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Additional Article Information: =============================== 799 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line Distribution Date and Time: 2006-09-14 16:12:00 Written By: Erin Ferree Copyright: 2006, All Rights Reserved Contact Email: mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] For more free-reprint articles by Erin Ferree, please visit: http://thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/d/index.shtml#Erin_Ferree ============================================= Special Notice For Publishers and Webmasters: ============================================= If you use this article on your website or in your ezine, We Want To Know About It. Use the following URL to let us know where you have used this article, and we will include a link to your website on thePhantomWriters.com: http://thephantomwriters.com/notify.php?id=3559&p=load HTML Copy-and-Paste and TEXT Copy-and-Paste Versions Of Article Are Available at: http://thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/db/f/ineffective-websites.shtml#get_code --------------------------------------------------------------------- Why Isn't Your Website Working Well? Copyright © 2006 elf design, All Rights Reserved Written by: Erin Ferree Elf Design http://www.elf-design.com/ One of the biggest problems that small businesses face is ineffective websites. A website is often one of the largest start-up marketing expenses for a small business; unfortunately, many small businesses never see a return on that investment. Why do most websites have this problem? The average starter website typically: 1. Is not well designed. Sometimes websites don't match the rest of your designed materials or, worse yet, are designed using a template that looks nothing like any of your other materials. 2. Tries to accomplish too many things on each page. 3. Has little or no information of value to your potential clients. Most websites are written all about you and your business not them and their needs and concerns. 4. Lacks calls to action. You have to give your visitors clear instructions on what to do and how to proceed. A small business's website should perform a few basic jobs. It should: 1. Extend your brand. 2. Answer your prospects' most-asked questions. 3. Help you to grow your prospect or contact list. 4. Convert your prospects into clients. Your site can easily do all of this and more. To get started, there are three main elements of the website that you have to address: Content Overall, the content, or text, on your website is the single most important element of your website. This content gives: 1. Interested prospects a place to learn more about your services and to get their burning questions answered. 2. Current and past clients a resource for at-their-fingertips contact information and in-depth information about your offerings. 3. Internet search engines some content to index. The search engines read only the text part of your website, not the graphics. So choose a few keyword phrases, and use those throughout the text on your site. Hopefully, your keywords will help your site to rank well! Design The design of your website should be consistent with the rest of your brand identity and marketing materials, so that it can extend your brand identity into the online forum. Be sure to include, at the very least: 1. Your Logo: This should tell the story of who you are, what you do, and what makes you different. 2. Your Visual Vocabulary: This is all of the visual elements, in addition to your logo, that make up your business's look and feel. This includes the fonts, color schemes, photography, shapes, backgrounds, and other elements that you use. It's important that your Logo and your Visual Vocabulary be used consistently throughout all of your marketing materials. If your website looks markedly different from your other materials, then people who have your printed marketing materials might feel like they've landed in the wrong place when they call up your website. Your site should also have: 1. Appealing information design: Having text content on a site is key, but your text has to be designed and laid out in such a way that it's understandable, easily readable, and compelling. Laying the information in quick bursts, such as bulleted lists, helps people to read your site quickly. And using headlines, subheads, and bold text to break up the copy can also keep visitors interested enough to read all of the text. 2. Consistent navigation design: If your navigation changes from page to page, it will be difficult for visitors to find their way around the site they can't tell where they've already been easily. Function The average small-business website is designed as just an online brochure. But the ideal website will do something else as well, such as: 1. Growing your contact list: Collecting the names of the people who visit your website and are interested in your services is a great way to create a list of contacts for your follow-up marketing (such as sending a newsletter). 2. Answering visitors' questions: Including answers to their most commonly asked questions can help visitors to get instant gratification from your site. Also, having a contact form can encourage hesitant buyers to ask the questions that will help them to overcome their buying doubts and fears. 3. Converting prospects into clients: Using calls to action throughout the site can help convert prospects into paying clients, as will giving visitors clear instructions on what to do next, paired with great benefits to compel them to do so. If you address all of these main issues, then your website will be more successful than the average website. Instead of just being another ineffective marketing tool, your website will produce results, attract your target customers, and help you to close more sales. Using calls to action throughout the site can help convert prospects into paying clients, as will giving visitors clear instructions on what to do next, paired with great benefits to compel them to do so. --------------------------------------------------------------------- Erin Ferree, Founder and Lead Designer of elf design, is a brand identity and marketing design strategist who creates big visibility for small businesses. Erin helps her clients discover their brand differentiators, then designs logos, business cards, and other collateral materials and websites to reflect that differentiation, as well as to increase credibility and memorability. To learn more about defining your difference, check out our eBook, Stand Out, at http://www.stand-out-branding.com . For more information about elf design, please visit: Logo design at http://www.elf-design.com --- END ARTICLE --- Get HTML or TEXT Copy-and-Paste Versions Of This Article at: http://thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/db/f/ineffective-websites.shtml#get_code ..................................... 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