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How to Lose Your Website Visitors in 2 Seconds Flat
Does your website actually invite people to WALK AWAY?
Find out now. Following on from 10 Deadly Sins – 1, Patricia invites you to check below and see if you are in line with any of these further deadly traffic killers …
- “What’s This All About?” People coming to your site are visitors, and should be treated with respect – especially if you want them to stay and look closer.
- Don’t land people on a page that leaves them guessing what your site is about – worse still, wondering if they’ve come to the right place! Remember the itchy mouse finger… I have seen trendy, professionally designed sites (some of them actually designers’ websites) that were so trendy and cryptic you really couldn’t figure them out.
- The part of your page above the top fold is crucial – use the images and text located there to identify immediately who you are and what the purpose of your site is.
- Navigation Not Simple and Consistent. Make every effort to keep your site navigation simple and logical. You, the site owner, are the one with all the knowledge about your business and what your site has to offer. The success of your website depends on showing that to visitors logically, simply, and as quickly as possible.
- Put yourself in the visitor’s shoes. Work out beforehand the major areas of your site and think of your navigation as a hierarchy – because that’s exactly how it needs to be structured.
- Draw a diagram to help work it out.
- Visitors have their own needs in mind first and foremost – that’s why they come : to find information or products to help with a problem. Think in those terms and figure out their main areas of need.
For example, with a Travel site you might have “Booking Travel”, ”Places to Visit”, “Travelers’ Reviews” as your main headings – to which you need to add the basic elements like “Home”, “About Us”, ”Contact Us”, “FAQ”, “Privacy Policy” and “TOS”. Then below your main headings you can start to flesh out more navigation details. So under ”Booking Travel”, your first category links might be “By Air”, “By Rail”, “By Sea” etc. Under ”Places To Visit” you might add worldwide and/or local destinations, with countries as the first level and places within countries below.
The whole thing should use straightforward, simple terms and follow a definite logic that leads your visitors straight to what they want. The more they have to search around trying to find it, the less likely they are to stay – or return.DHTML drop-down menus are an good way of organizing navigation, and they create a consistent, site-wide navigation system that can be very simply changed by altering one file. There is a neat little free script for one of these menus HERE.
One last thing – don’t ever leave a visitor on a page without navigation options. Believe it or not, I’ve seen this from time to time. People can land on any of your pages literally out of the blue from a search. Make sure you don’t lose this organic traffic. - Clickability and the Guessing Game. Allied to site navigation is the whole issue of what is and is not meant to be clicked. Leave your visitors guessing over this one at your peril – and unfortunately, here’s another trend that professional website designers are responsible for.
It is apparently no longer “cool” to have your text links underlined. OK – but if you are going to go that route, you’d better make sure your visitors have some way (other than running their mouse over everything) of knowing pretty quickly what they can and should click. Why make it a guessing game? Yet right now, it’s also not “cool” to identify your links by using a color that stands out clearly from the rest of the text (you’ll note this blog sticks with tradition). And if rollovers are used, the color change under present trends is minimal.
What’s up? It seems to me even less “cool” to thwart your own navigation and leave your visitors guessing. They won’t guess for long, they’ll GO. - Failing to Identify Your Own Priorities. If you as the website owner are not sure about what you want people to do on your site, don’t be surprised if they are not sure either. As a consequence they will leave in search of a more satisfying experience : feeling powerless or uncertain is not something any of us enjoy.
- Break your pages up into clearly-defined areas and make sure the layout of these areas leads the visitor’s eye to the most important things you want them to know or do. Your name, logo and tagline should be at the top.
- Use font styles and sizes, and images, to underscore the importance of the main things you want to say. Notice how on this blog, for example, the use of the font style Georgia in the headings, along with font size, helps readers to quickly find the areas they want to see.
- Similarly, if you need to explain the steps needed for a desired outcome on your site, lay it out clearly and prominently, using icons or images with the text to identify processes.
- Long-Winded Site Copy. Copywriters seem to think that longer is better (does this relate to $$$ I wonder?) – as do many gurus. Internet users are expected to scroll mile-long sales pages with paragraph after paragraph of supposedly persuasive text.
I personally think this is an insult to the visitor’s intelligence and a presumption on his time. Do they really think we read all that stuff? Do your visitors a favor, show them quickly and simply how your site or product can help them, and they’ll thank you for it by coming back for more. - “Following The Herd”, especially when it comes to sales page layouts. It’s great to be able to grab packages of sales and splash page templates, but they DO become boring after a while. I’ve gone to a number of sales pages recently all using the same shout-in-your-face red font heading, and I’ve muttered imprecations and clicked away immediately.
If you are serious about your business, take the time to learn a little HTML so you can modify the template beyond just inserting your own ad copy. Being different will help you stand out from the crowd and help pique your visitor’s interest to stay and explore further. I’ll add more about this later
I hope these 2 posts provide some food for thought. Website Design involves a lot of common-sense principles that are not hard to see once they are pointed out. The key is to put yourself in the visitor’s shoes every time.
I’ll be posting more website design tips soon.
Patricia







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