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Cornerstones of an Effective Website
Just about everyone has a website
today. Certainly, if you're in
business one way or another, you
have a website. And people have
different objectives behind their
sites. Some are content-driven.
Others provide an online service and
have sophisticated user interfaces.
Others still are designed to
entertain and amuse their visitors.
But regardless what your website is
designed to do, there are a few
primary objectives you should keep
in mind before you start building.
This first website objective is
FOCUS. Your site needs to have a
narrow and specific focus. Why is
this? Because there are literally
millions of websites out there and
the visitors you're lucky enough to
attract will only take a few seconds
to decide whether they'll stick
around or whether they'll simply
click the back button and continue
browsing elsewhere. Within those few
seconds, your site needs to
communicate exactly what it's
designed to do so the visitor can
decide if it meets his or her needs
or not.
One of the best exercises to enhance
the focus of your site is to
establish a 15 to 25-word
positioning statement that guides
all your development activity going
forward. Think about it like a
mission statement. It should
articulate exactly what your website
does in just 15 to 25 words.
Another way to look at it is to do a
Google search for a keyword in your
field and see what comes up in the
results page. Under each listing,
there's a short description of what
that site is all about. As it turns
out, the search engines get that
description from the meta tags on
those websites but it's exactly the
same thing. What do you want YOUR
description to say?
You should spend some time and think
about what you can offer your
website visitors as soon as they
land on your site. It could be
information. It could be a tool or
calculator of some kind. It could be
a free subscription. It could be an
entertaining video or an interactive
game they can play. Whatever it is,
you need to capture your visitor
within seconds and guide them to
something that will benefit them.
Once they've received one piece of
value, give them a second and then a
third. Guide them through a maze of
value, encouraging them to continue
browsing and discovering even more.
This is the key to a sticky website
and you can get a good idea of your
progress by measuring your average
time on the site through your
analytics platform.
There are a million different
websites out there and they're all
designed to achieve different
objectives. But each one of those
websites can be a bit better by
incorporating more focus, depth and
stickiness. All three improve your
website' effectiveness and all three
offer benefits with the search
engines as well
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