Websites Under Your Control Blog

You built it, they came. Now what?

Tuesday, September 07, 2010

You have this professionally-designed website that you can edit yourself, and you have finally achieved that goal of first-page listing on Google for some of your likely search phrases... but do the visitors to your site become customers?

Businesses that fail to "close the deal" will find that even high levels of traffic may not provide the return on their investment that they desired.

There are several way-too-common reasons why otherwise great websites don't generate the business they should. Check your own site, and see if you...

Qualify Yourself

Are you just another anonymous face in the drowd?Will potential customers want to do business with you? How will you stand out from the many competitors who are also found when someone searches Google for what you offer?

First impressions: Make sure that your website projects a professional appearance and generates trust in visitors. When someone clicks through to your web pages, they should feel they have landed on the site of a reputable business, and the quality of the site should engender confidence.

Provide your visitors with testimonials from past clients. Put snippets of these testimonials where they will be seen even if no one goes to the testimonials page.

Display relevant credentials and licenses, along with memberships in professional business associations.

Include an “About Us” page that describes the history of your company and bios of the owners and the key staff. List the qualifications of team members, and include "personalizing" things like community service and involvement.

Include your physical address and phone number. (If your address is a PO box or mailbox service, you'll have to work harder on other areas to build up the trust factor.)

Include frequent case studies or sample projects in your blog, mixed in with useful information related to your products and services.

Publish a regular newsletter, not full of ads, but with information useful to people who might become your customers.

Qualify the Potential Customers

"Qualifying potential customers" merely means making sure that there is a good match between what you offer, what they need, the location of the service, and the price.

Problem: If it isn't obvious what you offer or where, they are much less likely to ever call you.

Solution: Make it clear what you offer, and where.  (Many sites have their location in their title tags, but while this is great for Google, it is usually overlooked by website visitors.)

Pricing:  Many businesses do not want their prices on their website, for fear their competitors will see them.

Most people will not contact you for details when there is not at least some indication of pricing on your website.

We have to ask, however, whether the potentially lost "bargain-shopping" customers are as valuable as those who simply move on to the next website where they discover that the services are within their price range.

Given the many options for a provider, most people won't consider the ones who offer no pricing information at all.

Bonus: You won't waste time dealing with customers who won't spend what you ask, if you provide reasonable hints of your pricing on your website.

Make It Easy to Buy

While many service providers can adjust what they offer based on their customers' needs and budgets, many potential customers prefer to purchase packages of services at fixed prices. For the provider and customer alike, such packages remove the headache of having to make numerous decisions about many possible options.

Even if every project will be customized, start with a "standard package" and then adjust as needed.

With pre-bundled packages, the customer can often find exactly what they need on their own without the extra work on both their part and yours. The packaged services are also ideal for online purchase, since the whole bundle can be included as a single product.

Bonus: Don't underestimate the time saved when you don't need to develop a custom package with unique price estimates for each customer. What's your time worth?

Help Them Take the Next Step

Just listing your email address or phone number on your website won't cut it. (But omitting those will pretty much guarantee failure...) 

Do you need to "ask for the order" or give a "call to action" when you have already described what you have to offer and how to reach you?

Researchers have found, as reported by Malcolm Gladwell's best seller, The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference,  as much as a 900% increase in follow-through will result for walking the prospect through the next steps...

Make sure that your website includes a message calling on visitors to take action. Many websites forget this simple step and end up losing valuable sales.

 

Extra Bonus Topic: Make It Easy for Them to Keep Buying

While you are at it, why not boost your recurring revenues by offering your customers something you know they will need every so often? Make it easy for them to get automatic refills, updates, replacements, tune-ups, or whatever else your customers ought to be getting on a repeat basis.

Otherwise, you are abandoning these customers back to the marketplace when they next need what you offer.

 

Need help putting all this together for your website?

Call us at 866-640-1234, or email us at partners@friscowebsites.com.



Big Hat, No Cattle

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

You know the expression? It usually refers to a big talker who can't deliver on his claims.

We sometimes think of that phrase when asked to help someone get their amateurish website pushed to a more prominent position in Google.

For both the braggart and the website, once people get disappointed, they are likely turned off forever.

So even if you can get prime Google placement, if your website isn't up to snuff, well, nice hat!

We strongly advise: first and foremost, make your website appealing to your visitors. Only then give thought to your Google placement.

Why? Do the arithmetic.

Say your website brings in 500 visitors a month, and 5 of them, or 1%, become customers. Say each will spend enough to make you $100. That's $500 profit from your website.

Think about those 495 people who did not buy from you. Just like the 5 who bought from you, these 495  took the time to come to your website because they assumed you offered something they wanted.

What website improvements might convert just 5 out of those 495 interested people into buyers?

Get those 5 more, and the monthly net from your website just jumped from $500 to $1000.

Bonus:

Improve the content, and not only will your conversion rate improve -- the search engines will rate you higher as well!  If you missed it, last week we talked about how search engines are almost immune from "tricks" these days, and increasingly look for the quality of your website - so focus on compelling content.

(Need help with your content? We offer a ghostwriting service for our clients. If you're not our client, see if your webmaster or marketing advisor can help.)



Without good content, don't bother with SEO

Friday, August 27, 2010

There was a time when filling your website’s pages with relevant keywords and incorporating a variety of search engine optimization (SEO) tricks would all but ensure you would rank high in search engine results. There were plenty of SEO tricks back then, and many proved to be highly effective. But, as they say, all good (or maybe not so good) things eventually come to an end.

Search engines make their money by selling ads, and need lots of users in order to sell those ads.  It is only natural, then, that search engines continuously improve the methods they use to deliver the best, most relevant search results possible. As it turns out, they are very good at it – and getting even better.

It is no secret that Google adjusts its search algorithms more often than most people take a shower. One of the primary purposes of these tweaks is to seek out and destroy the tactics being used to surreptitiously increase a site’s ranking in search engine results. Consequently, websites filled with pages populated with content created solely with search engines – rather than visitors – in mind are only going to continue their steady fall into oblivion.

This leads to the obvious question: What do we do now? Well, we do what we should have been doing all along. We fill our web pages with high quality content that is well-written, informative, and of interest to our target markets. Search engines will only continue to hone their ability to recognize high quality content, while putting the kibosh on SEO tricksters.

If you populate your website with informative, quality content, it will naturally include words and phrases that are relevant to your topic or to the searches your target audience will perform to find products or services like yours. As long as the site is built properly (see our posts on titles and headlines), this is what it takes to for search engines to prominently display your pages.

(Need help with your content? We offer a ghostwriting service for our clients. If you're not our client, see if your webmaster or marketing advisor can help.)

The days of keyword stuffing have passed, and poor quality content written just to appeal to the search engines will no longer be so easily forgiven. SEO strategies that worked wonders before will now do little to increase your ranking, and their effectiveness will continue to dwindle in the coming months and years.

Providing useful, high quality content that educates your visitors and holds their interest is your best option. Rather than fanatically calculating your keyword density and obsessing over whether “web site” or “website” has more local search juice, simply deliver good, useful content that meets the needs of your target market.



Don't Waste Your Website!

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

You finally have a well-designed, professional website that really showcases the capabilities of your business. The business blog on your site is full of interesting, informative material. You are getting a lot of traffic and people are spending time looking around. But all of this isn't generating quite the results you hoped for.

Make sure your website is really working for you!What's missing? It's the follow-up.

After everything you have done to get the website the way you want it, and to get people to visit your site, the last thing you want is for them to leave without some way for you to keep in touch with them.

If they took the time to find and look at your website, they have an interest in what you have to offer — but it's pretty common that people do their research in advance, before they are ready to spend their money.

So even if they decide then and there to do business with you when the time comes, unless they remember your website address, they may never find their way back to you.

The solution? Follow up with them.

Collect their email address, and stay in touch by providing more of what they found interesting on your website, so they remember you.

Of course, most people won't just give you their email address merely because you ask. Offer them something of value in return. Perhaps an email newsletter with important information they need, money-saving coupons, or special offers. All they need to do to receive this money saving information is enter their name and e-mail.

Once a visitor leaves your website, they're gone, often forever. Capturing the visitor's name and email address lets you turn these anonymous visitors into contacts, and then you can follow up to turn those contacts into customers.

When you follow-up, monitor which of your visitors click on which links, and what actions they take on your website, so you can see which visitors are the most likely prospects (and also fine-tune the messages you send).

If you are using our standard Online Business Partner® service, this is all built in to your service.



Chamber of Commerce Week!

Saturday, October 25, 2008
The Frisco Chamber of Commerce decided to kick off the national Chamber of Commerce week with the unveiling of its new website, which uses our Online Business Partnerâ„¢ technology.

Chamber President John Land had us develop a custom design for the new website and build the initial menus and pages. Then his staff took over, and added additional pages and created their own material right in the website, thus letting them manage their costs as well as their site content.

Some of the information displayed on the Chamber of Commerce website resides in a different system, and the Chamber did not want to convert all of that information at this time. To allow for a fast and smooth transition, the data in the other system is displayed on the Chamber's new site through "iframes" or windows within a web page that display the content of a different web page.

While this reduces the level of control available for managing the presentation of the data from the other system, it allowed the Chamber to launch their new website without any time or attention whatever paid at this time to the format and management of the date stored on the other system.

Even though the Chamber did not make any announcement to its members, several hundred people per day discovered it on their own, starting with the publication of the site late on October 20th.

(The graphs here are taken from the standard graphs provided to every owner of a site using our Online Business Partnerâ„¢ technology.)

By the way... the visitors in the first week were not just from Frisco, not just from Texas, and not just from this side of the globe!

It looks like there were visitors from nearly every state in the US, from Mexico and Canada, and quite a few from all over Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and Australia as well.

In fact, with this much global traffic in the first few days, we would not be surprised to see visits from pretty much the rest of the world when we look back after a month or two!

(We know Frisco is a great place. But how do all these other folks know it? And why haven't they already moved here, now that they do?)





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