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20 Things That Should Never Appear On Your Website
A Tutorial By Nick Nichols, The Site Doctor
1. Undifferentiated Products or Services
A surprising number of sites offer products and services with no
"online ordering advantage." This is especially true of
health-related items, business services, book and information
sellers and MLM reps. You *must* give your visitors a
*compelling reason* to buy from you online.
2. Large Useless Graphics
Websters have the need for speed. Yet far too many home pages
open with Large Useless Graphics (LUGs) that load slowly and make
no contribution to the effectiveness of the page. Your home page
should be 20K or less in file size -- *including graphics*.
Spinning globes, stock photos, massive company logos, etc., take
up precious real estate that could be better utilized for
benefit-related information.
3. "Welcome to My Site"
Phrases like this, repetition of your company name and other
self-serving statements only cloud your message. Your home page
and virtually every other page on your site should begin with a
compelling, stimulating, interest-generating, *headline* or
opening equivalent that tells your viewers "what's in it for
me if I read this page."
4. Blinkers, Spinners, Scrolling Marquees, Counters, etc.
There was a time (that lasted about fifteen minutes) when these
things were new and unusual. Now they are passe -- and in many
cases, distracting and annoying. Counters especially have lost
their usefulness. They are self-serving devices that have no
purpose because most visitors really don't care how many alleged
hits your site has gotten.
5. External Links -- Especially on Your Home Page.
This is equivalent to having an office or storefront that leads
to a choice of doors that go to other businesses. When a
potential customer arrives, why give that person an immediate
opportunity to leave and never return? If you *must* link
externally, do it on a page that's buried deep in your site that
can only be accessed after viewing the important pages on *your*
site.
6. Just About Any Award Logo/Banner
Most Web "awards" are dubious at best, and meaningless to most of
your visitors. Awards are self-serving space-wasters that should
be replaced with visitor-focused information that gives people a
reason to stay at your site, not leave it to investigate the
"award" sponsor.
7. Typographical or Grammatical Errors
Seems obvious, yet many, many Web pages contain common spelling
and grammatical errors. Your copy is a reflection on your
professionalism (or lack of it), your attention to detail (or
lack of it) and your commitment to excellence (or lack of it.)
Why give visitors *any* reason to doubt you? Use spelling and
grammar checkers to make sure your copy is first-rate.
8. Over Use of "We, Our, Us, My, Me, Mine" and Your Company Name
These are self-serving words that turn off readers. Instead, you
should use words like "you" and "your." Before you post copy to
your site, run a "find and replace" utility and check for the
number of "you-words" against the number of "us-words." The
ratio should be 4-5 "you-words" for every "us-word."
9. "Name, Rank and Serial Number" Information
It's *amazing* how many home pages begin, "The Acme Widget
Company is a family-run business located in Cornfield County,
Nebraska..." *Who cares?* What does this have to do with the
benefits of your products or services? If you *must* include
boring vital statistics like these, put them on an "About Us"
page and give some reasons *why* these things are important to
readers.
10. Frames
Many older browsers don't support frames. Many search engines
don't index them properly. Many frames require scrolling to read
the text and activate links. Frame scrolling bars take up
precious real estate.
11. "Under Construction" Signs/Notices
What good does a page that isn't finished do for your visitors?
It just wastes their time and could possibly frustrate or annoy
them. Every page on your site should have a purpose or reason
why it's there. Every page should also have a "call to action"
- -- what you want the visitor to *do* after reading the
information.
12. Broken Links
This should be obvious, but broken links are all too frequent.
Broken links are annoying, frustrating and unprofessional. Why
make your visitors mad?
13. Missing Graphics
This should also be obvious, but missing graphics are all over
the Web -- even on "professional" sites whose principals should
know better.
14. Incomplete Contact Information
It's amazing how many companies try to remain anonymous and then
expect people to do business with them. To maximize your
credibility and believability, you should include complete
contact information on *every* page. Use a physical street
address, not a P.O. Box. Provide a "live" phone number, not a
voice mailbox. List your fax number, and toll-free ordering
number if you have one. And, of course, list an email hotlink to
*you*, not your webmaster.
15. Home Page That "Scrolls Into Oblivion"
Despite the universal quest for information by Websters, most of
them will *not* read long home pages that "scroll into oblivion."
You should break up your home page to a *maximum* of three
complete vertical page scrolls on a 14" monitor. Give visitors
links and benefit-related teasers that lead to separate pages.
16. Cookie Nags That Appear More Than Once
Setting cookies can help you better serve your visitors.
However, many people believe cookies are an invasion of their
privacy. Don't "nag" your visitors more than once *per visit* to
allow you to set a cookie.
17. Free Offers That Aren't Immediately Fulfilled
You *should* make some kind of free offer on your site that will
allow you to capture visitor names and email addresses. But you
should *only* do this if you can immediately fulfill your offer.
Many sites offer free consultations or information, then fail to
deliver. This can permanently damage your credibility.
18. Non-Secure or Confusing Ordering Procedures
Many sites have non-secure or confusing ordering procedures.
Better to *not* request credit card info, etc., if you can't do
it securely. Offer a mail-in, call-in or fax-in alternative. If
you have more that 2-3 items for sale, invest in a shopping cart
ordering system. Make it *easy* for customers to buy from you.
19. Plug-Ins/JavaScript Pop-Up Windows
Most people will *not* take the time to load plug-ins to view or
do something at your site. They'll just click away. JavaScript
pop-up windows can be annoying. Why make it difficult for
visitors to see what you offer?
20. Plagiarized Material
This should be obvious, but many people take copyrighted material
from other sites and pretend it's theirs. Doing this will
eventually bite you and could lead to serious legal problems.
The good news is, most people are flattered to let you use their
material, if you give them proper attribution.
Hope this is helpful.
Best,
Nick Nichols
The Site Doctor (tm)
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