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Is Your Web Site Too Hard?
By
Roger C. Parker
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Take the “Easy Test” to
see if your website is as visitor friendly as it should
be! Websites often fail to produce the desired results.
This can be because visitors find them too hard to
understand or navigate. Here are some potential usability
problems to avoid.
1.Hard to find
Is your website easy to locate? Do you promote it
everywhere, (i.e. business cards, invoices, envelopes,
etc.) and is your site search engine friendly? Do you
promote the benefits of visiting? Is your site address
easy to remember and easy to type? Does your url contain
easily misspelled words? Is it complicated by repeated
letters, i.e. “theentity?” Are there numbers, which
can cause confusion, i.e., “1shopping” or
“oneshopping?”
2.Hard to engage
Do you make it easy for visitors to understand why they
should read on?
You have only a few seconds to persuade visitors to begin
reading your message. Unless your home page immediately
provides an obvious “why buy from us?” benefit,
visitors are likely to leave—wasting the time and money
you spent attracting them to your site.
Home pages should begin with headline that immediately
communicates you are familiar with your visitor’s
problems and can help them achieve their goals.
Time-consuming animations, vapid “welcoming”
statements, and “brag and boast” claims, usually turn
visitors away.
3.Hard to decide
Do you make it easy for visitors to decide what to read
next? The best web sites have a clear and immediately
identifiable focus and sequence. Many home pages, however,
offer so many navigation options that visitors are
paralyzed and choose to leave.
Studies have shown that, if you offer grocery store
visitors an opportunity to sample 6 jams, 30% of customers
will eventually buy one. But, if you offer 16 samples,
response drops to 3%!
4.Hard to return
Do you make it easy for visitors to register for your
e-mail newsletter, so you can invite them to return?
Unless you obtain your visitor’s e-mail address and
permission to contact them in the future, you’ll
probably never see them again! Many web sites offer
visitors an opportunity to sign-up for their e-mail
newsletter, however, only a few offer a meaningful
incentive to sign-up. Without an incentive, without
showing or describing the benefits of registering, why
should visitors sign up? Most e-mail in-boxes are already
filled with unread newsletters!
5.Hard to read
Is your message easy to read? Easy reading is more
critical onscreen than in print. Problems that might be
overlooked on paper are critical online.
• Long lines of text are difficult to read and make it
easy for visitors to lose their place at the end of each
line. Limit line length to 2/3’ds the width of the
screen.
• Keep sentences and paragraphs short, and add extra
space between paragraphs.
• Frequent subheads break body copy into short,
bite-sized chunks. Each subhead “advertises” the
following text and provides an additional point for
visitors to begin reading your message.
6.Hard to print
Do you make it easy for visitors to print important
articles and descriptions?
Links to “printer friendly pages,” correct line-and
page breaks—add perceived value to your message and make
it easier to share and read your message offline.
You don’t need to offer a printer-friendly link of every
page, just key articles or important products or upcoming
events.
7.Hard to share
Do you make it easy for visitors to pass-along important
articles to others?
An “E-mail this to a friend or co-worker” link can
expose your message to others who may join your opt-in
e-mail list.
8.Hard to contact you
Do you make it easy for visitors to contact you? Do you
include full contact information on every page, i.e.
phone, fax, e-mail, and postal address? Avoid a single
“contact us” link that only loads the visitor’s
e-mail program. Give visitors multiple chances to call,
fax, or mail a letter!
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About
The Author
Roger
C. Parker knows the secrets to promoting
your business one page at a time. Find out
the simple way to keep in constant touch
with your customers, while saving you time
and money. Visit www.OnePageNewsletters.com
for your three free reports. |
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