Spend time planning your Web site. Before you design a page or
write a word, get a visual, and mental picture of your preferred
audience. Your visitors will spend up to 10 seconds on your home
page, so plan accordingly.
Draw your specific audience's attention with compelling headings
that include benefits that will solve their problems.
1. Define your preferred audience. Picture them as you create
your home page. Create an audience profile including their
special needs and concerns. Make sure your Web site solves their
problem, and it has a lot of information that will help your
visitors.
2. Make your home page simple and easy to read so it will load
fast and not make potential customers wait. Include benefits and
a few testimonials. Forget the large photos or spinning and
flashing signs that distract. Put navigation bars (topics of
other pages) on the side or top to lead your visitors to
different pages. You may name them: seminars, teleclasses, free
articles, archived past eMagazines, products page, testimonials,
and how to order page.
3. Send an email survey to your potential buyers to skyrocket
your Web sales. Ask them, which titles and benefits would make
you want to buy? From their feedback, make every word count on
every Web page. Dramatic headlines with specific benefits lure
visitors to read, then buy.
One author changed his copy from "Money-Saving tips on Car
Buying, Leasing, Repairs and Insurance Reduction Tips" to "How
to Buy a Car at $50 Over Dealer Cost." He discovered why his
surveyed customers bought it. More of them wanted to buy a new
car far more than the other benefits he offered. When he changed
the title, sales increased by over 300% in 48 hours.
4. Put a sales letter on your home page aimed at your major
product or service. Some experts write very long ones, others,
like myself, write short copy. Check and test every part, every
navigation bar, and every link to see how it works. If you are
selling a product or service, test your headline and your copy.
Replace dull copy with passionate testimonials, even for your
ezine. Be sure to research and include everything that will make
your home page sing. Check out the site www.stopyourdivorce.com.
Only one sales letter sold $300,000 in books this last year.
5. Check out all the rest of your site. A good tweak before your
guests arrive will bring you many more positive results. Check
your headlines. Do they lead to a motivating story, rather than
right to your products?
Check your offer. Did you include a freebonus report? Check your
prices. Low cost isn't always best. Let your products reflect
your professional status. Check your layout-- how you lead the
prospect to your order page. Check your ordering process. Will
your orders come back with proper information on them? You may
also want to test the use of color, typestyle, and copy.
In fact, test everything you put out to your Web site visitor.
Friends and associates can be your friendly sounding board.
6. Include a lot of content, and make it easy to reach. Your
visitor should be able to click and receive your "gold" in
seconds. At the end of each free article your offer, include a
link to your products, teleclasses, or services page. Each
article may steer your visitor to a different place.
7. Don't worry about being high in the search engines. Just
create a user-friendly, easy to navigate, site with meaningful
content and submit it manually to the search engines. You can
get a list of submission links at
http://www.bytesworth.com/submit_urls.asp.
You don't need thousands of hits a day on your Web site. When
you plan and test your Web site content, you will bring
qualified, repeated buyers.
About the author:
Judy Cullins: author, publisher, book coach _Ten Non-techie Ways
to Market Your Book Online_ Helps writers manifest their book
dream. 24 clients published since 1999!
http://www.bookcoaching.com/teleclasses.shtml Send an email to
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