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A1 · Purpose & Types of Websites

Spec reference: Learning Aim A - Principles of Website Development Key idea: Websites are built for specific purposes and targeted at specific audiences.


Types of Websites - Web Design for Beginners


Types of websites

You need to be able to identify and describe 7 types of websites:

1. E-commerce

Websites that sell products or services online. The primary goal is to convert visitors into paying customers.

  • Examples: Amazon, ASOS, Etsy
  • Key features: Product catalogue, shopping cart, secure checkout, reviews, search/filter
  • Target audience: Shoppers looking to buy specific goods

2. Informational / Educational

Websites that provide information on a topic. The goal is to inform, educate or answer questions.

  • Examples: Wikipedia, NHS website, BBC Learning
  • Key features: Clear navigation, search, well-structured content, trustworthy sources
  • Target audience: People researching a topic, students, professionals

3. News / Media

Websites that publish regular news, articles or media. Content is frequently updated.

  • Examples: BBC News, The Guardian, Sky News
  • Key features: Homepage with latest stories, categories, video/image galleries, comments
  • Target audience: People staying informed about current events

4. Social Media / Community

Websites that allow users to create profiles, connect and share content with others.

  • Examples: Facebook, Instagram, Reddit, X (Twitter)
  • Key features: User accounts, timelines/feeds, messaging, likes/comments, notifications
  • Target audience: Very broad - billions of users worldwide

5. Portfolio / Personal

Websites that showcase an individual's work or personal brand.

  • Examples: A photographer's portfolio, a developer's GitHub Pages site, a CV website
  • Key features: Gallery/showcase section, about me, contact form, clean design
  • Target audience: Potential employers, clients, collaborators

6. Corporate / Business

Websites that represent a company or organisation and provide information to stakeholders.

  • Examples: Apple.com, a law firm's website, a local plumber's site
  • Key features: About us, services, contact, team page, case studies
  • Target audience: Potential customers, investors, job seekers, press

7. Blog

Websites built around regularly published written content, often by individuals or small teams.

  • Examples: A cooking blog, a tech review blog, a travel diary
  • Key features: Posts listed by date/category, tags, comments, RSS feed, author bio
  • Target audience: People with a shared interest in the blog's topic

Target audiences

A target audience is a specific group of people that a website is designed to attract and engage with, based on their demographics, interests, needs and behaviours.

Understanding your target audience helps you make decisions about:

Design decisionHow audience affects it
Language complexityA children's site uses simple words; a legal site uses professional terminology
Colour schemeA children's toy site uses bright colours; a law firm uses dark, formal colours
Navigation styleOlder users may need larger buttons and simpler menus
Content typeYounger users expect video; professionals may prefer detailed written content
AccessibilityA site for visually impaired users needs high contrast and screen reader support

Describing a target audience

When you analyse a website's target audience, describe them using:

  • Age range - e.g. 18-35 year olds
  • Interests - e.g. people interested in fitness and nutrition
  • Technical ability - e.g. non-technical users who need simple navigation
  • Device usage - e.g. primarily mobile users
  • Purpose of visit - e.g. people looking to make a purchase

Example analysis

Website: BBC News

FactorDescription
Age rangeBroad - 18 to 65+
InterestsCurrent events, politics, sport, entertainment
Technical abilityMixed - must be accessible to non-technical users
Device usageBoth desktop and mobile (responsive design essential)
Purpose of visitTo read news quickly and stay informed

Features of a good website

Regardless of type, good websites share common features:

FeatureWhy it matters
Clear value propositionVisitors immediately understand what the site offers and why it's better than alternatives
Clean, easy navigationUsers can find what they want quickly - frustrated users leave
Prominent call to action (CTA)Guides users towards the desired action (buy, sign up, contact)
Testimonials / reviewsBuilds trust with new visitors
High-quality mediaImages and video grab attention and convey professionalism
Fast loadingSlow sites lose users - Google also penalises slow sites in rankings
Mobile responsivenessOver 60% of web traffic is on mobile devices
Contact informationMakes the organisation approachable and trustworthy

Summary

TermMeaning
PurposeThe reason a website exists and what it aims to achieve
Target audienceThe specific group of people a website is designed for
E-commerceWebsite focused on selling products/services online
CTACall to Action - a button or prompt guiding the user to take a specific action
Value propositionWhat unique benefit a website offers that others don't


Test Yourself

Question 1 of 5

A local bakery wants a website where customers can order cakes online and pay securely. What type of website is this?

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