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Thursday, April 2, 2009

Top 5 Signs That Your Website Sucks

Small business owners may not have the resources to invest heavily in their web presence and finding solutions to problems can be like finding a needle in a haystack. You know something's wrong but don't have the faintest idea how to fix it. Is it a technical issue? Are your ads not performing well? Don't know what kind of traffic you're getting? Website problems can fall into a myriad of categories. So if you think your website sucks, a) it probably does, and b) you should read on.


1. You Aren't Getting Traffic

You're excited about the big, expensive job the design team just finished on your site. It looks like a million bucks! Well it's a shame it isn't making you a darn cent. Just because it exists doesn't mean people know about it. Announce it to the world by submitting it to reputable directories and sharing your useful content with others on social bookmarking sites (you do have useful content, don't you? If not, I'll cover this later). You can even do some link exchanges -- provided the sites you exchange with are reputable -- just to get your site crawled early on. Further optimize it for search engines by following good SEO practices, building quality content and generating inbound links from other sites. Once you do that, you'll need to monitor progress with web analytics software. Google Analytics is free and it has a slick interface. And we know you like pretty things seeing as how you broke the bank on your web site design.

If you're looking for high ROI, invest your own time in learning search engine marketing. Better yet hire a qualified SEO firm if you have the budget for it. Don't settle for quick-fix promotional ideas. Build long-term exposure and a solid reputation by attaining high rankings, keeping email/newsletter lists, targeted ad placement and social media participation.


2. You Have Worthless Content

What defines worthless content? Without knowing what topic your web site covers it's tough to say, but if you have nothing that sets you apart from your top competitors then I'd say you aren't in good shape. If you don't know what kind of content people are looking for on the Internet today, take a peek at what's popular on social bookmarking sites. Observe some of the story titles on the front page of Digg.com:

"Guinness Stout Beef Stew Recipe for St. Patrick’s Day"
"In Move to Digital TV, Confusion Is in the Air"
"Kim Jong-Il Interprets Sunrise As Act Of War"
"Automatic bacon dispenser?"
"The 5 Best Obama Photomosaics on Flickr"

Words I would use to describe these topics, in order, are: seasonal, informative, satirical, comical, and trendy. This information is popular because it's appealing in its uniqueness and is relevant to today's market. To set yourself apart from your competition, you need to get creative. If you're the kind of person who had trouble painting by numbers, then hire someone creative. Professional copy writers can be well worth the investment. Create free tools your customers will want to use; write funny or interesting commentary in a blog about your industry; put a new spin on a traditional product or service or offer seasonal discounts. Create a comprehensive F.A.Q. on your site that covers topics your competitors don't.

Take the time to beef up your content. Be innovative - don't be afraid to think outside the box. Use the top competitor in your field as a measuring stick.


3. You Have No Call-to-Action

Poor promotional language can have a sabotaging effect if visitors aren't drawn to your conversion pages. A conversion page is any page that acts as the final step in a visitor submitting a form, making direct contact or purchasing a product online. Obscuring those pages or confusing the visitor on where to go next can make them leave your site. Internet users have a short attention span - give them a clear direction when navigating your web site.

Use your web analytics software again to find out what pages visitors are landing on first. If your home page gets the most traffic, make sure there are clear links to your sub-topics. If inner pages are your most popular landing pages, find out if the traffic is targeted. Once you know the type of visitor and the specific page they land on, then you can start marketing your content more accurately.

The bottom line is to always make clear why, and how, visitors can buy your product. Don't get too cute with multiple steps, options or convoluted language.


4. You're Getting Traffic But No Sales

Are you sure the traffic is relevant? If you're running a pay-per-click campaign, ensure your ads are geo-targeted properly and your ad text or landing pages appeal to your customers. For organic search engine placement, have you done keyword research and analysis before optimizing your content? Look at your web stats and see where your visitors are coming from. What keywords were they searching for when they landed on your site? Are the referring sites relevant to your industry or topic? How much time does the visitor spend on each page? Sales won't come if your visitors aren't interested in what you're selling. This is why preliminary keyword analysis is so important to search engine marketing.

If you're running ads it's always good practice to experiment with different ad campaigns. If you put all your eggs in one basket you run the risk of losing out on potential revenue. Elements of your ads that you can change are:

- ad text
- landing page
- specific network your ads are shown across
- topics on which you focus the campaign
- geo-locations targeted

Remember, it doesn't pay to skimp on initial product/market research and analysis.


5. You're Getting Relevant Traffic But No Sales

This problem could signal a technical error or navigation problem with your site. Make sure you thoroughly test all functionalities on various web browsers and systems. Submit test forms. Do a link check to spot possible broken links. Is your web hosting service reliable?

If you've ruled out technical issues as the cause then turn your attention to the content and customer base. Has your market taken a downturn? Can the lack of sales be attributed to the poor economy? Have you fallen behind your competition in product quality, selection or pricing? Does your web site's navigation system confuse users? Your web site is the first line of contact between the business and potential customer, but it's not the only step you need to worry about. Telephone operators or online payment systems can present their own issues.

This is moving away from web site problems but if any part of the sales process takes place away from the site, investigate those areas of your business as well.

If you're pulling out your hair over a problem with your site and these tips still haven't helped, feel free to post a comment and I'll personally have a peek at your site.

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19 Comments:

At April 22, 2009 , Blogger ecotist said...

We have a new site BuildingDIY for DIY and pro builders, emphasising green technologies. It has a vast amount of information, but not a lot of traffic yet! Early days as we are adding new things all the time.
Please have a quick look at

http://BuildingDIY.com

and let me know any comments, many thanks >>>

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger Kim Aron said...

Hi John!

Thanks for great tips!

I'm pretty new at I.M, but I've been working a great deal on the following site:

http://howdoigetmyexboyfriendback.org

I have done my keyword research and the site is getting targeted traffic (about 50-60 visitors a day), but no sales yet.

Hope you can take a look at it. What do you think I should do?

Kind regards,
Kim

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger Big Splash Web Design said...

Great article. The part early early on about announcing your site to the world really highlights the fact that no matter how great your site is, no one will visit if they don't know it exists. Too often people assume that a fancy site will automatically bring in the traffic. That's just the first step and, of course, fancy without meaningful content is just wasted time and money.

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger I am the Princess said...

could you please take a look at my website.
We were doing great until this week.
We did some re-designing and adding security badges in the check out.
and then our business went down fast.
thank you
www.iamtheprincess.com

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger A Week In The Life of A Redhead said...

John,
We are interested in your thoughts about our blog, 8 Women Dream. I am teaching 7 other women how to blog (yes I am crazy) so they can tell their dream story. We have some traffic, but people aren't commenting. I am trying to figure out if it is how we are writing, the content, or the blog itself. I receive the Site Pro News newsletters and saw your offer to take a peek at your readers site ... would you come take a peek at ours?
Thank you.
Catherine
http://www.8womendream.com

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger Minsky1 said...

Hi John,

Please feel free to take a quick peek and my site and let me have any comments.

http://www.software-dynamics.co.uk

We are an IBM business partner specialising in pSeries Enterprise class systems, we dont get a very high click to sales ratio, maybe you can help?

Regards
Chris

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger John said...

@ ecotist

We love green technology at FreshPromo so here's wishing you all the best in your endeavors :)

Great job on the free content - by covering a topic thoroughly, you're not only telling the search engines this is a great resource, you're presenting helpful content that will keep visitors on the site and generate repeat traffic.

Does the eco-friendly construction community have authoritative newsletters? (like SiteProNews is to the Internet Marketing community) Some sites look for unique content and well-written articles. There may be opportunities for you to submit your articles and get some free traffic that way. It's also effective in generating a solid reputation on your topic.

A final suggestion would be to organize the links on the left into sub-categories instead of having the long list. Makes it easier for people to find what they want so they don't have to read for too long. Internet users are lazy!

Good luck and have a read at another article of mine for more SEO prep tips - http://www.freshpromo.ca/2008/11/5-steps-to-prepare-your-site-for-seo.html

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger ecotist said...

Thanks John. We used to build eco houses before the Credit *** hence the ebook.
The long left nav is a bit unfriendly, I will rearrange into 'sections' by topic, but the idea is to let people browse then decide to get the actual book, which is a lot easier to navigate as it is a pdf. We also want people to click on those nice google ads...
I will let you know when we update; we are adding a Newsletter and a Twitter feed pretty soon.
Also some vids. Have a look it changes daily.

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger John said...

@ Kim Aron

Thanks, glad you enjoyed the article, Kim! Have you started marketing the site using social media? Twitter, StumbleUpon and other social bookmarking and community sites really help to generate interest in your content. It can take a while for a new domain to get trusted in Google and rise in the rankings for competitive keywords.

Have you thought about starting a Facebook group with the same topic as your site?


@ Princess

Did any file names change for the pages during re-design? For example, if Cribs-and-Crib-sets.htm used to be a different URL and ranked well in the search engines, changing it would have orphaned the old page. You'd have to setup some redirects to let search engines know what the new page names are.

Many times a re-design can cause a temporary drop in rankings. It's frustrating but if the same content is there now that was there previously, rankings will come back. If much of your business was done from search engine referrals this can be very noticeable.

In the meantime I'd make sure that there are no technical errors in the sales process and continue to generate new inbound links. I assume you've done the keyword research to find out the exact phrases that your potential customers are searching for?


@ Catherine,

I think you're doing a lot good things with the blog such as having a link so others can follow you on Twitter, and keeping the posts relatively short and to the point.

Do you look at your traffic stats in Google Analytics often? It's important to see where your visitors are coming from (ie. search engines, other blogs, etc.) to get an idea of how relevant that traffic is. Again, keyword research is important. It can help focus you on a particular keyword or phrase that people search for when creating a title for your new posts. It can even give you ideas for what to write about in the first place! This is a basic SEO tactic for static sites, but can be useful for blogs as well. Give the people what they want!

That said, you may be doing all the right things already but just not getting enough readers. I might get 200 clicks on one of my blog posts in a day and I may not get a single comment. Most people come to read and that's it.

It looks like your blog has only been around since October. If you continue to use SEO tactics and participate in social media, I'm certain you'll see more comments over time.


@ Chris

Where is your current traffic coming from? If you're trying to target Google searches (my specialty) then there are some SEO methods that need to be used on your site.

First up, the title tags on every page should be unique and reflect the specific topic. On your Oracle Database Services page, for instance, that phrase should be put in the title.

Your site is professional looking and organized well, so I doubt it's a case of users leaving due to problems with the content. My guess is that the traffic isn't targeted enough. Plug in some of your main keywords into http://freekeywords.wordtracker.com/ - the top phrases (the more general ones) are the most competitive. Depending on your budget for marketing (or your own time if you're doing this yourself) it may make sense to look at the niche, long-tail keywords and use them in your web content.

Of course, no SEO campaign is complete without generating inbound links on an ongoing basis.

If you have any further questions or are interested in our professional SEO services, I'd be happy to help out.

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger John said...

@ ecotist

The newsletter and Twitter are great ideas and reaching out to your market in a pro-active manner is never a bad idea. Have you considered adding a search function to your site? With so much info there, sure some people will take the time to browse, but many want what they're looking for quicker. Have a look at www.google.com/sitesearch/ and see if you think it might help.

I'll be sure to check back in again.

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger thisguybc said...

Greetings,
I have a site called makemoneybasics.com I get around 150 to 200 visitors per day but not one sale. After reading your post 5 reasons your website sucks I thought I would take you up on your offer to look at my site. Any feedback good or bad while constructive is greatly appreciated. Thank you in advance for your time and expertise.
Regards,
Robb Jensen
http://wwww.makemoneybasics.com
thisguybc@gmail.com

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger Brock said...

John, please take a look at my website www.squigglefly.com and tell me what I can do to make more conversions. Decent traffic but very low conversions. Help!!

 
At April 22, 2009 , Blogger Maggie said...

John:
I would luv to see your perspective, we have a niche blog catering to a specific reader.
Http://cuttlebugchallenge.blogspot.com
I'm open to suggestions that improve us :)
Thanks for the feedback.
Maggie

 
At April 23, 2009 , Blogger ecotist said...

Thanks btw for these comments.

We had some content on Hubpages, Squidoo and EzineArtciles, EA was the best, but we got mixed up with repeat content when we put same also on our website. Google thought we'd stolen it (from ourselves). But new content can go on these sites, they have such big traffic can be good.

Search: I think Google charge, will wait till we are bit busier.

 
At April 23, 2009 , Blogger John said...

@ Robb Jensen

I have to admit that I'm not familiar with conversion rates or general success with 'make money quick' sites. But in general, Google Analytics should tell you a lot about your visitors. Where they're coming from, how long they stay on your site - if you're getting hits from Google for searches like 'make money online' then this kind of traffic should eventually create some sales for you. If, for example, you do email marketing to a wide range of users, the conversion rates will naturally be very low and 200 hits a day might not produce any sales. Doesn't mean there's anything wrong with your site, it just means the right people aren't seeing it.

One issue stopping you from maximizing the site's search engine ranking potential is that there is only one page - the home page. The other content you have is hosted on a separate domain. The trust factor and link popularity of makemoneybasics.com is not strong. So just make sure you're not cutting your efforts in half by focusing on two domains instead of just one.

Just my personal preference, but the hand-drawn lines around parts of text on the ProfitLance.com order page detracts a bit from the professionalism. If they're on that page I'm sure they won't have trouble reading the red text and finding the form.

Thanks for reading my article. All the best!

 
At April 23, 2009 , Blogger John said...

@ Brock

Where is your traffic coming from and what are your most popular landing pages? It could just be that most of the traffic isn't relevant. Do you think much of your traffic is interested in digital scrapbooking? (or perhaps it's mostly traditional stamps they're looking for)

What is the average time spent on the image gallery page? Sometimes organizing a high number of individual products by categories instead of having a long list can give visitors what they're looking for faster.

If you're interested in starting a dialogue about your site, please feel free to contact me directly from the FreshPromo contact link at the top of the page.


@ Maggie

If you're looking for targeted traffic from search engines then there are a few things you can do to improve the blog.

Have a look at http://freekeywords.wordtracker.com/ and the free version of KeywordDiscovery.com to help find out what type of keywords and phrases people search for on your topic.

Page titles should accurately describe the content of the page and it's important to use the keywords you've found from the services above in those titles. Don't be afraid to ask owners of other related blogs to link back to yours. The more inbound links you have from relevant sources, the higher your link popularity will be - a large factor in determining search engine rankings.

If you're interested in any other facets of internet marketing, let me know and I'll be happy to comment further.


@ ecotist

Don't worry about Google and duplicate content. There is no penalty for it. They'll just ignore one of the dupe pages. You're right in that unique is always best. If you're trying to create content to generate inbound links from article sites, try finding the most reputable newsletters in your field and ask them to feature you. Reprint sites like EzineArticles can be alright, but nothing compared to more targeted placement in front of eyes that are interested specifically in your product.

 
At April 23, 2009 , Blogger thisguybc said...

Thanks for your feedback on my site make money basics. It gave me some things to look at and work on. I appreciate the time you took to view my site.
Regards,
Robb Jensen
www.makemoneybasics.com
thisguybc@gmail.com

 
At April 23, 2009 , Blogger thisguybc said...

Thank you also to ecotist and maggie for your feedback, resources and tips. I appreciate all the help I can get one day I will be able to help others as well.
Regards,
Robb Jensen
www.makemoneybasics.com
thisguybc@gmail.com

 
At May 31, 2009 , Blogger Jesse said...

Great tips!

Seattle wedding photography

 

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