Getting Your Website Ready for Tablet Users

Computer tablet sales are sweeping the country. Best Buy has confirmed that since the iPad came out, laptop computer sales have dropped by over 40 percent. Over 15 million iPads have already been sold, with many more predicted for the future. If you want to stay ahead of the curve, getting your website tablet ready is a necessity.

Make Your Buttons Larger

Buttons that are easy to click on can be very hard to press on with a finger. Remember that a mouse pointer is only a few pixels wide, but someone who needs to click on something with their finger is much less precise.
Small buttons are frustrating for tablet users. Enlarge the buttons on your website so that it is easier for tablet users to use.

Use CSS to Make Your Width Fluid

Rather than using a fixed width, which looks very strange on the tablet, go for a fluid width CSS layout.

This allows the CSS to adapt the page width to whatever device is displaying it. If it is on a large screen laptop,  it will expand its width. If it is on the small-width iPad, the CSS will shrink the width down without distorting the website.

On WordPress? Get the OnSwipe Plug-In

If your site is hosted on WordPress, then get the OnSwipe plug-in to make your site tablet friendly. OnSwipe is a plug-in already used by 18 million blogs, with integration features that make it easy for tablet users to view and use the website.

Cut the Flash

Unfortunately, Apple has decided not to support Flash on both iPads and iPhones. If you have a flash-based website or a website that has Flash incorporated in it, chances are your website won’t display properly on the tablet. Flash has traditionally been quite a slow media and has had other disadvantages as well, such as not being able to be spidered by search engines. If you want to be tablet friendly, now might be the time to cut the Flash from your website.

Test It!

Finally, get an iPad and test out your new website version. Make any changes you need to make, then have a few friends and associates test it out on the iPad as well. Continue this process of refinement until you are happy with your new, tablet-friendly website.

Getting your website tablet friendly shouldn’t take a long time, nor should it be an expensive process. Even if you hired a designer to do it, it shouldn’t cost more than $500 and would likely cost a lot less. Doing it yourself, if you have the CSS skills, could take as little as a day or two.

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Author: jm

Joan Mullally has been doing business online for more than 20 years and is a pioneer in the fields of online publishing, marketing, and ecommerce. She is the author of more than 200 guides and courses designed to help beginner and intermediate marketers make the most of the opportunities the Internet offers for running a successful business. A student and later teacher trainee of Frank McCourt’s, she has always appreciated the power of the word, and has used her knowledge for successful SEO and PPC campaigns, and powerful marketing copy. One computer science class at NYU was enough to spark her fascination with all things digital. In her spare time, she works with adult literacy, animal fostering and rescue, and teaching computer skills to women.