Responsive web design involves designing
websites that offer the best user experience across all screen sizes.
Responsive web design differs from other techniques such as creating a mobile
version of a website, because it shows the user the exact same website (that
is, the site is served from the same address, using the same HTML whether a
user is viewing on a mobile or a desktop) rather than detecting their device
and redirecting them to a different optimized website.
FLUID
GRID SYSTEMS
One of the main principles of responsive web
design is designing to a fluid grid system. Traditional websites, when viewed
on a small screen, require the user to “pinch and zoom” and scroll horizontally
in order to read the text and content on the page.
If a website is designed to a specific grid,
then each column of that grid can be made to behave differently on different
devices / screen sizes.
HIDING
AESTHETIC ELEMENTS TO OPTIMISE SCREEN REAL ESTATE AND USER GOALS
On a desktop screen, you have a lot of screen
real estate to play with. To engage the website visitor, we often use large
imagery on the homepage using an image rotator. This works because we have a
lot of space to play with and large image rotator will probably still only take
up half the screen. However, on a mobile device where screen real estate is a
precious commodity, image rotators, which won’t give the same impact that a
large desktop screen will, can often be removed to make way for more important
content.
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WE
SHOULD CONSIDER MOBILE VISITORS FIRST
This final point seems somewhat
counter-intuitive. On many of the sites we monitor, on average about 25% of
visitors are using a mobile device, leaving (obviously) 75% of website visitors
using non-mobile device.
The blaringly obvious approach here would be
to cater to the majority of your visitors, right?
While that logic is used a lot throughout the
web design process, it’s not as applicable here. The reason is that if we
design for desktops first and view mobile visitors as a secondary priority, we
tend to pack our designs full of features and functionality that work
beautifully for desktops but don’t necessarily “scale down” very well. We then start making compromises based on
functionality limitations in our designs rather than design decisions based on
our end users’ goals.
While we push mobile-responsive design
heavily, we appreciate that on occasion a mobile-responsive web design approach
just doesn’t give the user experience required for some applications. Sometimes
your mobile users will have vastly different and distinguishable goals than
people who are viewing on a desktop, and a collapsible grid system just doesn’t
cut it. In these circumstances you need to completely change the way your
website behaves and offer a distinctly different template, set of information,
goals and navigation to your users. While not going in to too much detail about
that here, such situation may call for a native mobile app, or user-agent
detection to serve a completely different website.
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