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What is the Purpose of Your Website?
When designing a website, it is important that webmasters
ask some general questions before they begin the design
process...
What Is The Purpose Of Your Website?
Many companies use websites to establish their brand.
Others use websites as a communication tool. Some companies
see websites as sales vehicles and "billboards".
Still others use their website as an educational tool.
And some may be any combination of the above. The website
must have a purpose in order for it to be effective.
What Is It That You Are Trying To Accomplish With
The Website?
A strong understanding of the website will allow a
webmaster to emphasize the action they want the website
visitor to take on the website. By defining and understanding
the purpose of the website, webmasters and publishers
can better structure the information on the website.
Information can be provided with the appropriate emphasis
and navigation. An ideal website will lead the web visitor
to take the action the webmaster wants.
Who Is Your Audience?
You must identify and understand your target audience.
Understanding your demographic will allow you to cater
content specific to that group.
What Are The Objectives Of The Website?
You also need to determine what the objective of your
website is. What are you attempting to accomplish? Are
you trying to sell something? Are you looking for downloads,
or is sales your real objective? Is your website trying
to promote a specific product or service? Do you want
your visitors to take a specific action? Is the intent
to profit from ad space in general or to have website
visitor's click on specific ads? Are you trying to build
a brand? Do you want visitors to purchase a product,
or provide an email address?
When attempting to solicit a specific action, there
are some general guidelines that you should follow.
Your website should be designed to solicit the action
you desire, so the navigation should intuitively lead
the visitor to take the desired action. If clicking
a link is the goal, then that link should be clearly
indicated and prominent on the page. This will not only
help insure that the maximum number of visitors will
be able to adequately view and navigate your content,
but it will also help prompt those visitors to take
the action you wish to have occur.
For example: Many software companies struggle with
the action they wish to solicit from the website visitor.
Software companies and eBook publishers are often guilty
of pushing users to download, at the expense of the
actual sale. Some companies prefer to have users download
prior to making a purchase decision, while others lose
impulse purchasers by only pushing the download rather
than the sale.
In Order To Maximize The Websites Sales Purpose
And Objectives, Follow These Simple Steps...
Address Compatibility Issues
If a website visitor is unable to view the website's
content, they are obviously going to be unable to complete
the desired action. The compatibility issues could be
related to technology or usability. Avoid using technologies
that require the website visitor to download a plug-in
before they can view the website content. If providing
content using flash is important to you, you should
also provide a flash-free version as well. Also, do
not alienate website visitors who might have a disability
-- use proper web construct, provide alt tags for images,
and avoid using a color scheme that will cause confusion.
Define A Clear Navigation Path
A website's navigation should provide the visitor with
a clear path. Information architecture is the organization
and categorization of online content -- the process
of creating clarity and organizing online information
in a purposeful, and logical way. Prioritize and emphasize
the most important items on the website. Give visitors
a clear path to what they are seeking. Each and every
page should intuitively provide them links to additional
information and purchase options.
Minimize Distractions
Minimize choices and other website distractions. Website
visitors should be provided a clear path of action.
Do not provide the website visitor an abundance of choices
-- studies show that a large number of choices often
puts the consumer off. It is generally recommended that
you provide no more than 3 choices. Keep your message
concise and on-topic. Website visitors will often just
scan a webpage rather than reading it, so bulleted lists
and headlines might be used to emphasize your message.
It may sound like a cliche, but it's the little
things that can make the biggest difference. Pay attention
to all aspects of your website. Defining the specific
website objectives and purpose will help to encourage
the desired action or behavior from your website visitors.
Author: Sharon Housley
Sharon Housley manages marketing for FeedForAll http://www.feedforall.com
software for creating, editing, publishing RSS feeds
and podcasts. In addition Sharon manages marketing for
RecordForAll http://www.recordforall.com
audio recording and editing software.
Keywords : sales copy, web copy, sales, text, website,
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