Blog

One of the biggest and fastest growing aspects of the web today is online stores. There are plenty of services that will integrate with your website to allow users to purchase content from your website.

With an e-commerce site doing any decent amount of sales, small adjustments can lead to huge improvements in your revenue and conversions.

*Note: we have a full guide you can download with these secrets and more at the bottom of the post for you, yours free.

Drupal is a real powerhouse when it comes to integrating and connecting all your apps. The challenge, however, lies in how can I do this and how easily can I get this done?

Enter Drupal Integrations

Barring the fact that "the fold" is an arbitrary term, and having content appear above the fold could actually harm your conversion rate, there is, in fact, a way to completely control where the fold appears on your site without u

On November 9, 2015, the Drupal.org announced that Drupal 6 would reach end of life (EOL) on February 24, 2016.

“Ad blindness” occurs when the brain decides content is irrelevant to the task at hand. This has been made especially worse by the many ads found on the internet today.

Similar in concept to placing navigation on the left, placing supplemental content on the right helps your visitors find it at the right time. Placing emotionally supporting content on the right side of content pages can help solidify your message in your visitor's brain.
Secondary Navigation Belongs on the Left. Similar to how your primary navigation should be on the top of your page, your visitors will expect your secondary navigation to be on the left of your page. And, while it is great to be unique, it's not worth sacrificing usability.

Where’s the best place to put your navigation? There are two places that are by far most effective. The reason for this, again, is a pattern established long before the web. Sometimes things shift over time—sure—but there are some truths that simply don’t.

Orienting your visitors is an important part of making sure they get of your site what you’ve brought them there for. Remember the “old days” when we didn’t have a GPS and we had to sort out our way through places we were unfamiliar with by trying to decipher a map?