| 5 Sure Fire Ways To Send Visitors
Away For Good
by Mike Cheney ©Copyright 2004
So your traffic is going through the roof yeah? It's all becoming
a bit too much? You're getting lots of sales enquiries through
your website every day? You want to send visitors away from
your site for good? Just follow these five Sure Fire Ways and
your site will be a tumbleweed ghost town in no time.
Way No. 1 - Clog Up Their Internet Connection
Imagine it. They're happily surfing around on Google looking
for your 'widget' and everything's going smoothly. Your website
appears in the first page listings (congratulations you must
have employed magnet4web or another highly-esteemed website
marketing company!) and they click through to you. Then their
internet connection starts to clog up. It is positively groaning
and creaking under the strain of downloading your homepage which
has so many images it takes over 30 seconds to appear. They
look at the progress bar at the bottom of their screen. It reads
'20%'. They look at their watch and then click on the little
'X' at the top right of their screen. Well done - you've just
sent away a visitor - for good.
Way No. 2 - 'I am not a Number - I am a free Man'
Along come some more visitors. They lick their lips in anticipation
of viewing your widgets which they are very interested in buying
- they have their credit card handy.
They land on your homepage and all is well, at first. "The
benefits of choosing Widgets Inc. are as follows..." Your
homepage is laden with customer-focused benefits and selling
points - excellent. But wait a minute. What's that at the bottom
of the page? It's not what I think it is, is it? Oh dear, there
in black and white is one of the fundamental no-nos in web design
that is guaranteed to send the message "This website was
built by my dog":
"Welcome - you are visitor number 102"
Regardless of the number (and let's face it 80% are either
you or your family!) you will be sending away people in droves.
Well done - your site is becoming less busy by the day. Let's
move on to way number three..
Way No. 3 - "Help me Buy from You - Please..."
They're lost. You have built the site around what seems a logical
approach but your visitors are lost. You've given most prominence
to testimonials but they just want to send you an email. They
click on three, four and sometimes five pages but can't find
your phone number or email address anywhere. But it's okay -
of course they have a spare quarter of an hour to hunt through
your website (that doesn't have a site map) to find your contact
details when they already have another window open with your
competitor's website - complete with email address, phone number,
fax number, street address, mobile number, map and GPS coordinates..
Yes - you've guessed it - you're one step closer to that ghost-town..
Way No. 4 - 'Please Let Me Watch Intro'
Yes, admit it - you once thought the best thing on the planet
was a website that started up by having a revolving animation
of the company logo that exploded, spin round a bit to an 80s
sounding techno tune and then re-constitute itself in the centre
of the screen with the immortal words:
"Click here to enter site"
Strange that - "enter site". That's what all your
visitors were trying to do when they typed in your web address
or clicked on your link but instead they were faced with Jean
Michelle Jarre and some possessed bit of code that replicated
the effect of
someone regurgitating your business' corporate identity over
the screen. Nice. Flash intro = trash intro. Use em (the intros)
and lose em (the visitors).
Way No. 5 -"I am five years' old - I like things
that flash"
One day in the future a law will be passed that will make it
illegal to use scrolling text, flashing images, rotating heads,
animated animals and bouncing cursors on a website. Your website
is here to do business. It is supposed to be a serious tool
in
your marketing armoury. It should be used to convey useful information
to your visitors and convince them that you are worth doing
business with. Dress it up with flashing icons, swirling graphics,
flashing logos and spinning pictures and the merry-go of visual
delights will just make your visitors sick. They will leave
your glitzy fairground never to return.
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