Website Awards
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Maggi Norris, Webmaster, Website Awards
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The purpose of Ask the Experts is to provide timely answers to common questions about awards and running award programs. The authors of the answers offer you expert advice based on many years of experience. They run some of the best programs in the world, and they are the leading authorities on the topic of awards. Armed with all the helpful advice in their answers, you will be better prepared to apply for website awards or run a successful award program!
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The Question

Why do award programs vary their criteria?

by Míc Miller, Webmaster, The Beeline
Editor's Choice

Karen Pimtzner, Webmistress
petalperfect Digital Photography Gallery (site closed)

The Emmys (TV), Tonys (Stage), Oscars (Film), Grammys (Music) ... these are awards that we are all familiar with. Would we ever want to standardize the criteria for winning these awards? Of course not. Why? Because each of these awards has a different purpose and yes, different criteria to be sure.

However, more importantly, the criteria for these awards were created to measure "specific" achievements within "specific" segments of the "general" or "broader" Entertainment field. Web site awards are no different.

If one were to believe that Web site awards should be standardized; they, too, must also believe that the above-mentioned Entertainment Awards should be standardized. This is a very broad (and boring) generalization at best.

But, as their peer awards above, all "quality" Web site awards are as "individual" or "specific", as the programs that offer them. Each Web site award measures "specific" achievements in "specific" segments of general Web site design. I can see some of you shaking your heads and saying ... but, all of the criteria for these awards is very similar. Isn't that standardization?

Although a particular award may have "similar" criteria to another, their purpose and scope may be entirely different. The criteria is merely a bare-bones outline for the evaluation. For the award-seeker, it clearly states specific areas of Web site creation that will be evaluated. For the award-giver, it provides a set of guidelines for conducting the review.

However, the actual "review" of the Web site will be done by "individual" evaluators. And, although all of your quality award programs have evaluators possessing a well-balanced blend of "visual" expertise, "technical" expertise and "literary" expertise ... they also all have their own tastes, styles, likes, dislikes and "unique" approach to a review.

It is this "individuality" that is used to add the depth or humanity to that skeleton outline (or criteria).

Standardizing award programs would be like standardizing all of the individual evaluators' personalities. And we all know what would happen if this horrifying phenomenon were to occur. Remember the "Stepford Wives"?

Although it would certainly make it easier on an award-seeker to make application once and earn a myriad of high-quality awards, what would this say about the awards earned? And, how would it measure the talents of the webmaster? Would they be counted among a small, specialized group of talented individuals who had excelled at their craft (the Oscar)? Or, would they be lumped together in a larger group of individuals who managed, by some stroke of dumb luck, to create a Web site?

Míc Miller, Webmaster
Beehive Awards

Since Web awards — at least those from credible award programs — reward sites for their "Web excellence," one has to define what is "Web excellence." This is impossible to do. It is impossible to come up with any universally acceptable, adoptable, or definitive understanding when there are so many design-development parameters that are variables.

Language barriers alone prevent this from happening in this situation. Also, there could only be one type of Web site in order to even theoretically discuss "standardized criteria." And as we know, there are many types of Web sites, each with appropriately different design-development parameters for fit, form, function, and the like.

In fact, even the most well-defined, simplest type of Web site has enough variable parameters to prevent its genre from having one "optimal" solution.

For example, the intended uses and audiences a Web site needs to successfully serve and support will determine and directly affect the many ways a Web site will be created, maintained, and expanded upon. A community Web site needs to address a broad range of audiences, issues, and topics, as well as many technical specifications, while a personal Web site may simply need to satisfy its author as an educational and/or creative outlet.

Web award programs are like Web sites. Despite their audiences, purposes, values, beliefs, weights, interpretations, preferences, and many other factors, award programs with original, detailed criteria cannot be the same simply due to the individual award givers. The best one can hope for is standardization within an award program.

The beauty of the idea behind Web awards lies in their diversity and variety. Any Web site that can provide a "fertile" environment for as many people, browsers, platforms, devices, configurations, and such, as possible will likely be appreciated in kind by them — whether they are, and belong to, casual, first-time visitors or world-ranked award givers conducting intensive, in-depth site evaluations.

Any Web site can "win" some kind of Web award. There is no challenge in this and, therefore, no great claim in calling oneself an "award-winning" webmaster or webmistress. The challenge lies in finding a form of glory that can only come from having a Web site that has passed muster from a great number of critically based Web award programs that incorporate and encompass a broad range of non-standardized criterion.

If one thinks of each award as a different type of flower, Web sites can harvest bouquets, gardens, and even a field of symbols representing recognitions of "Web excellence" for a variety of criterion, requirements, accomplishments, judgments, and such.

If every award program used standardized criteria — which isn’t even theoretically possible due to the subjective aspects of award giving — the best a Web site could hope for is a bunch of, say, red roses, whose symbolic meaning might as well then be reduced to a single red rose. Who would want this? Particularly when one can have a field of dreams realized — and confirmed!

Heidi Walsh, Webmistress
Heidi's Website Awards (program closed)

That's a very good question indeed. I have asked myself this same question numerous times when I applied for awards. What a waste of time to go through page after page of criteria when all you want to do is get to the application form quickly.

Some award givers want clean HTML, others don't care, some prefer sound content, others demand outstanding design and every time you apply for an award you have to find out if your site actually meets the rather arbitrary criteria.

Are there advantages of having standardised criteria for the award seeker?

Of course, there are. First of all, there is the time factor. Applicants could apply for far more awards in a short time without having to read different criteria. Actually you wouldn't have to read them at all and you would just have to click on "application form," fill in your data and that's it. That way you could apply for about ten awards daily and there would still be some time left that you could spend with your family.

Secondly, standardised criteria would transmit reliability and security (so much needed in our instable world). The applicant would know exactly where he stood, a bronze award from the first program he applied at would mean he would get bronze awards from all the other programs as well. That wouldn't only add to inner balance and consistency, but would save the applicant considerable time, too.

Just think of all the long hours you spend organising your awards won pages. You divide them up into gold, silver and bronze pages, which wouldn't be necessary any more.

And what about the advantages of standardised criteria for the award giver?

Award givers spend countless hours changing and tweaking their criteria for two reasons. The first one is they want to attract great sites that they really want to award and secondly to reach a higher level at Award Sites! or even to be recognised as a World's Top Award. Standardised criteria would make life so much easier for the award giver.

Different levels or WTAs would be useless because all award programs would be the same. Instead of classifying programs, websites could be classified into gold, silver and bronze sites. Evaluators or even teams of judges would be unnecessary. Applicants would just give their classification in the application form and the award giver would send them the appropriate award image and that's it.

Just think of the many hours that award givers waste by actually looking at sites at the moment! No problem any more!

I beg your pardon? You actually say giving and seeking awards wouldn't be fun any more? You can't be serious. And what about the sites that would never win a bronze, silver or gold award with standardised criteria? Well, too bad, isn't it? ;)

Dave Selig, Webmaster
Ultraweb Awards

Criteria for award programs are not standardized for a variety of reasons.

Web sites reflect the different personalities, likes, dislikes, and interests of people from many different backgrounds. Attempting to establish a single set of criteria for all reviewers and Webmasters would result in too many square pegs trying to fit into round holes.

Many skilled and creative webmasters choosing not to conform to a universal site mold would be excluded from the "awards community." Award reviewers would have diminished authority to express their learned opinions, and would become review franchisees for a MacDonalds-sized universal award program.

The awards community (including givers and seekers) would experience an air of reduced creativity and increased boredom. This could not be remedied by applying a universal criterion that a Web site must exhibit creativity because this would prohibit the most simple and straightforward, yet informative sites from being eligible for an award, and prevent reviewers who appreciate such sites from exercising their true judgment.

Further, adopting one standard set of criteria would dissuade potentially outstanding award reviewers from operating worthwhile award programs. Some superb award programs are owned and operated by experts in particular subject areas who focus on the quality of a particular type of content rather than someone else's idea of a good Web site.

Those award programs help include more types of websites into the "awards community" and help to encourage better work in the particular subject fields.

If there were only one set of criteria, it would seem redundant to ever apply for more than one award. Having more than one award graphic for identical reasons would be trite and trivial. Currently, unique award graphics are meaningful because the graphical differences are interesting and more importantly because they represent the unique opinions of different and independent award programs.

In fact, only one award graphic would be needed for all franchisees choosing to participate in the standardized award corporation. And who would get to be the "corporate leader" of all the "franchises?"

I could go on and on to further discuss reasons, but I'll spare you any further ado, and conclude by saying that I think it’s a rotten idea to standardize award criteria across the board.

Best of luck with your unique award programs.

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The Authors
We would like to thank the authors who took time out of their busy schedules to write the answers in these pages. They wrote them to share the knowledge they gained from years of reviewing websites and operating award programs. By so doing, they are making their expertise available to webmasters at large and helping to improve the quality of websites and awards on the Web. We applaud them for sharing their knowledge!
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