After several years of meeting with clients and discussing their websites, most sites breakdown into one of three categories.
There’s the Billboard site, it’s informational, doesn’t really ask you to do anything, but tries to convey information in a concise and direct manner. Sometimes it will walk you through the ins and outs of a product service. It doesn’t pressure you to act immediately, but hopes to leave an impression, like driving by a billboard on the highway. Their hope is the imagery and information stay with you long enough to a) visit their establishment, b) tell someone else about their business, or c) make you aware of their business so that you think of them next time you’re in need of their products/services. Think of it as a multi-page ad in a magazine. These sites should always gather an email address of those that are interested in the product, and give the brand an opportunity to reconnect with interested visitors.
Most Billboard sites think they are Sales sites, but they fail at one crucial juncture. To transform the user visit into a transaction. The sales site drives you to action, it describes the product, but asks you to buy, or sign up, or act at every turn. These sites, if poorly designed can seem overbearing and pushy at times. A well designed sales site can be a great revenue stream (and sometimes the ONLY revenue stream) for an organization. Well crafted messaging and product description are critical, where to place sales pitches are important as well, but most important is turning a casual visitor into a customer.
This site is heavy on, you guessed it, content. The main purpose of this page is to inform consistently with new and relative content each post. Much like this blog that you’re reading right now. We rarely ask you to act and purchase anything, we occasionally call out our services, but the inherent reason you’re here is to read our ramblings, get some ideas, and potentially put them into practice.
The Issue with these Three Site Types:Most sites want to do ALL of this stuff. They want to thoroughly inform you of their product, hopefully get you to spread the good word about what it is they do. Not only do they want you informed, but they’d LOVE for you to make a purchase of some sort. They want action, follow through, and they want to know who you are so they can reach out to you and keep you coming back for more. Moreover than just selling you on something, they want to PROVE to you have a great deal of knowledge in their craft. They want to tell you how to use their products/services and build a rapport through consistent updates of content.
When you try to put all of this stuff on one site, it can become distracting and confusing. I could call out hundreds of sites that have been constructed asking you to “check out my band” and also “buy this album” and also “check out our blog” and also “look at our tour dates”, etc. These are all great aspirations, but what is MOST important to you. What do you want featured? Is it most important for people to know about you and what you’re doing? If that’s the case then the blog/journal is your vehicle for your brand.
The primary focus of your site can be a vehicle to promote other aspects of your business (i.e. you can promote your product/service at the end of your blog, read a little further and you’ll see this in action).
Similarly you can use the promotion or sale of a product/service to reach out to your customer base and let them know about your content. Every site should incorporate a method of capturing email addresses, building a list to reach back out to loyal customers. When you begin producing enough content to garner followers, it may be a good time to reach out to this customer base via email and let them know there is a new way to keep up with your business.
As you can see, setting up this type of site is not impossible, but the concern becomes content layout. 9 times out of 10 this type of site becomes a disaster area. There is no streamlined layout to tell the user, “hey, check this out first.” It’s no surprise that most sites want to have it all. To do that effectively you’ll need a great plan, a better sitemap, and seamless execution.
If you’re interested in our assistance in building a Billboard, Sales, or Content site, please let us know. (ah-ha, there’s a call to action)
Moreover, if you’re looking to “have it all,” we’ve mastered the art of focusing on one element of your business and connecting those pieces to the other (equally important) pieces. Focusing on what your most viable hook might be, and then continuing the product/service experience with the other elements of your site. If you’re in this boat…please let us know, we’d love to make your web presence a viable revenue stream, and create a great experience for your site visitors.
[...] used their site to as more of a ”Billboard” for their brand, but gave little else in the way of news and information. A few of these [...]