50 Web Design Secrets v3 PDF
50 Web Design Secrets v3 PDF
If someone visits any page and leaves or quits without fulfilling one of these goals, the page has
failed.
Each page is an advertisement, either for the information on the page, a function, info capture, or
for information on another page. It has no other major purpose.
When your page works, people will complete one of the goals. They will continue to engage with
the web site. When it fails, they'll stop there and leave without getting what they want or giving
what the page needs.
Any time you sit down to make a web page, ask, "What is the goal of this page? What is this page
an advertisement for?"
And make it your sole goal to deliver that perfectly.
It's not a popular idea, I know. Many web designers will stop listening at this point, but it's a fact.
A beautiful web page isn't necessarily a better one.
Comparative tests have shown that sometimes downright ugly, cheap-looking design can
outperform slick, professional design.
Why?
The job of a web page is to facilitate communication, to share information between the page and its
visitors.
Attractive design can get in the way of the communication. The design of your page will either
support the message you want to share by drawing attention to the message, or it will detract - by
drawing attention to itself.
... Anything that keeps visitor's attention on the site and keeps them moving forward.
The more stuff you have on your pages, the more you dissolve attention between all those visual
elements. So the trick is to balance Simplicity with Appeal.
The more detail you put into your packaging, the less attention goes to your product. So STP tells
designers to "design your content - not the box it comes in".
If you're going to go to the trouble and expense of marketing online, make the effort to stand out.
Do not go by what your competitors do. If you do, you'll just join the flock.
In the flock, it's hard to make out an individual. If a prospective customer comes online and looks
at all the web sites available, and they all seem to stand in a huddle, looking the same, saying the
same thing, how are they going to choose?
Let's say there are 1000 competitors in your market, and you share search engine rankings fairly
(which is, of course, impossible). If you all look and sound the same, you only have a one in 1000
chance of attracting any visitor.
However, if you stand apart from the flock, you'll at least give them reason to say, "What's special
about these guys?"
I'm not saying you should be different for the sake of being different! You are already different.
Stop trying to act the same!
What is it about you or your organisation that's unique? What are you passionate about? Where do
you go the extra mile? What do your customers LOVE about you? What can you say about you that
no-one else can say?
When you answer these questions, find that essence, that unique proposition, which will make you
truly distinctive online. Make that essence seep from every pore on your site - in your design, in
your navigation, in your language - and you will get more business.
Imagine your prospect has looked at a few sites and then says, "Let's go back to those guys who ..."
What's your dot-dot-dot?
#5 - "Say it!"
One of the most common mistakes on web pages is simply not saying it!
What is this page for? What can you do here? Why am I looking at this? Whatever it is, just say it!
When you click on a link for "Contact us", you expect a contact page.
When you click on a link to "Buy now", you expect to buy from the next page.
When you click on a link that promises to explain something, you expect to know immediately that
you'll get the explanation on the page.
Web pages that attempt to play with their visitors' attention by being clever, coy, or cryptic FAIL.
You cannot beat good honest up-front transparency.
Try this test on your own web pages. Without scrolling, can you immediately see the point of the
page? Is it shining out? Is there one thing that first draws your eye, which explains in simple
language what the page is that you're on?
If these things don't happen, you will not be able to help your visitors answer the only important
question there is in web design...
... "Am I in the right place?"
Everything hinges on this simple question.
Do you know how Google figures out which web pages to put at the top of the search results?
Well, it's all about relevance. Google wants to find the best way to estimate which of the squillions
of pages in its index is the most relevant to a particular term.
It's based on two factors:
•How relevant the page says it is
•How relevant the rest of the world says the page is
Now, the first factor is important. You should optimise your pages around your chosen keywords
(more about choosing keywords another time). But on-page optimisation is only about 10% of the
story.
The big, really important factor is what the rest of the world says the page is about. And that comes
down to one thing - inbound links.
Basically, these are the two factors that dictate how high you will rank for your keywords. You want
as many links as you can get from pages that are...
• related (with similar subject matter, very important)
• and have high PageRank (very important - PageRank is an indicator of how respectable the
linking page is)
That's it. That is what distinguishes the top-ranking pages from the also-rans (and the top-ranking
pages get the lion's share of the visitors, and sites that get more visitors get more business).
So increasing your search engine ranking is one of the most cost-effective ways to get more
business via your web site. And the way to do that is to get more relevant inbound links.
Here's the problem.
Creating your own links is a very laborious, time-consuming business. And if you go chasing links
from irrelevant, low-PageRank pages, you are totally wasting your time.
There are tools coming out onto the market that help you find pages that are relevant and well-
respected.
The newest one comes from the guys at WordTracker, who have been building tools to help
professionals and amateurs do better SEO for years. It's called "Link Builder", and it's easy to use
(like their main keyword research tool) and very effective.
They are also currently discounting the tool, so if you would like to take a shortcut to boosting your
search engine rankings, here's what to do...
Go to http://bit.ly/fC6Pq3, and click “Take a FREE Trial” for LinkBuilder.
When someone comes to your web site, they should quickly be able to scan the page and know
"Yup - I'm in the right place".
Some web pages are so busy that the eye simply can't settle on the content. It skips around from
one element to another, and no information gets through. Then "ping!" the clock runs out and you've
lost the visitor's attention.
Look at your own web pages. Are they easy to look at - AND yet visually appealing?
Some web pages just have too much shouting for your attention, so your attention is fractured.
Others don't try to draw your attention anywhere, and your attention is squandered - which is just
as bad!
In order to fix either issue, you need to know the factors that draw attention, and - then - how to
balance those factors.
Here are the 9 "Noticeability Factors" that I describe in Save the Pixel:
1. Size
2. Colour
3. Contrast
4. Boldness
5. Space
6. Position
7. Dynamism
8. 3D effects
9. Content
You can use any (and all) of these factors to draw visitor's attention to one thing or another.
If you try to draw attention to too many things, you will fail to keep that attention, and that's bad
news.
So let every page have a focal point, a simple "Start here" for every visitor. Tip: The focal point
should be the most instantly noticeable thing on the page, and it should be in the content. There's no
point drawing attention to the non-content features that are the same on all pages (like branding &
navigation).
Everyone visits a web page for a reason. I don't know what the reason is, it's slightly different every
time.
I do know that there's a driving force behind any goal that any visitor wants to reach. The driving
force behind what we do - anything we do - is called self-interest.
When you're creating a web page, imagine someone visiting the page, consider what they may be
looking for, and then ask "What's In It For Me?"
Where's the value on the page? How can a first-time visitor spot that value immediately?
Here's a tip. Whenever you find yourself talking about the properties, values, or features of
something, connect it to "YOU the reader".
Change, "This does that" or "This has this property", to "You can do THIS because this does that",
or "Because of this property of that, you'll never have to worry about the other".
Whatever you do, whatever you say, whatever you show, let me know instantly what's in it for me,
and I'll engage.
Hide the value, and lose the visitor. It's as simple as that.
Whatever you're doing online, whether you're blogging, marketing your own business, or selling
stuff, you MUST build an email list.
However many people come through your web site, whether it's a handful or several thousand a
day, knowing who they are turns them from a stranger to a prospect. Every time you get a new
name on your list, that's money for you, one way or another.
A mailing list is not just for sending out news about your stuff. It's a Swiss Army knife for all your
marketing. You can use your mailing list to:
• Send out a personal message when you add new content to your site (as long as it's
interesting and valuable).
• Get marketing insight by sending your customers and prospects surveys to find out their
views.
• Promote your own products. Conversion rates can be really great. We got 411 upgrades to
Save the Pixel 2 by emailing a list of under 3000 previous buyers.
• Promote other people's products (affiliate marketing).
Have you ever used a web page, scanned the content approvingly, scrolling down to the bottom, and
then thought, "Now what?"
So many web pages do this, and it's grade-A first-class free range stupid.
You get to the bottom of the content, and then you're expected to scroll A-L-L the way back up to
the top of the page to consult the conveniently placed global navigation in order to decide where to
go next.
Finishing a web page with a dead-end is like having a sales conversation and stopping halfway
through until they say the magic word. You'd never do it in real life. Why do it on your web site?
I guess there's a bit in our brains that says, "Navigation goes at the top". Well, yes, it does, but
where is it written that you only get one navigation?
Think through every page on your site, and try these two simple questions:
1. What is someone who comes to this page looking for?
2. After we've told them what we tell them, what will they want next?
Then put links to those next likely things at the bottom of the content. Not in the side column, not in
the footer, and certainly not waaaaay back up at the top of the page!
If you want someone to go somewhere, you'll be amazed how many more actually go there when
you make it easy for them. We've tested it, it's true. More people click a link when you give them a
link to click than when you don't. Fact!
You could type any keyword into Gurushot, and it would try to match that word to the wisdom
quotes on its database, and show you a quotation that it thinks will be inspiring and helpful. You
could then say "Yes, it was inspiring" or not.. and Gurushot would learn for the future.
Sure, there's quite a bit of clever code behind the scenes, but we were absolutely sure that we
wanted Gurushot to feel really simple and easy. And that meant doing less.
It's easier to communicate one simple thing than it is to present a lot of options. If we showed lots of
different functions, maybe people wouldn't have discovered the one core thing that could really help
them.
Many web sites are like being in a crowded bar. There are so many conversations going on, you
can't really understand anything.
Whether you're marketing your business, selling products, or creating a Web2.0 application, just do
one thing at a time and do it really well.
The same thing applies when Google looks at your web site.
Look at this way.
• If you search on Google for "saw", you don't get a Swiss Army knife.
• If you search on Google for "pliers", you don't get a Swiss Army knife.
• If you search on Google for "file", you don't get a Swiss Army knife.
• If you search on Google for "bottle opener", you don't get a Swiss Army knife.
• etc...
So if your home page tries to tell everything you offer - and you don't have specific pages dedicated
to each of those things - you've got a Swiss Army knife.
That means your web site is weakly about each service and each product that you offer. So it won't
rank well for any of them.
And because we're talking about the web, everything is on view, so you can bet there's a whole
bunch of dedicated tool pages out there ready to take the traffic.
There are no prizes for being bad at a bunch of things. Do each thing well.
If someone comes to your home page, can they say with confidence, "This is a ##### site" ??
Continuing the theme of the importance of making a clear, clean impression, what does your home
page say about you? What does every page on your web site say about you?
We get so many messages every day that we are becoming skilled at instantly forgetting anything
that isn't immediately interesting and relevant. Any message that doesn't have authenticity and value
to me will be ignored. We have to do that to keep sane.
In that kind of environment, to be remembered - even to be noticed - you have to say something.
Take a position.
Say what you ARE.
Also say what you AREN'T, if it's relevant.
Give me a reason to care. If you don't give any reasons, don't complain when nobody cares.
Afraid of putting some visitors off? I get that. But don't be.
You see, when you take a position, when you distinguish yourself as "this, not that" you'll start to be
something.
And when you be something, that something can be identified as not what some people want, and it
can be recognised as exactly what other people want.
So for every prospect you lose by taking a position, you'll earn the trust of another. The only sure
way to fail is to be nothing, or to try to be everything, and end up saying nothing to nobody.
Reason One
When someone arrives at a page on your web site, whether they've followed an internal link, come
from another site, or from a search engine, they only have one question, "Am I in the right place?"
You only have a limited amount of attention-time to answer that question - preferably with a "Yes!"
The quickest way to answer that golden question is just to say it. Let your page shout out its
purpose, what content you'll find, and what you can do there.
Reason Two
Search engines love pages that are about something. Pages that are about lots of things are Swiss
Army knives. It's not a saw, it's not a can opener, it's not a knife - it's all of these things, but none of
them in particular.
So when you focus your page on a topic and say it with boldness, it makes it much easier for search
engines to match your page to people's queries. They'll reward you for it.
You may think, "Won't I need more pages?" Yes, you will. Lots more more effective pages!
You may also be thinking, "What about my page that lists all the different widgets we do?" Well,
that page should be about "All The Widgets We Do". It should say what's great about all your
widgets, and then it can go on to show pictures and descriptions of all your widgets. But the focus
of the page is one thing: "Our Widgets". You can still have a lot of content, as long as the message
at the top of the page neatly encompasses and describes all that content.
People are interested in people. Dogs like to sniff other dogs, because it's in their genes. People
respond to people. We can't help it. We are people, and we're motivated by competition and the urge
for safety and companionship, and the urge to breed. That's what being human means.
Human Language
Your visitors are human, so are you. So speak as what you are - human. Everyone seeks connection,
something they can trust, particularly online (where trust is naturally low). If you put your humanity
into your web site, you will connect with more people.
Speak as yourself, as though you were talking to a friend. Do YOU like reading jargon? Do you
connect to it? No, me either. So don't use it.
Human Images
If you sell services (which are almost all delivered by people), show them in context. Show people.
Pictures of people convey a lot of information. Images tend to give softer information (more feel
than fact), but we can read a LOT into a face. So pictures of people can be very good value content-
wise.
Eye tracking studies regularly show that our focus is drawn to faces. We can't help it.
Pictures of people should (usually) smile & make eye contact. We connect to smiles, and we
connect to eyes. The size of the smile depends on the context.
• Someone working in a store should have a bright, attractive, open smile.
• Funeral directors should wear slight, sympathetic smiles.
• People looking after nuclear reactors should be focusing on their job - not on the camera!
One of the all-time masters of selling through talking to people naturally is legendary copywriter
Drayton Bird. His book "Commonsense Direct & Digital Marketing" is hands-down the best guide
you can have to the art of marketing to humans. Highly recommended.
Testimonials and FAQ (or Q&A) content are extremely important tools for getting people to trust
your offering. They work in slightly different ways.
Testimonials offer third-party validation. When someone's on your site, they want what you offer to
be right, but they need to be convinced.
Seeing a quote from someone who's like them (another customer), which is credible and seems
honest, is a great way to raise the prospect's trust.
FAQs are also useful for raising trust. They do it by filling in the gaps - the little questions that
could make the difference between choosing to proceed or not to proceed.
Even if the questions you see answered on a web site are not the ones in your mind, they can
generate trust in the brand. When you see other customers' concerns being treated with respect and
thoroughness, you can assume you can worry less about your own concerns.
Now... many web sites have a page for FAQs, and a page for Testimonials.
This is the WRONG WAY TO DO IT.
Can you remember the last time you clicked on a FAQs or Testimonials link?
Here's the rub. Nobody wants to read FAQs, or quotes from other people. You don't go online in
your lunch hour and think, "You know, I'll spend some time reading testimonials." There's no
benefit in it.
The times when a testimonial or Q&A may helpful is when you're doing something that's relevant to
that message. When they're all grouped together, most of the content is going to be irrelevant to
most people, most of the time.
So having a page dedicated to these powerful messages is really just a good way to file them away
where nobody needs to see them.
Testimonials and FAQ pages are archives
Conventions are great. They're essentially solutions that have been designed before, and which have
worked so often that they're now part of the general tool kit.
Common web conventions include:
• Placement (logo in the top-left, login stuff in the top-right)
• Colours (text is black on white background, links are blue)
• Iconography (look at the toolbar above, you don't need to think to know what most of that
stuff does)
There are literally thousands of conventions, which we don't realise are conventions. We don't think
about them, which is exactly right. That's why conventions work!
Conventions work because:
1. You can use them in your web design without too much thought or work.
2. The people who visit your web site can understand what's going on without too much
thought or work.
Some "creatives" think that it's their job to create new stuff all the time (that's what "creative"
means, right?) They think it's all about surprising web site visitors, wrong-footing them, making
them think.
This is quite a short-sighted approach. Actually, most new things fail. That's just a law of Nature.
There are common design patters for most things, which already work well.
It's hard to create something that works as well as a recognised convention - even a bad convention
(and there are plenty of those around, but they still work because they're familiar).
So when do you follow the convention, and when do you try something new?
I believe you should use a convention wherever it completely suits your needs. That saves you time
and creative effort, which you can then apply to the problems that really matter.
Where there is no conventional solution, or there is no convention that does what you know your
design must do, then use all that stored up creativity and come up with something that works -
beautifully!
Every web site is selling something. It may be a product, a service, an idea, a subscription, or it may
be advertising something.
All these goals require visitors to take some kind of action. To pay money, to hand over personal
details, to read a full article, to download a PDF, or just to stay online and be exposed to stuff.
The only way you can sell anything to anyone is to convince them that what they're getting from the
site is worth more to them than what they're investing.
They may be investing money, time, personal details, and attention.
If you abuse the attention you get, and expect them to hand over more than they're willing to hand
over, they won't do it.
You have to build attention, build desire, and build trust, so that the actions you require people to
take make sense to them at the point they're required to take them.
That's what web design is all about. You're trading value for value. The only thing you need to do to
succeed is: to make the trade worth it.
It's very tempting to think that the Web is the only way to get eyeballs, traffic, and conversations.
Well, these things were not invented with the web browser. Marketers have been reaching,
convincing, generating action, measuring and improving for over a hundred years without a Web.
And... they've been making a profit.
There's a sobering realisation for me here. In the rush to adopt "New Media" we can overlook the
lessons of the past.
All that's really new about the web is the speed at which it's possible to test stuff, count results,
think again, try again, and - uh - repeat..
That's all marketing is really about. It involves two things: creativity and analysis.
Who's my market? What do they want? What's going to get their attention? What appeal will work
for them? What info do they need to see to build trust?
These questions are not new. They're the same questions that made millions for people like John
Caples and Eugene Schwartz.
And they're simple, aren't they? Perhaps we think our New Media world is too sophisticated for
those simple ol' questions.
You know what the weird thing is? Somewhere we stopped teaching those questions. Well, I made it
through over 10 years as a pro web designer before someone taught me. (Nod to Mr. Ken
McCarthy.)
So what's the secret? There's nothing new under the sun. People are the same as they've always
been. They need the same marketing they've always needed.
And it's so much easier and quicker to market now, we have no excuse not to make money!
It's hard to build trust on the web. I believe that one of the best ways to earn people's trust is to be
generous with your knowledge.
I don't mean to go over to their office and spend half a day giving them free consulting (that doesn't
pay off, I've tried it). I'm talking about publishing what you know online.
This applies particularly if you're in a service industry, but it can also help if you sell products, just
because it helps people feel safe with you.
The common objection is, "If I tell people what I know, won't they just use that knowledge
and not hire me?"
If they are going to do that, do you think they would really have hired you in the first place?
When I write about how to create web pages, I'm giving information on several levels. Some of that
information will be useful to someone who wants to create a web page. Those guys were never
going to hire me.
But it's also telling people that I know how to create web pages that work. It tells them that I am so
confident in my skills, that I can share it freely. And it gives them a clear signal that they can trust
me. Once you have trust, much of the battle is won.
So, if you're a financial advisor, just blog about what you know. Tell people what to look for, and
what to avoid. You are as likely to create a demand for your service as you are to make it so that
someone doesn't need to hire you.
If you specialise in cleaning carpets, blog about ways to clean carpets. Tell people what they can
clean easily themselves, and also tell them what they should *never* try to clean themselves
(creating opportunities). You never know, they may be in a rush, and prefer to call in the trusted
expert instead...
If you teach yoga, why not make some videos and show people a basic daily routine? Then, when
they're ready to learn more, maybe they'll get in touch with you.
All this information is putting your brand in front of potential customers who may not even be
ready for you yet, but may be soon, and may be crafted into customers through your generosity.
You may not thank me for this. I'm going to invite you to do something kind of yucky, unpleasant,
distasteful.
When you're marketing your business, it's important to use the language that your potential
customers would use, not the language you'd use.
That's easier said than done. Sometimes it can feel wrong to use the incorrect terminology,
compared to the proper vocab that everyone in your industry understands. But if the people out
there on the street don't use those words - don't use those words!
So if they're talking about "best way to save money", don't talk about "flexible investment
packages" on your web site.
Keyword research is your key to finding out what people are actually looking for. You should
definitely invest in a powerful research tool like Wordtracker or SEOmoz Pro to help you uncover
the keywords that are really being searched for and have relatively low competition.)
But sometimes the keyword research will show up words that you just don't want to know about.
Words that make you cringe, that make you want to put your fingers in your ears.
Words like "cheap".
Very few businesses would want to be identified with "cheap" but a LOT of people out there are
looking for it.
I had a client who provides low-cost web hosting. When I did their keyword research, "cheap
hosting provider" came out as a winning phrase. A lot of searches, and - guess what - not too much
competition.
I just did a presentation for a bunch of people in the printing industry. When I did some sample
keyword research for my seminar, using "leaflet printing" as my starting point, guess what came up
again as a little seam of stinking gold? That's right, "Cheap leaflet printing"!
Do you have the guts to be open to any keyword, even if you can't personally say it without looking
like Scrooge?
Here's a little secret. Your web pages don't have to identify you as cheap! Of course, you probably
don't want to associate your brand with... that word. And you don't have to.
You can talk about cheap hosting/printing/etc and talk about the risks and pitfalls of going for really
cheap options, how they can cost you more in the long run. Create a page that's covered in "cheap".
Then, you can position your own offering relative to "cheap" and say why your low-cost /
affordable / value-for-money solution is so good and doesn't cost the earth.
It's easy to get sucked in to thinking that the Web is all there is.
Sure, web traffic can be cheap, but it's not the only game in town. People have been marketing
profitably for a long time before the web.
The wise marketer uses the right tool for the right job. It's all marketing - matching propositions to
markets.
Not everyone who needs what you offer is looking for it on Google
In fact, only a minority of your potential market for anything are actually looking for that thing.
A lot of them are not at that level of awareness. They know they have a problem, and they're
looking for "solutions" to their problem, not "your solution."
They're asking, "What's the best way to..?" or "Does Competitor Product X really work?"
Or they're aware of a problem, need, or opportunity - but are not yet aware of any products or
services that might resolve that need.
They might be asking, "How can I..?" or "Problems with..."
Now, with a bit of creative thinking, you can identify these markets, and even reach them with
search marketing.
But there's another massive market, at an even deeper, more primitive level. These are the people
that are not even aware of the need or opportunity.
What's significant about these guys is that they aren't looking for anything (because they don't have
a problem). And if they aren't looking, you can't target them with SEO.
So what do you have to do?
You have to reach them where they already are!
We've gone over the line of SEO now. To reach these people, you need to advertise to them. You
need to make them aware of the potential opportunity or problem, and then lead them to your
proposed solution.
A few ways to do this include pay-per-click ads, good ol' banner ads, guerilla marketing on forums
and blogs, and even old media. That's right, I'm talking about print advertising, radio advertising,
and direct mail.
Ask where the majority of your market is. If your market isn't aware of the problems your solutions
solve, then you need to reach out to them, where they are right now. And that's not Google.
There's gold in them hills! For the full story and how to use these insights to build your own
business, it's all in my new book “Convert!” published January, 2011 and available on Amazon now.
If you're trying to target a specific search market, it always pays to do keyword research, to
optimise your landing pages for your target keywords, and sometimes to build inbound links.
The problem is, link-building is, to use a technical term, a royal pain in the arse.
It's time-consuming and it feels kind of wrong, going onto people's blogs and forums and trying to
trick them into not rejecting your half-hearted comments. Personally, I don't feel good about it.
It's much easier if you already own a bunch of domains or you're established on a range of forums
(or you have a bunch of friends who are).
But the ideal way to generate links is not to have to do it at all, and the way to do that is by building
a reputation instead.
It's not the short path, but it's the best path.
I started posting web design articles online in 2004. Now, when I add a new article, I don't need to
do any promotion. I'll tweet about it, and add it to del.icio.us, digg, stumbleupon, and reddit. But the
heavy lifting is done by my RSS feed.
Here's the secret... Write good content
If you consistently publish content that is:
• interesting
• newsworthy
• generous
• useful
• and timely
... you will build a following. Do it with integrity, with openness, and trust your readers, and they'll
repay your trust by trusting you in return.
Make it easy for people to follow you through RSS, Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, etc. and definitely
set up an email list.
Even if you don't have an audience today, believe me, it's worth it.
All you have to do to be a leader is start being a leader. People don't recognise a leader until they
see one doing what leaders do.
Then, when you want to reach a new market, you just write another great piece of content for that
market, and tell a few people, who'll each tell a few other people, and so on. Easy.
But, like most incredibly useful things, there's a barrier to entry. You need commitment, and you
need faith.
If I've earned your trust then trust me on this, have faith, and go for it ;-)
Content is king. The way you deliver your content is far less important than the content itself.
Poor delivery can prevent good content from reaching its audience, but great delivery cannot
compensate for crappy content.
When you're designing web sites, or if you're commissioning a web designer to do it for you, please
invest the majority of your time and your budget on crafting a great offer, powerful appeal,
compelling propositions.
The graphic design of your web site needs to be good enough, and you should invest enough to
ensure it works, and is appropriate for the task.
But if you don't invest in your message, whatever you spend on your sexy delivery will be wasted.
So many web sites are so focused on setting the right atmosphere and looking impressive that they
seem to forget the whole purpose is to engage someone.
It's like spending a fortune on the perfect romantic setting, with candlelight, music, great food, and
a diamond ring... but forgetting to ask the question.
If you want to engage someone, there's only one thing you absolutely must do. ASK THE DAMN
QUESTION!!!
That means setting out your proposition, making it compelling, and then having a clear call to
action that demands a yes or no decision.
If you do this, I promise you your web site will make more money. Ignore this advice at your peril.
Let's step back again and have a look at the kind of business you're in - from the very highest level.
Are you a product company or a service company? Or both?
What do you sell? If it's time, you're in the service business. Do you get paid for each hour you
work? That's service.
When you're in service, your earnings are limited by two factors: how much you can charge for a
chunk of time; and how much time there is.
Problem is, the market provides a natural ceiling on rates, and there are only so many working
hours in a month.
So, in service, to make more money, you have to make more hours. That means you have to hire
and train more people, which brings its own costs and risks, as most small business owners know all
too well.
With a product business, on the other hand, you're not selling time. You're selling something else. If
you have a widget company, you can grow by making more widgets more quickly. You can install
another widget machine and optimise your systems to make more profit.
Taking the product concept further, some products are intangible. Like intellectual property. If you
own the patent to something, or a brand that makes people want to buy something, you can sell the
rights to use your virtual assets, without even shipping anything.
Now, the world will always need product companies and service companies. But I believe it is more
attractive to make money through product. That's not to say you can't make good profits by
providing services - you can - but there are more natural constraints on growth that will make it
more challenging to increase those profits.
The guys at 37Signals recognised this over 10 years ago, and switched from being a very talented
web design agency to a very talented product company (article).
So the question I would put to you is.. If you're a service business now, could you also be a product
business?
Taking my own business, I have captured the qualities of the services I do in multiple products,
which can be re-sold many times over (without requiring extra time): two books (1) (2), one course,
and a forthcoming series of video web site reviews.
These products are not only profitable, but they also help me achieve my goal of making the web a
better place - which I couldn't do one web site at a time.
So what products could you create and sell?
Marketing online is a lot like fishing, but more fun. And you don't have to go outside. Or get wet.
Or hit anything repeatedly over the head (actually, that one's not always true).
The point is, you're trying to get business (fish).
To do that, you first have to guess where the fish are. Next, you show them something that will
attract them, and then you have to hook 'em and reel 'em in.
One great way to attract the fish is to invest in juicy fat worms that they love. If that gets you plenty
of bites, and you can land the catch, it's well worth it.
How does that relate to online marketing?
The first part (getting a bite) is attracting traffic. You can do this organically, or you can buy your
traffic with PPC (pay-per-click). However you go about it, the more you invest, the more results
you expect.
The crazy thing is how many web sites only focus on the first part (getting the traffic) and are very
lazy about landing the catch. If you don't have a sharp, powerful hook, you'll lose a lot of worms.
And sometimes those worms aren't cheap!
Here's what a smart marketer does.
1 - Test
Test a variety of bait at different places in the river. You may never know what markets are there
unless you go looking for them. Don't assume that there's only one type of fish in there just because
that's all you've ever seen. Maybe you're using the wrong bait, or you're fishing in the wrong place.
2 - Be Scientific
Measure the returns you get from every campaign. Figure out what gets you the most traffic most
cheaply.
You can show any balance between the 3 value factors by simply rotating the triangle around its
central point. You can't have all 3 factors as high priority.
Let's see how you might use the Value Triangle in practice.
5. Headline on promotional ad
a) "Save the Pixel"
b) "Make Better Web Pages!"
Unless you walk through your own websites, or watch other people try to do it, you may never
know if there are bits of your bridge missing. It doesn't matter how far people get, unless they can
successfully take the action you want them to take at the end.
Want to know where you're probably wasting the most money, and - more importantly - what you
can do about it?
The new discipline of conversion optimisation is all about getting more people who visit your
website to take some action you want them to take.
I have been researching and testing what works for over 2 years now. And here's one tip I think
you'll find useful.
Ben