A wedding photographer’s view of why Flash websites suck!

flash sucks

Flash websites were big several years ago in every industry; the need to present your brand in the most stunning way possible and to impress people with your slideshows, music and extreme animation was flourishing. Interestingly enough, back then, standard html sites looked unprofessional and often shouted homemade.

Various services were developed in which utilize a flash templating and proprietary content management systems, in which I think are a great idea, and I too have used them, however, I personally think that the day of flash websites are over.

Today, information is needed quickly and your target audience’s attention span has been shortened to the most extremely limited amount of time. People are used to going to Google and typing in a search phrase and immediately having dozens of options to look through, they click on their best options and if the content doesn’t load or the information is not there, the quickly go back to the list and find what they were looking for.

The problem with flash used for entire websites (for the most part) is that they are built as essentially an entire movie file (swf) or several movie files. This makes a large file in which a user must wait for their browser to load. Then once the file is loaded the content within the file is not crawled or recognized by any search engine. Of course there are techniques used to add content in which will be crawled underneath the flash and there are techniques in which write urls for specific flash pages (swfaddress.) However, the spiders (search engine crawlers) see your flash and either jump over it, or they get blocked.

Additionally with the success of the iPhone and iPad, flash is not supported and more than likely will not ever be supported on these devices and most if not all mobile devices. So it is important to be able to reach those users. Here is a stunning statistic for you, 42% of Americans use a smartphone, 18% of which are on iphones, and guess which age demo has the most users? Yes, 24-35 years old, that is your demographic as a wedding photographer.

There are many ways to build websites for your photography business that are not flash based, or utilize flash in very minimal ways (such as a slideshow or gallery.) Currently my new site (still not 100% finished) was built from scratch utilizing html, css, javascript and php. This enables search engines to crawl the entire site and it’s contents, as well as loads almost instantly, and for the kicker (ALL OF IT LOADS ON IPHONE AND BLACKBERRY.) Additionally for you non technically saavy individuals out there, you can use wordpress and prophoto to create an entire website with slideshow and use wordpress to manage all your content. Lastly, you can do it without having to pay monthly costs for your web content management or hosting, you can do it on your own shared server solution for $5-10 a month.

Well sorry to be so technical today, I just felt I had to vent about Flash websites… If you have any question’s about how to do any of this, feel free to email or let me know.

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show hide 3 comments

May 26, 2010 - 4:28 am

Brian kaplan - Eagerly awaiting you phil. :) . Yes I agree in it’s terrible misuse. However before I bring up the obvious, I am primarily speaking against poorly developed flash cms sites targeted at wedding photographers, who in turn misuse them. But to stick u with a small but growing dagger, can you see your site on an iPhone :) … All respect of course

May 26, 2010 - 4:16 am

Phil Thornton - My site loads quickly, auto detects browser type to display perfectly on iphone/ipad, is ranked very high and crawled regularly … and is flash.

I think most of the frustrations with flash comes down to people not using it correctly.

You knew I’d comment on this post didn’t you?

May 25, 2010 - 10:57 pm

Matt Pfingsten - Flash-based websites always remind me of an old IBM commercial made in the pre-Flash days. It had a CEO sitting down with a web designer. The web kid shows him his “ideas for a website” that include a flaming logo or a spinning logo. The CEO says if they could tie their website to their inventory and billing, that it would change everything. Web kid says “I don’t know how to do that.”
That commercial was ahead of its time, and it was made in the pre-Flash days when animated gifs and were all the rage.

The web has been and always will be about information and making that information as accessible as possible to as many people as possible.

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