80% of websites have adequate traffic to achieve their goals, they just don’t handle it well.
My last post was about the Internet Strategy Checklist my firm uses to “cover all the bases” with clients when brainstorming their Internet Strategies (albeit a useless list if I don’t already know the client’s audience, objectives and opportunities). The list is arranged with the most important Internet marketing strategy components first, from the perspective of priority and hierarchy of what needs to be done 1st. The 1st category on the list is Website Optimization.
Don’t Throw Money at a Bad Site
Without a website that can handle traffic, there is no sense of giving it any. So often companies get caught in the idea that sending more traffic to a site will result in more sales, and they are normally right, but not normally making profiting off of it the way they could be. The 1st thing we do for clients is audit their incoming traffic. If they are paying for clicks, we figure out the return on investment and estimate how they can better convert these “paid for” visitors once on the site. This is a minor step in the big scheme of things, but it does “stop the bleeding” so we can get to the point of getting sites on a path towards optimal health.
You Know Where to Find the Yogurt.
A good website is like a grocery store. People coming in have a sense of where items they want might be located and easily follow directions and conventions to getting what they want. This is no accident. Retail Strategists lay out stores be easy to navigate and promote. Sound familiar?
Website Optimization is getting the most out of people visiting an online property. This might be apply to a landing page, micro-site, website, online catalogue, online slide deck, Interactive tool etc. If your web presence is not handling visitors well, then paying to sending qualified traffic to it in large part a waste of money.
Good website optimization often starts with the website homepage strategy and how site visitors handle people once they arrive at it. I wrote a post on this a while back, click here to read it. The best place to start is to look at your website analytics and see were the top “landing pages” are (what pages people are entering your site) and then optimizing your landing pages (another previous post).
Keep Your Promises
When I look at a site for the 1st time, I look at its “Promises”. What is the site promising the site visitor? Then, is the site delivering on its promises. This starts from the ad or search result that got the user to the site. Do they arrive on a page that fulfills the promise of the search engine (This shows why SEO without strategy is worthless, as it can just create “broken promises”. If you have a decent landing page and are getting more than a 20% bounce rate on it, it is likely caused by “broken promises”. I don’t want this to be an SEO post, but having an integrated SEO strategy is part of Website Optimizing (sending qualified traffic in any way is part of it).
Focus on Website Optimization
Focus on website optimization as your primary web focus. This starts off by making sure the site is simple and well organized from the user’s perspective. Then it goes further into “giving people what they want”, when they want it and how they want it. It also means spending time on statistics and testing out different things (check out
Achieve your Customer’s Goals, Forget Your Own
Your customers have their own goals when they are your site (forget about your site’s goals for a minute). Once your site is organized from your site audience’s perspective, you need to set up analytic goals and track the “Goal Funnel” to see where visitors are falling off in trying to achieve THEIR goals. Once see where they are dropping off, you can critically look and very likely see why. Then you can fix it.
Now lets talk about your company’s and its site’s goals. These are really just the goals of the site visitor. If you achieve their goals, you will achieve yours. (This needs to become your mantra. Design it from your visitor’s perspective, give them what they want and help them achieve their objectives, you’ll profit from it, have faith).
Try User Testing
It is so easy these days to get user testing (See Get Tested) there is no excuse not to watch people trying to achieve their goals on your site on a regular basis. This is the catalyst to website optimization because after watching your target audience trying and failing at core basic stuff, you will be compelled to do something about it.
Measure Progress
Your site needs “Core Metrics”. These are what you need to measure. These metrics need to be from analytics, sales (or leads) figures, feedback data, and anything else that you could measure that would show that website optimization is working.
Website Optimization Summary
Give people what they want, do it from their perspective, make it easy and test test test. You likely have an SEO program. Now you need a Website Optimization program. They two have a lot in common. Neither give immediate results, seem simple but are not, and require a strategy and lots of work. There are there are website optimizing companies that provide such services, and even pair them with an SEO company. I suggest getting website optimization services before sending paid clicks at your site. So many companies build something and leave it. In reality, you can often get 100% better performance out of a page or navigational path through optimization.


1 Comment Received
August 3rd, 2009 @7:43 am
I like your comparison of a good website to a grocery store. It really is true, a good site should guide the visitor through its different pages like a grocery store guides visitors through its aisles. On the ones hand, the configuration of those aisles is carefully selected to maximize consumer spending. But at the same time, the customer feels in control the whole time – s/he navigates freely and doesn’t feel forced into exposure to any certain aisle or product.
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