**Security** - Validate and escape ***all*** user input. Never trust any data given by the user. - And the above will help with protecting against SQL injection. - Understand SSL - Keep your systems up to date with the latest patches. - Protect yourself from cross site scripting - How to resist session hijacking - Find out about HTTPOnly cookies - How to handle authentication/permissions - Understand PKI (public keys) - Keep up to date! This is the most important thing, make sure to follow all the latest information about possible security issues and vulnerabilities that affect your platform. **SEO** - Create SEO friendly URLs - example.com/articles/rampaging-bull-tramples-unicorn NOT example.com?article=45 - Use an XML sitemap so that site engines can crawl your site more intelligently - Set up Google Analytics (or another analytics package) from the start - Learn the difference between 301 and 302 redirects: it's not the same for search engines. **Performance** - How to cache - What *not* to cache - How to gzip - Make regular backups. Don't just rely on your hosting provider - have another backup source in case something critical is destroyed (like a database table) - Read Yahoo's best practices (<a href="http://developer.yahoo.com/performance/rules.html">http://developer.yahoo.com/performance/rules.html</a>) for information on improving performance - Set up an Operation Database (<a href="http://ayende.com/Blog/archive/2008/05/13/DevTeach-Home-Grown-Production-System-Monitoring-and-Reports.aspx">http://ayende.com/Blog/archive/2008/05/13/DevTeach-Home-Grown-Production-System-Monitoring-and-Reports.aspx</a>) to quickly identify bottlenecks. - Look into performance monitoring **Productivity** - Documentation! - Code from the beginning with maintainability in mind - Have a good deployment strategy - URLs designed with REST in mind could save you a headache in the future. - Use patterns like MVC to seperate your application flow from your database logic. - Be aware of the many frameworks out there that will speed up your development - Use staging and a version control system to deploy updates so that your users won't be affected - Set up an error logging system. No matter how well coded your website will have errors when it is released. Don't wait for the user to let you know; be proactive in identifying errors and bugs - Have a bug tracker - Know your environment. Your OS, language, database. When you need to debug it will be important to understand how these things work at a basic level in the least. **User experience** - Be aware of accessibility. This is a legal requirement for some programmers in some jurisdictions. Even if it's not, you should bear it in mind. - Never put email addresses in plain text, or they will be spammed to death. - Have some method for users to submit their comments and suggestions - Catch errors and don't display them to the user; display something they can understand instead **Web technologies** - Understand HTTP, and things like GET, POST, cookies and sessions. - How to work with absolute and relative paths - Realize that web applications are inherently multi-threaded, you will have lots of visitors (typically much more than in non-public websites), and threads are not unlimited. **Books** - Read Josh Porter's book Designing for the Social Web.