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Last active December 30, 2015 21:09
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Title: Maloba

Oyo ezali lokasa na web.

Awa ezali mingi te.

Maloba kaka.

Na ozali kotanga bango.

We've become obsessed with fancy designs, responsive layouts, and scripts that do magical things. Tozali tokomaki [obsessed] na [designs] [fancy], [layouts] [responsive], na [scripts] ezali eloko (singular -- boloko?) [magical]

But the most powerful tool on the web is still words. Kasi [tool] makasi mingi na web ezali maloba kaka.

I wrote these words, and you're reading them: that's magical. Nakomaki maloba oyo, na otangi oyo: ezali [magical].

I'm in a little city in British Columbia; you're probably somewhere else. I wrote this early in the morning, June 20th, 2013; you're probably reading it at a different time. I wrote this on my laptop; you could be reading this on your phone, a tablet or a desktop. Nazali na [city] moke na British Columbia; ozali esika [else] [probably]. Nakomaki oyo na tongo [early], 20 Jun, 2013; ozali kotanga

You and I have been able to connect because I wrote this and you're reading it. That's the web. Despite our different locations, devices, and time-zones we can connect here, on a simple HTML page.

I wrote this in a text editor. It's 6KB. I didn't need a Content Management System, a graphic designer, or a software developer. There's not much code on this page at all, just simple markup for paragraphs, hierarchy, and emphasis.

I remember teaching my daughter to code HTML when she was 8. The first thing she wrote was a story about a squirrel. She wasn't "writing HTML"; she was sharing something with the world. She couldn't believe that she could write a story on our home computer, and then publish it for the world to see. She didn't really care about HTML, she cared about sharing her stories.

You are still reading.

Think about all the things you could communicate with a simple page like this. If you're a businessperson, you could sell something. If you're a teacher, you could teach something. If you're an artist, you could show something you've made. And if your words are good, people will read them.

If you're a web designer, or a client who is working with one, I'd like to challenge you to think about words first. Instead of starting with a style guide or a Photoshop mockup, start with words on a page.

What do you have to say? If you don't know, there's not much use in adding all that other cruft. Just start with one page, with a single focus. Write it and publish it, and then iterate on that. Every time you're about to add something, ask yourself: does this help me communicate better? Will that additional styling, image, or hyperlink give my audience more understanding? If the answer's "no", don't add it.

At its heart, web design should be about words. Words don't come after the design is done. Words are the beginning, the core, the focus.

Start with words.

Cheers, Justin Jackson @mijustin On Google+

I'm writing a book on building and launching things on the web; you can find out more here.

This post was originally inspired by Jason Fried's design of Know Your Company.

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