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Make sure your visitors can quickly find the information they need. Make your website "sticky" without:
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making your web pages significantly larger
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slowing down your site
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annoying the search engines!
If your menu is starting to look like a maze, we can help you trim it back and make sure your visitors enjoy their visit to your site.
Want to see an example? The menu you see on the left is a custom navigation menu. The key is the ability to create multiple levels within one menu. The menu at the left uses two levels - the main level that appears on each page is relatively short. The second level menus group pages into logical segments.
We're using a new generation of menu software* that integrates extremely well into the Point2 Agent Websites for the following reasons:
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The menu is pure CSS - lighter and faster than traditional DHTML menus
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Cross-browser support includes IE, Firefox, Netscape, Opera, Mozilla and Safari
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Multi-level menus are no problem
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Search engine friendly - search engines can read all levels of the menu
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No off-site hosting is required - The menu code is often self-contained on your Point2 site
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Categories can be added to organize menu entries
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Menu items can link to other websites - try the "Visit Our Main Site" menu option
Navigation on a website is critical. If your visitors can't find their way easily, or if they are overwhelmed, they won't stay on your website very long!
Here's are a couple other examples (a new window will open):
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San Antonio Real Estate
- Two levels
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Chicago Real Estate
- Three levels under the Chicago Neighborhoods and Suburban Chicago Communities tabs
If it's time to clean up your menu,
contact us
today for more information.
*The software is offered by OpenCube. OpenCube menus are used on a variety of websites including Fedex, Best Buy, CompUSA and Delta. If you're a Do-It-Yourselfer, OpenCube is highly recommended.
Important Note:
Designing a menu and uploading the code requires a fairly high level of technical expertise. If you do not possess advanced technical knowledge, we suggest you carefully consider whether a "do-it-yourself" approach is the best strategy for meeting your objectives.
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