Drafting a Plan
Are you publicizing a political candidate? Trumpeting your favorite cause? Looking for a job? Selling shoe polish? Notice the verbs in each example. They’re the key factors in determining your site’s purpose, as opposed to its topic.
What do you want to accomplish?
Just having a topic isn’t enough — you need a purpose, too. The topic is merely what the site is about; the purpose is what the site does. Say, for example, that you want to create a site about penguins. Okay, that’s a nice starting point. You like penguins — they’re cute, unusual, and pretty interesting; many people share your interest in them. But why do you want to create a Web site about them? Do you have something to say? Do you have information to give, an opinion to share, or a particular point of view that you want to put across?
You don’t need to have a PhD in aquatic ornithology to create such a site. Maybe you just like funny-looking birds that swim. But you still need a purpose, or the site just won’t work out in the long run. Perhaps you spent ages plowing through the search engines, and you’ve gathered together the world’s greatest collection of penguin links. But why did you go to all that trouble? What’s your purpose?
If the purpose for creating a penguin site is for your own personal enjoyment, you really don’t need to do much with the site. In fact, you can just create a Web page on your own hard drive or even settle for leaving the links in your Web browser’s bookmarks. If you do want ...
Become an O’Reilly member and get unlimited access to this title plus top books and audiobooks from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers, thousands of courses curated by job role, 150+ live events each month,
and much more.
Read now
Unlock full access