The Purpose of your Website
What's the purpose of your website?
When I ask potential clients this simple question, I always
get similar answers: to sell products, to increase
subscriptions, to generate leads, or to make money.
Of course, all these answers are correct.
But, only partially. They are the result of what happens
when your website does what it’s supposed to do.
The purpose of your website is to connect with the people
you’re supposed to serve.
Why?
Because the novelty of shopping online wore off a long time
ago. There are now (2007) approximately 110 million websites in
the world competing for the attention of Internet users. If
your website doesn’t connect with them, there’s a website out
there that will. And it’s that website that will succeed, and
not yours.
Here are five things you need to know:
1. It’s all about your customers.
Your website should revolve around your customers. That
means everything about your site, design, navigation and
content is a well-thought-out sales process that’s completely
relevant to your visitors. Start by analysing who your visitors
are and what motivates them to buy. Identifying them by age,
gender, income, education, lifestyle, personality and buying
style.
2. It’s not all about search engine
rankings.
Of course, it’s important for your site to do well within
the search engine results but ultimately your goal is to sell
more of your product or service. Better one visitor and one
sale than thousands of visitors and zero sales. When
creating your site, put the needs of your customers first then
build your site around what they want, not what you think they
should have. That’s not to say you shouldn’t include search
engine optimisation in your overall plan, just don’t make it
your first priority.
3. It’s about clarity not cleverness.
You may know what you’re selling, your mother may know what
you’re selling, but if your visitors don’t know it from the
moment they land on one of your pages, you’re doomed. Try
looking at your site from a visitors point of view then ask
yourself the following questions:
- Does every page identify the company and/or the product
or service?
- Is the site well organized? Does it progressively drive
customers toward a sale?
- Is each page headline strong enough to achieve
impact?
- Is each image strong enough to achieve impact?
- Is the text easy to read?
- Is the copy well-organized? Does it stress the main and
subsidiary benefits of your product or service?
- Is the total physical effect of each page effective in
achieving its objective?
- Does the navigation “track” well in leading the visitor
logically through the site?
- Is the page/s overly complicated
4. It’s about knowing when to opt for cosmetic
surgery.
Much like us humans, time isn’t kind to websites. They get
old, tired and outdated. In addition, as time goes by, pages
get added, graphics get changed, and content gets tweaked.
Before you know it your site is not only showing its age
design-wise, but it’s evolved into a confused
collection of content with no central focus.
Keeping tabs on what’s going on in the online industry, and
implementing changes accordingly — even if it means a complete
re-design — will help you keep up with your competition.
Remember, Internet years may be much, much shorter that human
ones, but it’s a lot easier, and cheaper, to give a website a
facelift than it is to have one yourself.
5. It’s about customer interaction and
feedback.
Today’s customers have high expectations and low-levels of
patience. Gone are the days you can get away without providing
your customers with a way of telling you what’s on their mind.
If there’s a problem, they want to be able to tell you about
it. And, they want you to respond. Better yet, they want ways
to interact with you. Then, when you fix their problem, you
tell them you care. For your own business. And for your
customers.
The purpose of your website
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