10 Ways To Make Your Web Site Work
Harder For You
By Janet Attard, Business Know-How You bit the bullet. You set up a Web site because new prospects and existing customers kept asking you for your Web site address. Then, too, there were all those stories you kept hearing about small companies bringing in significant business through their Web sites. So, you paid a Web developer thousands of dollars to put your business on the Web, or spent countless hours of your own time learning enough about the Web and about html to put up the site yourself. But your site's been up a couple of months and you haven't gotten a single sale you can trace to the Web site. What happened? What's wrong? What do you need to do to make your Web site start bringing you business? Here are several tips that will help you fine tune your site to make it a more effective marketing tool. Make Sure Your Site Looks Professional Or does your site include design flaws like these that immediately mark it as an amateur production: Photos that are squeezed or stretched out of proportion Multiple elements on the page that are blinking, bouncing, scrolling or turning in circles Multiple styles of type used for headlines and body copy Colored background graphics or textures that make it difficult to read the type Background graphics that are inappropriate for the content of the site (eg.: bubbles on a site selling bookkeeping services) Text blocks that are out of alignment First impressions matter on the Web, just as they do anywhere else. And, the first impression your site makes should be one of professionalism and appropriateness for the markets you serve. Don't Use the Name of Your Company as the
Web page Title That's not a good idea, however, unless the name of your business includes a descriptive term that someone looking for your services would search for to find what you sell. The reason: Search engines place heavy emphasis on the words in the title bar. Like the text on your page, the closer the text in the title bar matches the term a Web surfer is searching for, the higher your site will rank when the results of the search are displayed. So, if your company name is non-descriptive and little known, leave it out of the title page, or put it at the end of the title. Don't Let Your Home Page Be a Flash Presentation But, Flash presentations can make your Web page take a long time to load. Search engines don't pick them up, and they often annoy visitors who come to your site for product information or facts in a hurry, not entertainment. If you have a product or service that benefits from an animated demonstration, make that one of the choices on your home page (eg.: "Watch a demo.") Don't make the Flash presentation the entire home page. And if your products or services don't need an animated demo, don't use the technology at all. Focus the Home Page & Product Pages on
Your Customers' Interests, Not Yours Get their attention with benefits-oriented headline and text. The headline should make clear what you do and suggest a benefit. For example, "Fast, accurate transcription for Monroe County Medical Offices and Hospitals," or "Phone systems that grow with your business." Don't toss out that company information, though. After you interest the customer in your products or services, they may want to know more about your company before deciding to do business with you. So, if the purpose of your Web site is to sell your product or services, make the company information a link off your home page, not the focal point of the home page. Avoid a Cluttered Look Instead, put small photos of a few of your best-sellers or most representative products on the home page, and then have links to other products in your catalog. Break up the links into logical categories. For instance, if you sell sandals, you might have categories for women's sandals, men's sandals, and children's sandals. If you sell footwear, you might have pages for men's footwear, women's footwear and children's footwear, and then break down each of those pages into categories such as sneakers, shoes and sandals. Minimize Graphic Sizes to Make Sure Your
Pages Load Quickly Be Sure You've Included Important Supporting
Information Make Sure It's Easy to Place an Order Be Sure Your Contact Information is Easy
to Find Get more online marketing help from such sites as www.zdnet.com/eweek/, workz.com and www.bcentral.com. |