Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Website Design Tips for Any Business Owner - Simple but Powerful Tips

Your business’ website is everything. So how do you make sure it’s designed to perform its primary duty? LEENTECH Network Solutions, Inc.knows the answer. Let’s find it out in this article.




Whether you’re designing your own website from scratch, using an off-the-shelf theme, or hiring a designer to create your website, you’ll need to end up in the same place: with a website that performs for your business.

Your website is often the first contact people have with you and your business. That means it’s a make-or-break opportunity to turn a new visitor into a potential customer down the road.

Here are some tips which you can use when designing (or redesigning) your website to maximize the impact it has on new visitors.

1. Focus on value. I don’t have to tell you that a great business is built on a strong value plan. That is, why should customers care about your product or service, and how does it provide them with a return on their investment. Also, your content should speak as if you’re talking to one person, not a crowd of people. This helps you make a connection that builds trust and credibility.

2. Minimize distractions. One thing you never want a visitor to ask is, “Where do I go next?” If there are multiple calls to action, or the navigation has too many links to choose from, their attention is diverted in too many different directions. This means they’re too busy figuring out where to go, when they should be focused on your message and the benefits of your product or service. For that reason, you should break your navigation into a primary menu and a secondary one. Your primary navigation (the large one near the top of your website) should include links to only a handful of “mission critical” pages. These are the pages that educate and sell your product.

3. Optimize your call to actions. Everything on your marketing website should be designed around your “funnel.” That is, the path a customer takes from the home page (or a landing page) to eventually converting to a paying customer or subscriber.

The bottom of the funnel is your “call to action.” This might be a button to purchase your product or signup for an account. Or it can be a newsletter opt-in or even a phone number to call you.

As regards optimization, here are three easy ways to do it for the call-to-action on your website:

1. Be explicit. You never want to be unclear in your call-to-action. Give your visitor clear and plain instructions on what exactly you want them to do. You also want to set clear expectations. Your visitor should never be wondering “what will happen after I click this button?” For example, instead of “sign up!”, you can try “Start your free 60-day trial!”

2. Reduce Friction. Any transaction on the web always comes with some natural resistance. Customers simply are never fully comfortable entering their credit card information or even giving up their email address. There is always a fear of being ripped off, spammed, or scammed. You also want to make them feel secure. There is a very real fear that credit card info will end up in the wrong hands. So try adding security symbols like a lock icon on your credit card forms, indicating this form is secure (of course, the form must actually have security measures in place, like an SSL certificate).

3. Differentiate them (visually). You’ll want to make sure your call-to-actions stand out visually. One way you can do that is to give them their own unique color. For example, let’s say the color scheme of your website is blue and gray. You might make all of your call-to-action buttons yellow. Make sure your CTA buttons are the only elements on the page using that color. This helps them stand out and attract attention, but it also helps your audience become more familiar with the way your site works. After browsing several pages, when they are ready to take action, they know they should look for that yellow button.

I hope you found these tips helpful as you go about designing (or redesigning) the marketing website for your business.

2 comments:

  1. This article is easy to understand, particularly for those who wanted their website designed. It is simple yet very informative.

    ReplyDelete