Is Your Website Content Useful?

Web content useful

Pretty designs and flowery words don’t provide your visitors value. Relevant website content does.

What’s relevant? It’s whatever your target market deems relevant.

For instance, a frequently asked questions (FAQ) section that provides practical insight into your target market’s common concerns could be regarded the most valuable part of your website. Alternatively, an aggressive pitch for a product your visitor has no use for is a complete waste of time — for all parties involved.

Here are some essentials to deliver useful website content:

Continue reading

Is Your Web Writing Aligned for the Web?

Most populations read from left to right, hence, it’s best to align your web writing to the left side of your pages.

Centered or right-aligned text is difficult to read. It causes eye strain, which is bad for visitors and consequently counter-productive for your business. Centered headlines can also hinder readability.

Making your web writing easy to read is a plus for your visitors and your bottom line.

Common Web Content Mistakes

Common Web Content Mistakes

Common web content mistakes on websites, especially on home pages, include:

Disclaimers – Don’t greet visitors with apologies and excuses for a lame or out-of-date site. Take the suspect pages or sections offline, make time to rectify the content, or hire a professional. Ill-equipped web content can kill your credibility.

Welcome Messages – “Thank you for visiting,” “This site is meant to” and “Take a look around” are unnecessary. In fact, such over-used phrases waste your visitors’ time, and they may return the favor by hitting the back button.

Clichés – Spare your online visitors the cute and the clever. Clichés usually add no value and can create barriers when communicating to global audiences. Webcopyplus has conducted web content conversion tests in which the removal of clichés increased sales. That’s why web content writers need to push their egos aside and write for the target audience.

Is Your Website Cluttered?

Vancouver business coach Mark Wardell features an article titled 10 tips for growing your business on his website. One of the points, keep your business spotless, rings true for websites.

He sates: “Unless you own a farm, dirt and clutter give an unprofessional impression whereas a clean business sends a message of professionalism to everyone, including your staff.”

The same goes for websites. Is yours cluttered? Here’s a checklist.

Avoid Web Content Pollution

Avoid web content pollution

A noisy business website distracts visitors, which negatively impacts the bottom line.

Websites often become convoluted over time because businesses don’t invest the time and resources to remove obsolete information.

Many businesses just add content on an as needed basis. But, just as important, businesses should regularly maintain websites. Scheduled clean-ups promote positive online experiences, which translate to increased conversions.

Things to watch out for:

  • Outdated information, events etc.
  • Too many menu items or links
  • Irrelevant web copy or graphics

For a typical business, websites can be maintained by investing one hour, just once a month. During a website audit, I recall an employee who detested the idea of cleaning up a few web pages. But the handful of hours it took him to make those changes are saving thousands of prospects and customers several seconds each visit, which makes it more than worthwhile.

Clean your website to make it easier to do business with you. It makes perfect business sense.

Prioritizing Your Web Content

Prioritizing your web content

To help your visitors enjoy a positive online experience, it’s important to prioritize the information in your web content.

An effective strategy is to separate the “need to know” from the “nice to know.”

Group your need to know information — anything that is critical to your messaging. And place this relevant information on the top pages of your website.

Then take the nice to know information and place it on secondary pages. Links should be clearly labeled and point to this supporting information.

This nice to know/ need to know strategy complements the inverted pyramid organization, which is the best way to present information on your website.

By neatly providing visitors the relevant material first and support material second, you provide an intuitive information flow. That leads to satisfied visitors and completed tasks.

Delivering the Right Web Content to Readers

Delivering the Right Web Content to Readers

Knowing your audience is imperative to achieve high conversion rates with your web content.

As you attempt to define your reader, pay heed to his knowledge of the subject. If he’s informed, get right to the key facts and figures. Otherwise, you’ll bore him and turn him off with generic information.

If he’s not well versed with the subject, ensure you provide some basic, high-level information, and offer plenty of references to helpful background material. Sidebars can also be an effective tool in this case.

If you need to cater to a mixed crowd, which is common on the Web, provide high-level material, but include clearly labeled links to all the particulars. This is a web content strategy called link layering, and it’s an incredibly effective way to provide online visitors information that’s relevant to their specific needs.

Continue reading

Turning Internet Leads Into Sales

Turning Internet Leads Into Sales

Showing consumers respect turns browsers into buyers. Yet, when consumers reach out, their inquiries often seem to fall on deaf ears. In the digital age, a prompt response is anticipated — always. And when it’s not delivered, it can easily kill the sale.

Many businesses don’t recognize patience is scarce on the fast-paced Web. Even the slightest delay in response prompts consumers to go back to Google and friends to click the next search result.

While planning web copy for an HR firm, they sent requests for quotes to three web designers. Within 48 hours they made their choice between two; they refused to wait for the third to respond.

Meanwhile, some businesses just don’t care. Two years ago, Webcopyplus was referring several businesses to an industry partner, and a couple clients made comments about their response times. E-mails weren’t returned for up to four days.

Continue reading

Web Content Can Disqualify Your Competitors

Web content can disqualify competition

Purposefully written web content that effectively tells your prospects why they should buy from you can really help your business on the sales front. In fact, if done right, it can completely disqualify your competitors.

As noted in the article Brand strategy: distinct or extinct, you should leverage your business’ unique points and strengths, which may entail your:

  • Selection
  • Experience
  • Knowledge
  • Credentials
  • Expediency
  • Style
  • Technology
  • Geography
  • Alliances
  • Tools
  • Customer service

But when you do, make sure you nail the point on the head. Don’t be subtle. Use clear, short and relevant web content to drive the message home.

And don’t be afraid to repeat your most potent points. It will drill the facts and ideas into your prospect’s brain, and make it memorable.

It’s a sound way to exclude your competitors from the final decision-making process.

Handling Clients’ Pains

Handling clients' pains

Author and super marketer Seth Godin made a good point on his blog, where he touches on the fact that the closer you are to the point of need, the more you can charge clients.

In one example, he cites pizza at the airport costs five times more than pizza on the way to the airport. That’s true in most cases, including Frankfurt and London Heathrow, where the price for a hot dog and a beer will give you the impression you’re fine dining.

However, some airports choose not to charge premium. The Vancouver International Airport is a prime example.  Tenants are required to offer “street pricing,” which means franchises like Flying Wedge Pizza can’t inflate their prices. A big mama’s bacon special will cost you $4.99 on the east side of town, and it’ll cost you $4.99 as you’re running for the departure gate.

Continue reading

« Previous Page  Next Page »