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7 Essential Homepage Tips To Ensure That Your Site Converts Traffic Into Sales
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| Guest post by: Michael Delpierre |
Article Overview: On average, you have roughly seven seconds to get your message across before the end user abandons your website for one of your competitors' sites. We have created simple guidelines for what should and, more important, should not be featured on your homepage, so that you can convert regular traffic into revenue.
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7 Essential Homepage Tips To Ensure That Your Site Converts Traffic Into Sales
Every company today has a website. But is your website
compelling? Does it reach out to your potential customer base and convert
traffic into sales?
Well, It Should . . .
On average, you have roughly seven seconds to get your
message across before the end user abandons your website for one of your
competitors' sites. We have created simple guidelines for what should and, more
important, should not be featured on your homepage, so that you can convert
regular traffic into revenue.
1) Create a Powerful Homepage Message.
Your homepage message should be a targeted, benefit-oriented
statement that outlines what you can do for the potential customer. In order to
properly draft an intriguing homepage message, you will need to identify the
inherent benefit to your potential customer base. No one wants to hear that you
are the best; customers want to hear why your product/service is different and
what it means to them. Put more simply, customers are asking, What can you do
for me? Answer them.
2) Focus on Clarity.
These days, with so many people searching online for
products and services, your homepage should clearly identify who you are, what
you offer, your core competitive benefits, and your supporting text all in a
clean and easy-to-navigate user interface. Use graphics and pictures to help
illustrate what service or product you provide, and how these benefit the
customer. However, the homepage should be a no-fluff zone. A good rule of thumb
for the homepage is less is more. Make it easy for the user to understand what
you do. Too much verbiage, images, and graphics will only confuse the user.
White space is good. Clutter, bad!
3) Make Effective Use of Secondary Messaging.
After you have presented your homepage message, you will
need to incorporate secondary messaging on the homepage. This includes any
additional messages that will be used to help clarify and drive home the points
made in the primary message. Secondary messaging should also incite the user to
take certain steps that is, it should be a call to action. These calls to
action could direct the user to e-mail the company for additional information,
phone the sales rep, download a white paper, read a recent success story, etc.
The secondary message will change from company to company (isn't this stating
the obvious?). A good marketer will know how to choose a penetrating secondary
message.
4) Integrate Imagery and/or Flash to Emphasize Your Core
Message.
Imagery and flash animation are important parts of your
homepage. To help illustrate your company's core competitive benefits, both
strategies help customers visualize how you can meet their needs and
requirements. Most people are visually oriented, so your imagery/flash will
quickly convey and emphasize your message. Be consistent with what you are
telling your potential prospects. Align your messaging with your visual
strategies. Images and flash are also great ways to eliminate clutter; by
adding a visual component to your website, you are alleviating the need for
additional reference text.
5) Drive Toward a Specific Call to Action.
You have already heard a little bit about calls to action,
but it is such an important strategy that we have also dedicated a specific
section to it. Failure to convert online potential customers into sales leads
is mostly attributable to homepages that lack primary and secondary calls to
action on homepage. A call to action can be as simple as a link that states,
“Contact us” for more information or “Tell us more about your needs” and we
will “Schedule a conference call”. Statistics have proven that if you can guide
web users along your sales process, you will convert more of them into
customers.
6) Know Your Audience, and Know the Audience Within Your
Audience.
OK, so maybe you don't know who Carl Jung is, but chances
are, you either have taken or soon will take a Myers-Briggs personality test.
Most people can clearly state whether they are an introvert or an extrovert;
your website should cater to these and other personality types. Develop your
website not only for an audience that requires what you can provide, but also
for disparate personalities within that audience. Some people prefer to pick up
the phone to find out more information about your products or services. Some
may prefer to e-mail you instead. Others may want to schedule a meeting. Your
website should cater to as many of these personality types as possible, or else
you will lose conversions. Make it easy for the web user to contact you . . .
using whatever method they choose.
7) Make Your Homepage Easy to Navigate.
You must lay out your website with easy-to-navigate options
and buttons. If you are a service-based company, then put an XYZ . . . Services
tab on the top navigation bar. If you sell more than one service, then enable a
pull-down menu showing options for your customers. Allow them to select the
page that they want to researchwithout having to click first to find out more
(a big no-no!). Another strategy is to use sidebars to help users navigate as
they read
your content. You will also need to ensure that your
homepage uses an interlinking strategy, so that if web users hit the wrong
button, they can easily get back on track and find the information they seek.
The Bottom Line
Make it easy for a prospect to find out more about your
products and/or services. Create a homepage that takes the guesswork out of it
by guiding web users through the process, from understanding the message to
taking action. Statistics have shown that the more clicks it takes for
potential customers to find what they seek, the higher the rate at which they
will abandon the website.
These guidelines will not only create a more satisfactory
website experience for the end user, but will also convert some of that
scrolling web traffic into genuine sales leads. And as we all know, the more
sales leads, the more $$$. Give your website the much-needed attention it
deserves. Your website should be your company's most effective marketing tool.
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About the Author: Michael Delpierre RSS for Michael's articles - Visit Michael's website Michael Delpierre is the Chief Marketing Officer at Conversion Pipeline, a strategic marketing communications company focused on the small business and non-profit sectors. Conversion Pipeline offers a variety of custom-tailored marketing, communications, branding, social media, and revenue generating strategies aimed at elevating brand awareness while increasing the revenue pipeline. For more information please visit www.conversionpipeline.com or contact the Pipeline creative team at info@conversionpipeline.com.
Click here to visit Michael's website Social Media For Small Business Marketing Advice For Franchise Owners Why a business card should matter to you Marketing Focus For 2010 More Marketing Dollars Focused On Internet Marketing 7 Essential Homepage Tips To Ensure That Your Site Converts Traffic Into Sales |
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