Ben Callahan explains that you don’t need to start over, and shows you that a little CSS can go a long way.
This is “about finding a way to use responsive techniques on legacy sites to create a better experience for more users”. It enables you to re-focus your content, lighten and streamline your experience, and deliver real user value-without the (often all too real) burden of re-structuring your entire legacy web site. In which Stephanie Rieger suggests that “mobile is an opportunity to reboot”, something I heartily agree with.ĭeveloping a standalone (but responsive site) provides an ideal opportunity for learning and experimentation. Complex navigation patters for responsive designĭo you really think that those mega-dropdowns are going to work on a mobile device? Here are a bunch of approaches to responsive navigation design for different screen sizes. Everything in between is fairly equally weighted. On a mobile page there are really only two hot areas, the header and the footer, both of which will need to carry important navigation options for our site. Leigh Howells at Boagworld offers up a great primer on responsive design, and concludes that: Well worth a read if responsive design is a new concept to you, or if you are about to embark on your first responsive project. The sagely Luke Wrobleski presents various different approaches to page layout. 2022: New normals for digital marketing and ecommerce.E-Learning: Fast Track to Modern Marketing.Achieving Omnichannel Excellence Best Practice Guide.Ratings and Reviews Best Practice Guide.Third-Party Marketplaces Best Practice Guide.Direct-to-Consumer (DTC) Best Practice Guide.Machine Learning and Predictive Analytics.