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15 Website Elements
That Attract Visitors
Here is a quick list of
components that make a website attractive. They are listed in layers of
attractiveness beginning with the "must" haves, to "nice to haves."
1. State the website's purpose up front and clearly of the site. Do this
as quickly as possible. The visitor needs to know immediately if they
have landed on the right site. They also need to know "what’s in it for
me to stay here." If you don't provide this, they are gone. 90% of the
sites on the Net don't do this.
2. Give visitors the ability to search for exactly what they are looking
for, if they have something exact in mind. A "site search feature"
satisfies this best. Allow the search feature to be prominently
displayed and not hidden away somewhere. It is best place in the
navigational system so that it shows up on every page. Sales letter only
websites are an exception to this rule. Return visitors and visitors
that have something specifically in mind, want the option and ability to
find what they want fast. So give it to them.
3. Photos allow connection. Especially to people who process visually.
Clip art gets them to pay attention, however, it doesn't create much of
a connection. Personal photos connect within reason. Keep them less than
three to a page. One photo always needs to be in the top portion of the
screen on the first page. It doesn't need to be large, but attractive.
4. Ways to capture visitors information wherever possible.
5. Place items on the site that keep them lingering. Audio and video are
one of these, yet there are other less time consuming and inexpensive
ways to keep them entertained.
6. Articles. For solopreneur sites, your own written articles. For other
sites, articles with various authors yet on focus.
7. Interactive elements. For example: response forms, quizzes
8. If you use a shopping cart, it must be fluid, no hiccups. PayPal is
not a shopping cart, it’s a hiccup. All auto responders must be well
written and positive. If someone purchased something, they need the
energy of "thank you."
9. Give offers that are of value.
10. Clear path of where a newcomer can start if it is their first visit.
11. Newsletter that is consistent with the 80/20 rule. 80% value and 20%
marketing.
12. E-courses of value.
13. Well-written e-books: 50-75 pages, plus valuable information (info
not found anywhere else). Length doesn't do more than provide perceptive
value. Once purchased and the vastness is only fluff, then your
credibility is shot. Complimentary e-books meet the same requirements.
14. Give them other ways to receive more on...you if you are the
focus...or the information if that is the focus.
15. Automated referral system. If you want referrals for your products
or services, make it easy for you to get them. Set it up so it’s as
automatic as possible, and clear and easy for someone to send you a
referral. Be clear on what and how you want to give for that referral.
Catherine Franz is a Marketing & Writing Coach, niches, product
development, Internet marketing, nonfiction writing and training.
Additional Articles: http://www.abundancecenter.com blog: http://abundance.blogs.com
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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