Click the right-arrowhead once to show the details.
Click the down-arrowhead that appears again to hide the details.
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Please include a link to the District 27 website
at www.d27tm.org.
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Remember to add your web site address to your information page on WHQ's site by going to the Submit Club Info page in the Club Business section. You will need your club password. If you don't have the password then you can
ask WHQ to add your Club to their listing
by emailing pubs@toastmasters.org or
tminfo
at toastmasters.org
with
your Club Number, Club Name, and District Number (27).
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Include this statement on every Toastmasters website:
The names "Toastmasters International," "Toastmasters," and
the Toastmasters International emblem are trademarks protected
in the United States, Canada, and other countries where Toastmasters
Clubs
exist. Unauthorized use is prohibited.
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What
makes a good website?
Note, if you have a link to a good article on
building a good Toastmasters Club website, please let me know.
Content issues to consider
Write the content for your audience not yourself. For example, when a potential
guest (who is not a TM) comes to your page, they're not going to know the difference
between a schedule and agenda. Nor will they know what a TMOE or TMOD are,
nor the reason for a Timer, Grammarian, etc. Only include information that
will help them (a) Decide whether they want to come to a meeting; (b) find
your meeting; (c) impress them with the quality of your Club.
Decide first whether you want your site to be mostly for guests who are not Toastmasters,
or for your Club Members, or both. In most cases, content for your members
will need to be changed frequently to be at all useful, while content for your
guests can pretty much stay unchanged once it's posted. Before you decide to
put up pages for your members that include items such as Newsletters, Agendas,
Schedules, etc, be sure you know your own limitations. Don't bother doing it
if you won't be able to keep it up-to-date. If it's out of date, your members
won't look at your page, and visitors who are just perusing your site, will
think that your club is defunct or that you don't pay attention to details
-- not an impression you want to be projecting.
Be mindful of your members' privacy. Don't put email addresses, postal addresses,
or phone numbers on publicly accessible areas of your site unless you have
their written permission.
This includes Rosters, Schedules, and Newsletters that include these items.
However, putting this information in a password-protected area is a great solution.
Be careful of out-dated content
The Guest section of your site will have mostly static content, so you
probably don't need to worry too much about out-dated content there. However,
if
you
have a section that focuses on information of use mostly to Members, then
that content probably changes frequently. Sooner or later, whoever updates that
information will have a situation-change that keeps them from updating the information
as frequently as they once did. When that happens (when not if), then
the site will start looking old and outdated and will reflect badly on the Club.
Guests will stumble on those pages and decide the Club isn't worth paying attention
to.
Therefore, before developing any pages with content that needs to be kept
up-to-date, make sure you have a plan for what to do when the site isn't being
kept up-to-date as zealously as it once was. This is crucial. If you
can't do this when you first think of creating pages that need to be kept up-to-date,
then it's not worth doing those pages at all. The damage that they can do to
your Club far outweighs any benefit from those pages.
-
Types of information guests will find useful
Some basic design issues to consider
Use normal size fonts and avoid underlining (because that signifies a link to
be clicked on) and avoid bolding or italics more than is absolutely necessary.
Avoid glitzy items and things that "look cool". Remember, people come to your
website to look for information, not to see what you're capable of putting onto
a page. Glitzy items have a tendency to distract the eye from seeing what's important.
Ask yourself, How dos this enhance my message?. If it's something that
aids navigation, makes it easier to read, or enhances the content, then fine.
Otherwise, it's probably a bad idea to use it.
Limit your content to only part of the screen width. People's eyes get tired
trying to read across a wide screen. If you notice this page, it's divided
into 2 - 3 columns (depending on your screen resolution). The content is only
in the 2nd column.
Avoid backgrounds that have logos or textures that may make it difficult to read
the content. Notice that this background is white.
Graphic issues to consider
There are 2 basic types of graphics -- those meant to be printed and those meant
to be placed on a website. Please only use those that are specifically designed
to be placed on a website. Although they may look the same, images for print
are a lot bigger in the number of kilobytes than those designed for the web.
A good web graphic is usually less that about 20K - 30K, while a good print
graphic is frequently 100K - 300K. If you put a 300K graphic on your website,
a potential guest will leave your website before the page finishes loading
-- they'll never even see most of you have to say to them! If you've noticed,
we have 2 separate pages of graphics for people to download and use from this
website -- one is
Graphics For
Printing
and
one is
Graphics
For Websites
.
In addition, you should generally use jpg images
for pictures and photos, gif or png images
for most other graphics. Never use a bmp image.
Testing your site
Most people have monitors that are set at 800 x 600. Therefore, that's what yours
should be set at while you're designing a page. However, there are enough people
that use other settings that you should test your pages at 800 x 640 and 1024
x 768 to ensure they look acceptable at those resolutions.
Many people still use 56K modems. Therefore, if you have a fast Cable Modem or
DSL, then you should try to dial in at 56K, to make sure your site downloads
quickly. Very few people still use 28K modems, so I wouldn't worry about that
speed.
Test under different browsers to ensure that your page shows up reasonable well
under them. Not all browsers display pages the same. For example, if you leave
out a closing tag within a TABLE, IE will show the page reasonably well, but
many versions of Netscape will show a blank or totally corrupted page. Old
versions of browsers can be found at http://browsers.evolt.org.
In particular, old Netscape browsers can be found at http://browsers.evolt.org/?navigator and
old Opera browsers can be found at http://browsers.evolt.org/?opera.
If you use DHTML, CSS, or Javascript, then it's really important that you test
under as many different browsers and versions as possible, as the standards
for those technologies are not consistently followed by any browser.
Tools to use
There are a lot of choices available if you're willing to pay for them or if
you know HTML and can write your own code. If you need a free GUI editor, however,
there are only a few I know of. Since I haven't used them, please let me know
your thoughts.
Amaya is an
Open Source tool sponsored by the standards body that develops all web standards
(the W3C.org).
It is both a browser and WYSIWYG web tool that allows you to develop web pages
without knowing anything about HTML or CSS. You can create your pages, view
them, and upload them to your website using this software. It supports CSS
(including CSS 2), HTML, XHTML, etc. There are versions for Windows, Mac, and
Unix.
Composer, which comes
with the free Open-Source Mozilla browser. You can download Mozilla
from www.mozilla.org.
Here is a
review
of the Mozilla Composer
. Here is a
tutorial
on using Mozilla Composer
. From reading the review, it appears that
Composer has 2 huge weaknesses (1) Lack of CSS (Cascading Style Sheet)
support, and
limited drag-and-drop support. There a versions for Mac, Windows, Linux,
and other platforms.
Trellian
Web Page
-
has a drag and drop interface,
a preview screen that allows you to see your page under the three most common
screen widths, built-in FTP uploader, table creation wizard,
form
creation tool, etc. It also allows you to switch back-and-forth between GUI
and HTML editing.
For additional tools, see
the
Free Country
.
Other free tools which may not be GUI can be found at freeprogrammingresources or
slackerhtml or
freedownloadscenter or
Search
Google
.
-
Please note that the District cannot currently host Club websites.
Instead, see below for a list of free and low-cost websites.
Email Mailing List
An email mailing list is not specifically a website issue. However, it is
a great adjunct to a website. You can use yahooGroups as one. Using this feature,
you would add all your members to the list. Then, whenever a new roster or
schedule is created, or whenever anyone wants to email everyone in the club,
they just send the email to the mailing list and it gets automatically forwarded
to all the members in your Club. Go to www.yahoogroups.com for details. There
are plenty of other ways to do this (including maintaining your own), but I
recommend this solution for simplicity.
Domain Names
A domain name is a personalized website address like d27tm.org or mywebsite.com.
They generally cost between $10 and $35 annually. There are 2 advantages to
them. First, if you need to move your website from one web host to another,
your
website
address doesn't need to change (assuming your new provider allows domain names
to point to them). The second advantage is it allows your club to have a very
specific personalized website address.
Free and low-cost hosts and many ISP's
don't always allow you to have a domain name that points to them because
they figure that's a business and want you to pay more. Therefore, keep that
in mind if you have a domain name and want to switch where you're hosting your website.
Hosting generally falls into several categories that each have pros and cons
-
Free or low-cost (under $30 annually) hosting without
ads. I have several listed below. Please let me know of others (but
only after you've used it enough to know that it's reasonably
good). Be wary of any catches that may come with them. They may also
be here today and gone tomorrow, so make sure you keep a backup copy
of your pages.
-
Company websites. If you are in a company club, then you might be
able to get your company to host the page for you. If you are in a
closed club or if the company's website is publicly accessible, and
if they'll allow you to maintain the website yourself, then this is
ideal. Just remember that if they want you to host it on their Intranet,
then no one outside the company can get to the page.
-
A member's ISP. Most ISP's allow free hosting. This is a reasonable
solution. The 2 major drawbacks are that (a) the name of the website
might be
convoluted; (b) if the member leaves or doesn't want to do the website
anymore, then you have get a copy of the website, move it, and publicize
the new website address.
- Medium Cost ($50 - $120). This is probably more than a club needs to pay. Therefore, I am not listing any here.
-
Places like Geocities, Tripod, and AngelFire. These have free and for-pay options.
The free options usually have extremely annoying pop-up adds that cause me not to
want to go to the site. The pay-for options are usually more than a club should pay. Therefore, I am not listing any here.
Free and Low-Cost Hosting (approximately $30 or less per year)
-
Google
searches:
Toastmasters
and free website hosting
or
Free
Web Hosting
-
Reviews by 100
Best Free Web Space Providers
-
Reviews by FTP Planet
-
The following appear to be completely free (or less than $30) with
no advertisements. Be sure to read their Privacy Policies before signing
up to be sure
you're
OK
with
them. One of these may be your best choice.
Please read the reviews for these sites and
do some research of your own
.They may be exactly what you're looking for. Since
I haven't used any of these sites (unless noted), I can't vouch for
them. I'd like to hear other people's experiences with them. This
information is accurate as of January 2004, based on information located
on other websites.
The District is not responsible for any
outdated information.
-
The following offer your choice of a free website with ads of some sort or
medium-price hosting which don't have ads
-
If you find other hosting options that are free or under $30 per year
and have no ads, please let me know!.
See also:
Club Website Content for
Guests
...
Club Website
Content for Members
Club Website Help ...
Other
Club Websites
WHQ
guidelines
... WHQ clarifying info
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Save the Dates
May 24, 2008
District 27's Spring Conference . . . more
News For Clubs
Honor the best Toastmaster you know -- get them a special award . . . more
It's time for Club Elections . . . more
Club Presidents look for Proxies from International . . . more
Calling for Nominations for District Officers . . . more
Be sure to check the TLI Training Results now!
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