ReveNews Ready To Go Under The Design Knife Again One Year Later
About this time last year I launched the current ReveNews design you see right now. It’s been a year now, and while I’m still ok with the look and feel here, I always knew the design change I put forth was a quick fix. In other words, we can do better, and better we will.
So today officially marks the day I start really thinking about how ReveNews is going to look in the future. Here are some of my thoughts.
1. We need to start from scratch and move to WordPress. Why? Because our MT installation is complex and custom and very difficult to make changes too.
Problems with this idea? Well, the very nature in how we are setup is an issue. Our folder structure (/jimkukral) is something I don’t think we can do in WordPress, mabye I’m wrong, but I haven’t figured that out yet. Anyone? Plus if we move to WP we lose basically every engine indexed page (thousands and thousands). I know we can do redirects, but I also know the effects could be disasterous to our rankings.
2. The layout needs to be cleaner and less newsy. The design you’re looking at was my vision of combining www.huffingtonpost.com with more of a traditional blog format. Again, our setup as a group blog makes things very difficult in that we have to have a home page that aggregates all the writing from each author, while still maintaining their archives in their own directory.
3. I’d like each author to have a bit of control over their own page. Like being able to change colors, add links, move some stuff around. Of course, not affecting the outside shell, just their content and bio area. Tall order, I know. But I think our bloggers would like that, and the readers would be able to feel more at home inside each blogger’s space.
4. I want the home page to be flowing, yet readable for a lot of content. Techcrunch does this well. But again, Techcrunch doesn’t have 40+ authors, so they don’t have to worry about content being pushed off the home page. We can have up to 10 blog entries a day sometimes, then nothing for a few days. It’s important that the traffic that visits the home page can see that there is new content from each blogger, or they may miss it. Or maybe there’s a simple way in the new design to showcase recent entries “you may have missed”. The Blog Herald does this now.
5. Check out this online magazine I found the other day. How nice and readable is that? I love it.
Final Thoughts…
So now I need to begin the process of hiring a designer. If you’re up to the challenge, please contact me via email at jimkukral at revenews dot com. I’m looking for someone with a vision, and who understands the challenges we face in this redesign and who wants to do something unique and creative, but still very readable and “bloggy”. And of course, I’m only looking for seasoned veterans with an extensive portfolio of top-quality work.
Note: Feel free to leave positive ideas and suggestions for the new design in the comments below. I’m really not interested in negative comments about the current design, those will be deleted. But if you have some good ideas or examples that can help, please share them.
-
http://www.imwave.com Adam Viener
-
http://www.affiliateprograms.com Dave Cole
-
http://www.revenews.com Jim Kukral
-
http://www.cumbrowski.com/ Carsten Cumbrowski
-
http://www.stopscum.com Steve Shubitz
-
http://tradelead.tv MCP
-
Jonathan (Trust)

