Here are some points to help you gain more sales from your website.
Your website headline
What you have to offer a visitor on your website should be clearly stated on your home page. More often than not websites having a headline along the lines of ‘Welcome To My Website’. Much more effective is if your headline is based on what you have to offer the visitor – think, ‘what’s in it for them?’. You only have a few seconds to get the visitor’s attention so make sure you really place focus on enticing people into your website pages by having a headline that gets to the point and promotes your offer and services.
Say for example, you are a recruitment company in Wellington, your main headline should be based on your offering of helping people to find a job in Wellington.
Examples you could use might be:
- Wellington Recruitment Company
- A Specialised Recruitment Company That Helps People Who Want A New Job in Wellington
- Recruitment Specialist in Wellington
- Helping People To Find Jobs In Wellington
Not only will a headline like this instantly advise the visitor what your main offering is, it has a secondary benefit in that using words and phrases people will be searching with will help your website turn up in search engine results.
A good way to tell if this works is to test with new headlines to see if your website improves in leads, sales or customers with one headline over another.
Website content
The content within your website is key to creating not only more sales and leads, but what you have on your web pages can and will influence what keywords your website will be found for by search engines. Not only are you writing to entice people to buy or take action on your website, but your content is scanned by search engines so that they can rank you for certain keywords and phrases.
With this in mind, make sure the content you write about is relevant for both the end user and the search engines. The visitor to your site needs it to be clear and easy to understand, the search engines need relevant keywords and phrases they can pick up on to produce your website in a search result.
Testimonials / credibility
Testimonials can mean a lot to a small to medium sized business. Having that credibility factor is key to helping you grow your sales and customers. One of the best ways to add credibility is from your very own fan base. If you don’t have any testimonials go out and source some. Send your customers an email and ask them for feedback of your services You may like to offer a small incentive so that they are more inclined to do so.
Once you have sourced a few place them in all of your marketing documents. Get the word out that your services are highly favoured by many and that you actually do walk the talk. There are of course people who doctor up testimonials. To make your testimonials look and feel legitimate add a photo of the fan, a name, or even better the website link to their business along with a video from that fan…whatever the case start of by at least having some included in your website and all other Internet based documents.
Remember to ask your customers for feedback regularly, written if possible. The positive feedback can go on your website and other promotional material, and if there is any constructive criticism, use it to make your business even better.
Usability
Usability is a strange word that came about as websites became large and complex, not only from a managerial point of view but from a users perspective as well. When websites begin they are usually straightforward and simple to use. As time goes on and more products, services, links to third party sites are introduced, usability is critical to have sales and leads successfully generated on your site.
In the early days people believed your site shouldn’t be any deeper than three clicks away from making a sale or lead. Nowadays however after studies conducted it is the process that leads the end result that is more important than the number of clicks. Studies have shown that visitors to websites like to be guided (to have their hand held), and once you have this guidance in place it really doesn’t matter how many clicks.
So first of all make sure your visitors can surf around your site without having to second-guess what the next step is. Keep it simple. Give people a workflow and take them through the sales process step by step.
Website page names
One way to help your website increase its leads, sales and customers is obviously through search engines like Google. One of the biggest killers in this area for websites are page names. Make sure your page names are well formed with rich keyword terms, which will help in your pages being found. For example instead of having a page called /our-services, consider calling it /our-marketing-services. This way you are promoting your product offering as well as increasing the likelihood of being found for ‘marketing services’.
In this same vein, your website meta-description will aid your search engine listing if you place your websites main products and services within this area.
Call to action
Ok, so what is the ‘call to action? A call to action is a mechanism that you can have on your site to encourage visitors to act. Look to create page content that tells the user to take action either by clicking to another page, phoning your office number or contacting you for more information. Making sure your call to action clearly explains what the user will get by taking that next action will improve your response numbers. There are a few things that you can do to increase the response rates to your calls to action. Think about the use of colour to entice people in or use of space to make the next action more visible. Think about the position of where to place to the action request or just having the correct urgency of language like, ‘call now’, ‘buy today’, ’book quickly’, ‘register today’, ‘subscribe now’. Make these calls to action simple for the end user.
Contact from your website
Making contact with businesses these days is overlooked on many websites. While you might think that visitors can contact you from your contact page, think about placing your contact details into your overall website design to ensure you have the contact options throughout the site structure. That way people can chat, email, find your number and locate your business without any major work on their behalf. Look to use chat tools, for example Skype, Google Talk or even a professional chat system if you want to be able to log this chat activity so that you can see the interaction in a weekly report. There are many options available to select from.
Friction
Friction on your website is an area that makes people reconsider moving forward with you. It is either created by poor website design or by some other anxiety that is stimulated along the way. There are many ways to test for friction points on your website. One thing that I do often is to check where most people are leaving my websites. This quickly identifies areas for me to look at in more detail.
Say for example you notice a large percentage of your visitors are leaving your website at the checkout area. Look to see if there are things that need to be moved, removed or added to try to stop this from happening. For example it may be due to the large shipping costs, or due to the form on the checkout being too long, or that maybe the form is broken for some users so that they cannot purchase anything even if they have tried.
The next step would be to test separate elements on this page to see what changes if any make a difference to that area of your website. There are also companies that can offer you advice into friction points. Look at usertesting.com or userfly.com. They do cost money to report back to you but if you are selling your services and products from your website it might just be worth the cost of around $120.00 to get some testing for friction on your website.