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Your Website As Persuasion Machine
Written by: Jerry BaderArticle Overview: The combination of the Internet, the Web, and technology has democratized business almost beyond recognition. Today the small, nimble, clever adaptor has the competitive advantage over their bigger, slower moving, 'we've-always-done-it-this-way' competitors; but the confluence of the Web environment and digital technology is one thing, how to use it effectively is another. Not every trendy social networking gimmick, user generated irrelevance, and pointless viral voyeurism is a productive business communication tactic.
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Your Website As Persuasion Machine
The combination of the Internet, the Web, and technology has
democratized business almost beyond recognition. Today the small, nimble,
clever adaptor has the competitive advantage over their bigger, slower moving,
'we've-always-done-it-this-way' competitors; but the confluence of the Web
environment and digital technology is one thing, how to use it effectively is
another. Not every trendy social networking gimmick, user generated
irrelevance, and pointless viral voyeurism is a productive business
communication tactic.
The Day Dinosaurs Died
Like the dinosaurs that once ruled the world, the giant behemoth
corporations that once dominated the business landscape have become fat and
lazy, relying on muscle rather than brains, on statistics rather than
understanding, and on technology rather than insight.
As these companies got bigger, they became top-heavy, corrupt, and
stagnant, throwing their weight around rather than innovating and adapting. Oh
yes, the big boys are still around, still doing what they've always done,
jumping on every trend 'du jour' promoted by the 'blogosphere' without any real
understanding of what it can accomplish, but hell, they figure if they throw
enough you-know-what at the wall some of it is bound to stick, or so they hope.
But the handwriting is on the wall, the giant Internet meteorite
has already hit these corporations right in their balance sheets and they are
tumbling into irrelevance. The list of extinct corporate giants grows, and the
march to Chapter 11 continues unabated.
So how does the smart, fearless, innovative thinking, business
decision-maker take advantage of the Web's ability to even the playing field?
The answer lies in their ability to use the Web as a persuasive communication
medium.
Persuasive Communication
The Web is really a very simple concept: it is a place that allows
you to communicate your message to your audience. What could be simpler, but
like anything democratic, it's messy: a jumble of the very good and the very
bad, and a whole lot of mediocre in-between. And in today's overcrowded
Web-centric business environment there is little room for the mediocre.
In the final analysis all marketing, branding, positioning,
advertising, and public relations is about communicating a persuasive message
that attracts attention, generates interest, stimulates desire, triggers
experiences, produces memories, and prompts action. And what Web-enabled
communication tool gives you the best chance of delivering that kind of persuasive
message? Web Video.
Persuasive Web Video Communication
The Web has some of the most effective creative video
presentations you would ever want to see, and it also has some of the worst.
Easy-to-use and relatively inexpensive technology has created a
plethora of do-it-yourself efforts. Some DIYers do it because of cost, others
do it because of ego, and some just figure they're smarter than the people who
do it for a living; and in some cases they may be right. Not all professionally
produced Web-video is created equal. If your Web-video team is not pushing you
to be bold with a focused, defining, differentiating message, then you've hired
the wrong people.
Communication intended to persuade is a complex undertaking, one
that requires a better understanding of how messages are communicated than it
does the technical production issues. When people watch a video, what they see
is far more susceptible to both intended and unintended nuance than a simple
face-to-face conversation.
Every Move You Make, I'll Be Watching You
"Every move you make; every vow you break; every smile you
fake; every claim you stake;
I'll be watching you."
- From the song 'I'll Be Watching You' by The Police
Everything a person does or says is a sign, not just a
communication of the obvious intent but also of the underlying subconscious
subtext. In person, people have a built-in monitoring system that filters-out
irrelevant verbal and non-verbal distractions, glitches and eccentricities, but
on your website, in a video, those performance issues get magnified and can
destroy your entire presentation.
In his book 'Messages, Signs, and Meanings' Marcel Danesi states,
"Humans convey over two-thirds of their messages through the body,
producing up to 700,000 physical signs, of which 1000 are different bodily
postures, 5000 are hand gestures, and 250,000 are facial expressions."
If your website lacks a video presentation, and instead relies
solely on text communication, you are handicapping your business's ability to
persuade, convince, and convert website visitors into clients. And, if you do
have video on your site, but it's not producing the intended results, perhaps
the verbal communication is in conflict with the nonverbal message, creating
confusion and distrust rather than confidence and understanding.
Forget all the things you think your website should be doing; its
most important and most critical purpose is to deliver an effective
communication to your audience.
A Recipe for Web-Video Communication
Persuasive Web-video communication is a complicated process that
involves numerous creative and technical talents, as well as psychological
insight into performance issues: scripting, casting, producing, directing,
editing, music, and sound design, all complemented by communication psychology,
emotional resonance, and business savvy are required to create effective
presentations.
Ingredient One: Attract Attention
Job one is to get people to take their hand off the mouse and pay
attention; it's the equivalent of someone yelling, "hay you" in a
crowded room, everyone stops and turns to find out what's going on.
Mark Hughes author of "Buzzmarketing" suggests six
criteria that provide the hay-you-pay-attention affect: the taboo, the
unusual, the humorous, the outrageous, the remarkable, the secret, and the
titillating.
Which of these criteria you choose to use depends on your brand
image, your audience, and your message.
All these elements individually or in combination can produce the
stop-look-and-listen effect you want as long as they are appropriate for your
target audience.
Ingredient Two: Generate Interest
Sarah Wood of Unruly Media, a company that specializes in paid
viral seeding points to high value relevancy as an additional key
ingredient; it's what turns the viral-for-viral's sake into a purposeful,
persuasive, viral marketing communication.
High value relevancy is based on the connection made through your
video presentation. If your video doesn't resonate in some way, you will lose
your audience. Resonance can be established through the performers'
personality, the delivery of the dialogue, the scenario presented, the subject
matter discussed, the point-of-view perspective, and/or the emotional content.
The idea of course is to convince and persuade; that's what makes
the whole exercise worth the investment. Resonance builds trust and allows you
to present your message in a way that gives the audience pause: a kind of
"I-never-thought-of-it-that-way" sort of reaction. You're not trying
to get your audience to buy into something they don't want, need, or care
about, but rather get them to see what you are offering in a new light, so that
they see it as something they do need, or better still want.
Ingredient Three: Stimulate Desire
Once you've attracted the audience's attention and gained their
interest through some kind of cerebral or visceral connection, the next step is
to stimulate desire. Generating desire is key to the ultimate conversion from
audience spectator to active client.
Everyone likes to think of him or herself as intelligent and
rational, as someone who makes decisions based on logic and need, but the truth
is we are emotional creatures motivated by desire, only tempered by logic.
When products, services, and ideas fail to capture their share of
the market, even when they are superior to their competition, it is often
because their marketing focuses on their technical superiority rather than
their emotional benefit. The marketing challenge for cell phone supremacy
between Apple's iPhone and RIM's Blackberry is not about which is better, but
rather which provides the status-buzz buyers get from ownership.
Web video provides the ideal vehicle for delivering both logical
and emotional benefits in an easily digestible format that penetrates the
audience's subconscious and delivers all the necessary desire-building
components. In an over-crowded marketplace, need alone is not a sufficient
enough motivator.
Ingredient Four: Create An Experience
Far too many website business models are based on the idea that
customers should make instant decisions. By focusing your attention on the
quick sale, rather than a client seduction, you are giving up on the vast
majority of your potential customers.
The old high-pressure direct marketing tactics of a bygone era have
little relevance in a Web-marketplace where potential customers are safely
hidden behind a wall of remote access. A website needs to do more than present
a bunch of photos and order buttons and expect people to just follow commands
to "Buy Now"; there are just too many options available for that
strategy to work.
A website has to be a memorable experience, one that forces your
audience to keep your offering in the forefront of their minds, where every
competitor must stack up to the memorable experience you present.
For example, take e-commerce clothing websites; why present
clothes like you were limited to a print catalogue with static images when you
could present video of models moving to display how the garments look from all
angles with a voice-over commentary providing detail and incentive: a simple
but far more effective presentation sure to sell more clothes than a series of
static lifeless images.
Ingredient Five: Be Memorable
Getting an order is important, but getting a customer is far more
valuable. Because your audience is hidden behind a veil of Web security and
remote access, pushy high-pressure tactics just won't work, and if they do
work, they'll probably only work once. By providing a memorable experience your
site stays top-of-mind, and when a prospect finally decides to buy, your site
will be the one they remember, and not the other dozen or so faceless, boring,
characterless websites they visited.
If you are not prepared to take a chance, and woo your audience
with some memorable relationship building content that delivers emotional
resonance and meaningful memories, then your chances of converting traffic into
clients is slim.
Ingredient Six: Prompt Action
The idea that you need to blatantly ask for an order sounds like a
sound sales tactic, one you hear all the time from sales experts, but let's
face it everyone knows you're out to sell him or her something. By being too
pushy or too obvious, you appear to be untrustworthy or desperate.
What you really want is for your audience to take some action,
commit to remembering you by signing up for a newsletter, book marking your
site for future reference, or better still phoning or emailing for more
information. It's all about building a sustainable business relationship with
viewers by staying in the forefront of their minds and establishing trust and
expertise through communication and dialogue. It's the true value and meaning
of the Internet's promise of being a means of generating global conversations.
What to Remember
In the end, business success is all about how well you communicate
your message to your audience. Websites provide the opportunity to deliver a
meaningful, memorable marketing message through the use of Web-video.
There are many fine technologies available that allow you to
dialogue with customers over the Internet, but real conversations are sloppy,
frustrating, rambling exercises in point-counterpoint discussion, whereas
Web-video is an organized, focused, concentrated presentation of the message
you need to deliver.
Article Tags: balance sheets, big boys, blogosphere, business communication, business landscape, color 000000, digital technology, giant behemoth, giant internet, gimmick, green span, handwriting is on the wall, meteorite, productive business, social networking, span style, style color, style font, voyeurism, web environment
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About the Author: Jerry Bader RSS for Jerry's articles - Visit Jerry's website Jerry Bader is Senior Partner at MRPwebmedia, a website design firm that specializes in Web-audio and Web-video. Visit http://www.mrpwebmedia.com/ads, http://www.sonicpersonality.com, and http://www.136words.com. Contact at info@mrpwebmedia.com or telephone (905) 764-1246. About MRPwebmedia People ask, "What do you do?" You could say we inform, enlighten, innovate, and create; you could also say we deliver our clients' marketing messages in memorable ways using video, audio, webmedia campaigns and websites; all created in-house from concept to implementation, from graphic and motion design to Web-design, from script writing to video-production to post-production, from music composition to signature sound design. What do we do? We motivate action by speaking to your audience's real needs. We tell your story so your brand, your message, embeds in the minds of your clients. We are corporate storytellers. Click here to visit Jerry's website 8 BrainBranding Web Presentation Concepts Part II How To Deliver A Marketing Message On Your Website How To Make WebAdvertising Worth Watching How To Make Money On The Web Assembling Your Web Video Marketing Assets |
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