into a mobile version
of your website? It depends on who
is your audience and why they are using
your website. Begin by researching
your audience. If you find that you
have mobile viewers you may want to
look into optimizing your site for
them. Some options you have:
Do Nothing
You may not
have to change anything on your site
if the code is clean, structured and
labeled correctly. If you keep your site
light it will help with how long it takes
to download pages. With clean code, higher
end mobile devices will have no trouble
rendering your site. Lower end devices
are reliant on structured code with descriptive
labels because they will remove all styling
and will instead view the pages as plain
text. While this can be the most inexpensive
option for your site it is not truly
optimized for mobile viewers.
Separate
Style Sheet for Mobile Devices
Your next
option allows you to add to your current
website saving you a little time and
money. Your website is brought to life
by colors, textures and layout. These
styles are applied to your website by
a style sheet. You have the option to
have multiple style sheets that are specific
to what the viewer is using to browse
your website. You will be able to structure
the site specifically for mobile devices.
This option will not increase your page
download time because it is still downloading
everything you see on a normal browser.
Separate Mobile Website
The last option is to
build a separate website specifically
for mobile users. Mobile viewers will
have the best experience because the
site is tailored with a mobile viewer
in mind. Content can be condensed down
to the bare minimum and place more important
information and features toward the top.
The page will load faster and navigation
and usage will be easier because it is
built for a mobile device. The down fall
to this option is that you will have
two websites to maintain instead of one.
Website owner may opt to go with one
of the first two options of either "doing
nothing" or "creating a separate
style sheet" for mobile device.
If your mobile audience is visiting your
site for specific reasons such as viewing
a calendar of events, needing to search
your site or to view continually updated
stats then a separate mobile site is
probably the best choice. Mobile is rushing
at us at an exponential rate. By this
time next year most sites will likely
be viewed on mobile devices rather than
computer screens. It is certainly an
area to keep on top of if you want to
effectively reach your audience.