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Your Business Website – Plain and Simple
By: Alyce Chiles

 

 
A good business website makes money. Plain and simple. That same

term should be applied to the description of your site. While bells

and whistles might be fun for you, your paying customers don’t want

to spend time wading through them. They want to come to your site,

easily find what they seek, and pay you. That’s what you want as

well.

Front page – The First Impression

As the adage goes, you only get one chance to make a first

impression; so make it good. Your customers should know within 10

seconds what your site is about.

Do:

* Let your customers know who you are and what you do. Provide your

company name and brief description of services. The front page

should be short and concise. Visitors want to see immediately if you

offer the product or service they seek. If they don’t see it up

front, you’ll probably lose them. Let the sub-pages of your site

take care of the details.

Don’t:

* Have a “splash page”. A splash page is all looks, no substance.

It annoys busy customer s by forcing on them an extra click to

access your site.

Sub-pages and Content

These are where you provide details to your customers – pricing,

samples, company information, etc.

Do:

* Create a sub-page for each category – all linked from your menu.

* Carry the design and layout from the front page throughout all

sub-pages of your site. Continuity makes for ease of use and

professional appearance. The header should be the same on each

page, the menu in the same location on each page, and the general

layout the same.

* Direct your content to your audience. Whether you sell siding,

copy-writing services, or investment advice, make sure your content

is specific to people who would buy what you offer. Keep your

content up to date.

Don’t:

* Have long, rambling blocks of copy on your sub-pages. While this

is the place for providing more detail to your customers, they are

still going to be “scanning” for the info they seek. Make your copy

explanatory and tight.

* Have typos on your pages! Spelling and grammar are important for

a professional and polished impression.

Navigation

Ease of navigation is extremely important. If your customers have

trouble getting around your site, they’ll go somewhere else.

Do:

* Have a “home” button as part of your menu so your visitors can

easily get back to your front page. It’s amazing how many people

forget the simple “home” button, forcing visitors to use the back

button several times or retype the main URL.

* Have each main category clearly listed on your menu. Your

customers should ideally not have to use the browser’s back button.

If they were looking at your prices 3 pages ago, and want to see

them again, they should be able to get there in one click from the

menu.

Don’t:

* Use mystery navigation. Have you ever seen a menu of pictures

where you had to guess what they might mean or mouse-over for the

description to appear? Business customers don’t want to play with

mouse-overs. They want to see the menu items clearly spelled out –

Home – Products – Services – Contact – About Us – Etc.

* Have a mile long menu. If you have a tremendous amount of

content, it is fine to have sub-menus on each category’s main page.

Just make it logical so visitors will easily find what they seek.

Site Look and Feel

Your site should be pleasing to the eye. Avoid clashing colors and

flashing objects. You want your visitors to feel comfortable at

your site, not recoil in ocular pain.

Do:

* Use colors that complement each other. Choose just a few that

look good together and use them throughout your site.

* Use a few subtle, relevant graphics on your site. They help break

up the text and make the page nicer to view.

* Use easy to read, standard fonts such as Arial or Helvetica. If

you select a font that is too stylized it will make your site

difficult to read. Font size? 10-12 pts is generally safe. Not

too big, not too small.

Don’t:

* Use neon green text on a black background or anything remotely

similar. This is visually painful and screams amateur.

* Have too many animations on your site. One or two subtle animated

gif images are fine to draw your customers’ attention to a

particular item. Don’t make them feel they’ve stumbled into a

virtual carnival midway. They’ll leave. I promise.

* Use heavy 3D or deeply beveled images. A small drop shadow or

tiny bevel is acceptable as long as you don’t put it on everything -

use sparingly.

* Use heavily textured or multi-colored backgrounds. A busy

background makes text difficult to read and, more often than not,

makes the page look amateurish.

Final Polish

* Never have a visible counter on your business website. Did I

mention never? A counter is at the top of the list for identifying

an amateur website. Use a web stats program or invisible counter to

track visits.

* Do not use the terms “under construction” or “coming soon” on your

site. These are off-putting and frustrating to site visitors.

* Do not embed music files in your page. These make the page load

slowly and annoy the customer.

* Avoid placing too many outside ads on your site. You should have

more content than advertisements.

* Test your links! Broken links avert customers.

A subtle, easy to use, professional-looking website breeds trust in

your customers. You look dependable and responsible. People will

buy if they feel safe. Plain and simple.


About the author:
Alyce is a freelance writer specializing in short articles for

print, fillers, and web content. Hobbies, for those interested,

include reading and vintage guitars. For more info visit her website

at http://AlyceChiles.com


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