I am to build a website plan for a buisness called “Sorcerers Creations”. This buisness makes custom tumbler cups, customs soaps, custom candys and customs shirts. This buisness is what the following instructions will describe.

include wireframe as well.
**** Instructions.*****
Your Site Plan is the design documentation for your final project web site. In the industry, it would be a part of the proposal that you’d submit to the potential client after your preliminary meeting. It should be typed using Microsoft Word, or an alternate program capable of saving in RTF or PDF formats. 
Step 1 – Overview and Description
Write a minimum of three substantive paragraphs describing your web site. To get you started, think about the following questions:
Who is the web site for?
What will it accomplish?
What will it include?
What will it exclude?
What will it look like?
What is the existing market like in terms of competitors?
Your project description should flow directly into the project objectives/goals.
Step 2 – Goals and Objectives
Write a minimum of four substantive paragraphs that state the project’s goals and objectives. This should be a clear, well-documented purpose statement of the project. Questions you may wish to answer to aid in defining the site objectives are:
Why are you building the web site (what is the mission or purpose of the organization or company)?
What are the short-term goals of the web site?
What are the long-term goals of the web site?
What does the organization or company hope to gain by having a web presence?
Closely examine what type of web site project you are creating (i.e. informational, educational, entertaining).
What do your users want from the web site?
Do your objectives support your users’ needs?
Examples:
Billboard – Establish a web presence for a business or commercial venture. Act as an online brochure rather than offering web-based interaction.
Publishing – Contains multiple levels of information with many page templates drawing the content from the same databases as the company.
Special Interest For public interest and nonprofit organizations. Include new and current information for volunteers, devotees, novices, a specific audience, or the general public. Contains links, information, files, addresses, and telephone numbers that can help people solve a problem or find more leads.
Visual Gallery – Show off samples of types of art and design. This may be a multimedia resume or portfolio.
Step 3 – Target Audience
Write a minimum of three substantive paragraphs describing the target audience of your web site. This should be clear and well-documented to aid in designing your web site. Questions you may wish to answer to aid in defining the target audience are:
Who are the typical members of your audience? 
Are they male or female? What is their age range? What are their professions? Education level? Reading and vocabulary level of the site’s intended language (i.e. English, Spanish, Russian)? Technical aptitude?
Why will people visit your web site? 
To buy something? For information? For fun? To download files? Looking for links to other web sites?
If you’re creating a web site, how often will users return to your site? 
Do they have reason to come back? Do they have a need to return?
What computing platform do your users have (Mac or PC)? 
What size monitor? What is their resolution?
What is their typical connection speed? 
Dial-up at 56k? DSL or Cable Modem? T1?
What web browser will they use to view the web site? 
Microsoft Internet Explorer? FireFox? Chrome? Opera? Safari? And which version?
Step 4 – Wirefame
Plan your web site by creating a wireframe that shows the structure and logic behind the content of your project and the navigation choices you offer. Consider using wireframe.cc to build your wireframe. This preliminary planning step is one of the most important steps that you take in planning your web site. The web demo does not allow you to save your work for future edits, however, it does allow you to export as PDF. Be sure to export as PDF before exiting and submit that PDF file with your site plan.
Think about the information needs of your users and how they can best access the content of your project
Consider how you can break up your content into manageable and logical chunks of data
Use hypertext to connect facts, relationships, and concepts

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