creative branding & marketing

Web design, graphic design, SEO, SEM and creative brand strategy thoughts to help you gain market share authored by the Metropolis Creative team and industry leaders.
8/3/09
4 Ways to Increase the Time Users Spend on Your Site
increase time users spend on your siteIf you have an online business and a corresponding website, you’ve likely had to address user engagement at some point, and if you haven’t, it is time to start. While getting traffic to your site is crucial, if users don’t stick around once they arrive, they are unlikely to convert into customers or sales, so make them stay.

Here are four ways to maximize the time users spend on your site. Address these factors and you are likely to see an increase in user engagement and conversions!

1. Make your site welcoming and easy-to-use

With the number of distractions, not to mention websites, vying for users’ attention, it is important to make sure your site is welcoming and easy-to-use.

Many of us have arrived at a website and noticed it makes us feel calm and comfortable. The website is inviting in some way and makes us want to stick around and explore. Try to think of a website design that makes you feel this way and take note of the qualities that stand out on your next visit.
This ‘sticky’ quality to some websites is a big part of ease-of-use, but there are more tangible aspects of your website that contribute to a carefree user experience. Things like a speedy site load time, uncluttered and logical navigation, and reader-friendly formatting of your website copy that includes headings to break up important points in your text and bolded keywords to direct users attention will make users feel at home on your site and encourage them to spend time looking around at what you have to offer.

2. Give users clear calls to action

If you want people to stick around, tell them what to do. When a user visits your site, they need more than a quick load time and welcoming interface design. They need direction.

Use clear and prominent calls to action to tell users what to do next, whether that is to read more about your company, check out your blog, try your product, or fill out a form. Be sure your calls to action are strategically placed on your site in areas where the eye tends to gravitate. Use call to action buttons when it makes sense, and design them to grab attention without making them garish. Finally, avoid overwhelming your user with conflicting calls to action. It is okay to repeat a call to action on an individual web page and at times it makes sense to give your visitors an option, but if you give them too many, you’re taking a risk that they glaze over and move on.

3. Educate users with articles, case studies, eBooks, and white papers

Users want information. They want to be educated. If the primary goal of your site is to inform, educational content specific to your business is an obvious inclusion, but the same is useful if your goal is sales, and to get a sale you need a user to stick around.

Add value to your site by educating your users and you will not only increase the amount of time they spend on your site, you will also help build brand credibility and activate the law of reciprocity, a powerful marketing principle popularized in the milestone book, The Psychology of Persuasion by Robert Cialdini.

The law of reciprocity states when you do something for or give something to someone, they are naturally inclined to repay the favor, and marketers have been employing this principle for ages. Give your user something of worth in the form of content and they will take the time to divulge it. Once they are through, they are likely to be more inclined to become a customer, request more information, or at least come back for a second visit. Either way, you win.

4. Keep your content fresh

No matter how useful your content is, it also must be fresh if you want repeat visitors and long-term user engagement. While an impressive white paper or comprehensive how-to guide will gain traction on its own via word-of-mouth draw new visitors to your site, if you want people to keep returning over time, always offer them something new.

Start a company blog and post 2-3 times per week, host a forum where experts can share industry tips and advice, or pull in RSS feeds from authoritative sites and blogs to give users a comprehensive look at the pulse of your industry. As long as your content is dynamic, engaging, entertaining, and/or useful, users will take the time to consume it, spread the word, and return for more.

Hope these tips help you improve the performance of your website. Good luck!

Amanda Moshier is the staff writer and editor at Wpromote, Inc., the #1 search marketing firm in the US as ranked by Inc. 500. For more information on PPC Management, SEO Management, or how to grow your small business online, please visit www.wpromote.com/. You can also connect with us at twitter.com/wpromote.

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2 Comments:

Anonymous Anna Goldsmith said...

Great article - thanks for posting. And yes, it's hard to underestimate the importance of a great Web presence. As your writer points out, "great" is not always flashy bells and whistles. In fact, in our age of sensory overload that is almost never the right approach.

From our experience, people really appreciate a clean, easy-to- navigate site above all else. This goes for the design as well as the copy. For example, just like you don't want flashing offers, you don't want to overstuff your copy with jargon and corporate speak.

Keep it simple and they will come ....

August 10, 2009 2:03 PM  
Anonymous Search Engine Placement Services said...

I know for me, the easy to use website is what keeps me on longer than a few seconds. The second I start to feel irritated that I can't find something, I move on to another site.

August 14, 2009 1:15 PM  






3/9/09
How Much Is Your Web Design Hurting Your Business?
Web design monsterThere are over 182 Million web sites out there according to Netcraft. So what makes your site findable, usable, and effective? A good web site design should have three basic things on every page: search engine optimization, a good user interface, and a strong call to action. If your web site doesn't focus on these things, your target audience will just move on, or not find you at all.

Search Engine Optimization
This is a huge topic, but I'll talk about some web design basics.
  1. You need a list of key phrases. If you are a web design company, "web", "design", and "company" are horrible keywords. But "web design company" is a good one. Think about key phrases as opposed to words. Include your city in there as well. The more keywords you can come up with, the better.

  2. Target the keywords to your pages. You can't effectively target more than 5 keywords per page. Three is a better number. Start with the page title bar. Use your keywords there, and then in the copy of the page. Links using keywords are great, too. Instead of saying "See our web design work here" use "See our web design work here". Lastly, take a look at your copy, and see where you can inject your keywords more often. You need to balance effective communication with adding additional keywords, but it's usually not that hard, just time consuming.

  3. Code the site correctly. A good web designer will use HTML searchable text, not text in a graphic. True, you can't get too crazy with fonts this way, but findability is more important than how it looks. And there's a lot you can do with HTML fonts anyway. Images should always have ALT tags, with keyword-rich descriptions. Headlines using tags hold more weight then body text. And if you can get keywords into the actual file names, that's even better.

A good User Interface
This obviously starts with an easily understood nav bar.
  • Navigation is expected either on the top or the left side of the page. If you deviate from that, it will be harder to find. Don't forget that most web surfers are still a bit technically challenged.

  • Keep the navigation options to the minimum. The more options you give someone, the harder it is to choose

  • Buttons should look like buttons. And if it isn't a button, then don't make it look like one. (Sounds simple I know, but we've all clicked away on that thumbnail image waiting for it to do something... waiting... grr — not a button.)

  • Wording on the buttons needs to be obvious. Don't put product names on buttons. They make sense to you, but not to your visitors. Also, don't get cute with titles like "The Team" and "Home Runs." What does "Home Runs" mean anyway?

  • Don't forget that the user interface includes proper labeling of areas of the page, including the name of the section that you're actually in. A depressed button usually isn't enough to tell you where you are.

A Strong Call to Action
What's the point of your web site? Is it for lead generation? Or are you selling a product? There should always be a call to action on every page if you can. The top right column is ideal for this for a couple of reasons. It's usually space that's available, and it's where people expect to see an important announcement. Make your call to action prominent, and you'll see an increase in action.

What's interesting, is that all of these things can usually be done to a web site without requiring a complete redesign. If you'd like an analysis of your site's effectiveness, post a comment below and we'll check it out!

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1 Comments:

Anonymous Justin Barton said...

Thanks for the informative post Michael. As far as SEO goes, keywords are only part of the equation. Another big piece is filling the page with content that your visitors will want to share and link to. I cover this idea in-depth in a series of posts I recently wrote on optimizing your website for demand generation if you're interested in linking up.

I totally agree with you about usability and calls-to-action. I'm surprised how often a client will be fully vested in redesigning their website without ever considering what the main purpose of their site should be.

March 16, 2009 11:33 PM