Meeting Your Targeted Audience’s Wants and NeedsHow to build your website to meet your audience's needs and expectations. |  | Visited: 1701 |
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| | by Stoney deGeyter September 20, 2006 |
| Stoney deGeyter |
Stoney deGeyter is president of Pole Position Marketing, a professional search engine marketing
firm providing SEO and SEM services since 1998. Stoney is also a
part-time instructor at Truckee Meadows Community College, as well as a
moderator in the Small Business Ideas Forum. He also contributes daily
to his online marketing blog (EMP) E-Marketing Performance. |
| Stoney deGeyter
has written 13 articles for PromotionWorld. |
| View all articles by Stoney deGeyter... |
Some of the most important aspects of website design,
development and usability get left undone until it is realized that something
is preventing user from purchasing the products or services represented. Every
industry has a different niche audience (those seeking your services
specifically) as well as a much larger one (those who are not seeking, but can
use, your services). While you don’t have to provide a perfect user experience
for every individual who stumbles across your site (an impossible task anyway,)
you always want to be sure to incorporate the elements that your audience wants
and needs.
Display Contact
Information
This was mentioned earlier but important enough to repeat.
Be sure your contact information is easy to find, don’t make your visitors hunt
for it. Every page of your site should have a “contact us” link taking them to
the page that provides all the information necessary to allow them to contact
you with their preferred method of doing so.
Having a prominently displayed phone number on every page
can increase phone traffic and resulting sales significantly. If you target a
national or international audience, be sure to display a toll free number.
Create Fast Loading
Pages
Even though broadband access is increasing, there is still a
significant portion of those still connecting to the Internet via dial up. Keep
this in consideration when you design your site. Be sure that every page
downloads relatively quickly, with minimal lag time. Don’t make your audience
wait for you because they won’t.
Using CSS and external scripts can significantly decrease
download time of your pages. Use them! Limit your images and, whenever
possible, compress them into smaller byte sizes.
Focus on a Single
Theme
Don’t try to do too much with a single website. Unless you
have a nationally recognizable brand name, such as Wal-Mart, that sells both
Barbie dolls and car batteries from the same store, you need to keep your
websites focused on a single theme. Focusing your site(s) accordingly will help
drive customers to the closing sale with minimal distractions, as well as
enhancing keyword targeting for search engine placement. The less your website
is about, the better you’ll be able to focus the engines and the visitors to
what you have.
Developing Multiple
Sites
If you wish to sell products from different industries
you’re better off creating multiple sites to do the job. Few people will trust
a clothing website to sell auto insurance! When going after different markets,
it makes good business sense to create a new site for each industry you are
targeting. When using this strategy, be sure to follow a couple of simple
guidelines:
Target a Unique Audience: You want to be sure that each site
is targeting a substantially unique audience or customer base. If you own a
site selling house plans, don’t go build five new sites with each one selling a
different version of the same thing: garageplans.com, houseplans.com,
customhomeplans.com, colonialhomeplans.com, etc.
This tactic is often used by those trying to dominate the
top results of the search engines, edging out all their competitors. It is also
considered a severe form of spam by the search engines. Each site that you set
up must have a unique purpose with virtually no crossover with your other
sites. Some examples of uniquely targeted sites are: houseplans.com,
landscapingplans.com, homeofficeplans.com.
Somebody looking to convert a room into a home office is not
necessarily going to be crossing over with someone looking to build an entire
house. On the other hand, someone building a house might also be looking for
landscaping plans, but that is essentially an entirely different area of design
altogether. Each of these potential websites can be built to be substantially
unique and target seekers of different needs.
Use Unique Content: Each site that you build needs to
contain substantially different content. In our examples of acceptable unique
sites above you want to make sure that you don’t use similar content from one
site to the next. You also should avoid using the same design template as well
as the same business name and contact information on each site.
When I first started a blog for my business I had
incorporated it into my main business website. About a year later I decided to
roll it off into another completely new site hoping to garner some broader
exposure. I could have easily kept the Pole Position brand for the blog but
instead decided to create an entirely new name, look and feel for this new
site.
On the other hand, I also created a small web directory
where I kept the Pole Position branding, but chose a different name:
PolePositionDirectory.com.
In each case, each of these sites serves an entirely
different purpose with unique content. Even though someone can easily determine
that all three sites are related to some degree, they are each unique entities
going after different audiences looking for different things.
Reduce Shopping Cart
Abandonment
If you sell products or utilize a shopping cart system in
any way, you can easily increase conversion rates simply by improving your
shopping cart system. The fewer clicks visitors have to go through to finish
the buying process, the less likely they are to abandon their cart midstream and
move on. Make the process simple, have them fill in only what is necessary to
process the order and get them out the door.
Think of your shopping cart checkout process like the
checkout line at any store. If the line is long many people, especially those
making only small purchases, are more likely to set their products down and
leave. Maybe they’ll come back another day, or maybe they’ll find the same item
at another store with a smaller line. I don’t know about you, but I’ve done
that more than once. Shorten your checkout line and capture every sale
possible, no matter how small.
Eliminate Those
Annoying Ads
If you operate a commercial website don’t clutter your pages
with advertisements. Ads may be a great way to generate additional income but
they also might be taking away more than they are generating. Everything on
your site should be designed to draw the visitor toward the sale. Ads are
designed to draw attention as well and therefore they often do no more than to
draw the visitor away from one sale (yours) and off to another (a possible
competitor!).
If you operate a non-commercial or information-only site,
ads can be great, but use them sparingly and be sure stay away from useless
banner exchange programs. If you’re going to sell ad space, then determine what
that space is worth and sell it accordingly.
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