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 Issue March 8, 2005 Mailworkz Mailworkz

 

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Today's Article: 20 Website Mistakes That Cost Me - Part 2

Today's Ask Dr. Ebiz:  Building Fake Websites

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20 Website Mistakes That Cost Me   - Part 2 
  

By Catherine Franz

To view Part 1 click here.

11. The best way to give your visitors what they want is to keep it simple.  This is especially true for the landing page of your website.  The landing page is your main or index page.

What do you want your visitor to do when they reach your site?  If they are there to subscribe to your ezine (electronic newsletter), send them to that page by giving them that immediate option.  Then send them to a page that focuses them on subscribing.  Give them all the information they need to make a choice and to subscribe.  If they are a first-time visitor, where do they click first?

For example, if you are a coach, ask them if they want to know more about coaching.  If you are a virtual assistant (VA), send them to a page or two about what a VA does and how you help your clients.  After they get to the next page, give them choice of different areas where you can help them as a virtual assistant or a coach.

Walk them through the process in steps, "hold their hand" as you lead them through all the things that you can do for them.  Create a walk-through easy-to-follow effect.  It will pay off in profits.

12.   Do not add any pages to the site that do not pertain to the visitors' reasons for coming to your site.  People do not have time for irrelevant information.

13.  You do not need an engineer or web site designer to design your website.  In fact, while they would not like to hear this, you do not need them.  They may do everything right technically, but they do not know how to get people to stay at your site or buy from you.

Marketers know how to do that. While 98% of engineers and web site designer claim they are marketers, less than 1% know anything about marketing.   The truly rare commodity is a fantastic marketer who is savvy about web site design.

Building your site is just like building a house: without an architect who knows about layout, structure air flow, etc., all you have is a construction company building the house from their sense of style, direction and beliefs.

Know where the advice is coming from and hire them only for their expertise.  If you are reading an article on marketing on the Internet that was written by someone who is a web site designer, a red flag should go up.

If you are talking with a marketer who does not have website design experience and you are looking for help in building your website, raise that flag again.  The rare person with the unique combination may be hard to find, but we exist -- I designed my learning to be one of those rare ones.

I have helped many people clean up their web site after they have worked with web designers and/or marketers.  And trust me, the clean up is more time consuming than starting all over.

14.  Don't make your buyer feel stupid while they are in the process of buying from you -- in the "cart" process. Internet service providers (ISPs and web site hosts) do this frequently.  Just one example of this is when they ask their nontechnie buyers the question, "Choose your server."

The majority of their buyers have no idea what this means. They do not understand you are asking if they want a Unix or Windows based system.  Moreover, even these same buyers are asked in this manner, they still do not have any clue what are the advantages or disadvantages or either one.

So, they feel stupid.  You will lose more buyers with questions like this.  The buyer feels frustrated and 99% of the time leaves without buying.  Look on your site, are you asking any questions that make the buyer or visitor feel stupid?

15.  The most common place to click on any web page is the top left-hand corner.  Put the choice to go to the next page or to pick the most popular page or product in this location.  If the purpose of the page/site is different, you may want to put the back and forward buttons there.

Don't put graphics, especially your logo, in the upper left hand corner.  This is prime real estate for your website. If you have a retail site, place your top-selling item in this space or a drop down menu of three of the top selling items.

16.  Answer the visitors' main questions in one easy-to-find and readable paragraph.  Don't make the font too small to read and do not make it go across the page requiring the reader to scroll.  I've seen young web site designers use small fonts who want to attract a market that's in their 40s and 50s.  Fact, the older you get the bigger the font.

17.  Don't talk down to your visitors.  They are intelligent people who will not stand for it.  They will leave and never come back.  There is a difference in talking down and presenting a conversational style.  Talking down is like explaining it to your child; the other is like talking to another adult.  Technical people have a big tendency to talk down to nontechnical people.

18.  Make it easy for them to share their comments with you. Whether it is about a hyperlink that does not work or other errors they have found.  They may want to tell how much they appreciated your information.  Create a place on every page where they can feel comfortable about submitting their comments.  Comfortable also means that they have a choice on sending their contact information or not.

19.  Organize your site from the visitors' point of view. If you are not sure, ask some typical visitors.  "What questions did they have when they landed on the first page?" is a great question to start.  Get them to walk you through their thinking.  You will pick up some patterns after the first three or four.  This is the best research you can do and it will save you years of revisions.

Do not ask family members or friends.  Ask clients who have just finished visiting your site. They are familiar visitors and they will want something different from a new visitor. You need to set up your landing page to handle both familiarand new visitors without being confusing.

20.  One of the most valuable pages in a web site that is sadly overlooked is the "thank you" page.  If someone signs up for your ezine or places an orders include a popup saying "thank you for visiting."  Use whatever way you can think says it best, but don't leave it out. The other half of this equation is not to loose the opportunities to cross sell or up sell on the thank you page.

First, say thank you and then give them an offer they cannot refuse.  On the thank you page, you can provide a coupon for 10 percent off anything in the store or 10 percent off any overstocked or limited stock item.

Now that you have these tips on what mistakes not to make, you need to put them into practice.  Choose three and start completing them.  Then move on to the next three and keep moving through the list.   You will be excited by the results.

Bonus Tip 1:  60% of the buyers opt out of purchasing a product on the Internet in between the first cart processing page and the last page.  It is usually because it took to many clicks to complete the transaction or it took too much time to think about it or to make choices.  Check your website and eliminate any obstacles or places so you can reduce this percentage on your web site.

Bonus Tip 2:  If you have questions on your page, divide them into categories and don't put them all on one page. Spread them out between pages.  It looks easier and faster to the person answering the questions.  Give them an incentive to move from one page to the next and give them encouragement between the incentives.

Watch for Part 2 in our next newsletter.

About the Author:


Catherine Franz is a 30-year marketing industry veteran, a Certified Business Coach, CertifiedTeleclass Leader and Trainer, speaker, author, and Master Attraction Practitioner. Business client's include professional firms, restaurants, retail stores, coaches, employees using writing for advancement, and independent professionals across the globe, i.e., the USA, the United Kingdom, Europe, Australia and New Zealand. For daily marketing tips and electronic newsletters on marketing, Universal Laws of Attraction, and marketing writing/copywriting, visit: http://www.AbundanceCenter.com, catherine@abundancecenter.com or directly at 703-671-5677.

 


 

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"Dr Ebiz"

"Did you already write something about a personal websites network for someone who would like to build up a network of 10 to 15 secondary sites for channeling most traffic to one main site? Could you give me some tips or some Web resources about this topic?" -- Jean-Marie Le Ray, Studio 92 Snc, Rome

This is a common question, but one that makes some questionable assumptions. It is true that, in general, the more links to your main site, the higher the ranking. But there's more to the story. I turned to my friend Mike Grehan, author of Search Engine Marketing: The essential best practice guide, whom I consider an expert in the field, to give us an authoritative answer:

"I actually get asked this a lot by major clients with plenty of cash: 'Why don't we just throw up a few thousand fake sites and point them at our main site to improve linkage?' It's very much the same issue with a smaller organization linking a handful of mini-sites together.
It may fool a search engine into thinking that the 'mother ship' is hugely popular. But the search engine then looks to see who is pointing at the fake sites.
Of course, the linkage surrounding the fake sites will be very weak and based on mainly inbound links from the same network. Basically, it is a spam island, pretty much isolated from the rest of the community. That's not natural, so it will likely get penalized.
You could try to build linkage around the fake sites from the community at large. But it's a bit of a waste of time, because you're diluting linkage which could be pointing directly at your main site.
However, on the upside, if you have a business which is diverse and targets a number of niches within the same community, then you might benefit from a 'natural' mini-network.
Let's say you are a computer manufacturer and you also supply peripherals and accessories. You could have a number of websites across your entire product range which cross-sell and up-sell to the same 'macro' audience.
Each one of the sites in the network will be attractive to a certain fraction of the industry sector and should be able to garner quality (as opposed to quantity) natural linkage.
A quick of word of warning about mini-networks. Google recently became a domain name registrar. This means they have access to a lot more data on who owns which domain names, expired domain names as well as IP addresses, etc."

This is Ralph Wilson back again. About a year ago I began consolidating domains and brands. I still own the DoctorEbiz.com domain and registered trademark, but its PageRank and Alexa ranking were low compared to my main WilsonWeb.com site. I decided to get all the links to my site focused on WilsonWeb.com in the future, not divide them between sites. I took my strongest domain and worked to make it even stronger.

A lot of this is being wise about your own time and energy. It is also about working with PageRank, not against it. [Note: Google PageRank is a relative indicator on a scale of 1 to 10 (10 high) of the quantity and quality of incoming links to a website and has a great deal to do with Google's ranking of the site for its important keywords.]


"Copyright 2005, Ralph F. Wilson. All rights reserved. Used by permission."


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