Website Testing

So, I had an interesting one last week when I checked my web stats to see that someone had been trying to fill in the contact form on my website and had kept refreshing the page.

It seemed that something happened at the hosting end that disrupted the form working - a lost lead for me!

This highlighted something that spurs me on to test my websites on a more regular basis. Web stats play a big part in this, but going through the sales process on a website will highlight it from a user experience.

I also often find things to improve as I do this.

Another better way of doing this is do sit someone else down to do it and watch them.

Posted in: web design

The problem with web services

I guess it comes down to cost versus value but I have had two episodes in the past 24 hours that highlight potential issues with using online services and have given me a crappy day to boot.

  1. One of our web hosting companies facilities went down last night at 7.30pm and went back up again at 8.50am this morning. Worst part is that we couldn’t get hold of them to sort it out. It’s the second time it’s happen this year and at £395 per month I may start looking for a new solution. (ASP managed server if you know anyone in the UK).
    This just so happened to coincide with my first Facebook group e-mail - bugger!
  2. I love Campaign Monitor for e-mail marketing, but it’s the first of the month, I have three e-shots waiting to go and the system isn’t working after some ‘routine maintenance’. I’ll be fair to them as it’s a great system and very cheap to use but it puts me in a hole right at this moment.

To be fair to both of these issues, it’s cost and systems versus value. I can’t afford to write my own e-mail system and host my own websites, and even if I did, I couldn’t guarantee that it would be working 100% of the time.

As for my hoster’s 99.9% up time guarantee, that’s been blown, but having seen the Service Level Agreement, it would be hard for me to do anything about it anyway. I bet they keep on advertsing their up-time though!

Posted in: websites- web design

Creating the right signs on a website

I was on a course last week (The Human Element) at a pretty classy business venue, the kind that has a very plush foyer and makes you stand up straight as you walk in.

In the toilet was a sign that bugged me all week and on Friday I worked out what it was.

Business Hib Toilet Sign

How polite can a notice be when the instruction is an order and CAPITAL letters are used? I felt a bit patronised considering the location and the type of person who was there (me being one of them).

Now, this post isn’t about my sensitivities, it’s about the need to create the right message:

  • For the right audience
  • At the right time
  • In the right language

How many sales must lost and call-to-actions ignore simply because they use the wrong words in the wrong way.

Posted in: content and copywriting- web design

Creating HTML from your blog feed.

Feedburner is a great tool for sharing your blog feeds and allowing subscribers to read your articles the way they want.

I have also discovered by accident (it’s probably been there for months) one of the Publicize tools within Feedburner called BuzzBoost,which allows you to take that feed and simply insert it onto another website as HTML.

A bit like I have with my own

Posted in: tools- web design- blogging

The Pistachio Nut Experience

pistachio nutsI like nothing more that sitting down, late afternoon on a lazy day, drinking a beer and eating my way through some pistachio nuts. And I was doing just that on Saturday when my wife made an interesting point… Most of the enjoyment was in shelling them as she ate, rather than the actual eating. Would we still eat them if they didn;t need shelling?

There are lots of things like that in life, where the lead-up, rather than the end goal, is the bit that’s enjoyable, or at least adds to the experience. It reminds of the title of a great book called “The Journey Is The Destination“.

If you think the same, and I know I do, you can start to understand how people are looking for that experience in any marketing or sales process. Think top-class boutiques that offer clients glasses of wine as they try on clothes and think about how those people not only come back, but tell their friends. That kind of experience runs through all echelons of business and industries.

When I speak to people looking for e-commerce solutions, they are always looking to build the “Amazon” experience, albeit on a much smaller budget.

Creating experience on a website is not hard,  but could add so much more reason for someone to stay, and take that next step in the buying process. White papers, articles and added value are always a great place to start, and then… what’s the next step on the journey. I’ll leave you to answer that one.

Posted in: web design

Why Market A Broken Website?

Google Adwords is a great tool for driving traffic to a website, especially an e-commerce site. It creates a quick and easy way to reach a search audience by creating an ad and bidding on a set of “keywords”. But, because it’s easy and delivers results, more people are using it, which is driving up the click-through charges.

It’s worthwhile adding that a lot of these people are lazy and unskilled, bidding on the most generic terms and throwing money at it - Google must be drooling. I had a meeting with a charity a couple of months ago who assigned themselves a £500 budget and got through it in less than a month. When I checked out their account, they had one advert with 5 very generic terms and had paid a hell of a lot per click-through. The sad thing was the words were so generic that they didn’t actually apply to what their charity does.

When dealing with clients, what I have found interesting is that many of the corporates still view pay-per-click as advertising in the traditional sense of the word, ie. stick up an advert and send it over - let’s go for numbers. And, because of that they don’t mind spending thousands of pounds a month to drive traffic to their site.

Yep, than can be done, but when the visitor gets to their site, the process is broken, the information is not clear - basically the experience is lacking. So, the traffic shoots up, but the sales or leads don’t come in.

But, suggest they take their marketing budget and spend it developing the website and it doesn’t seem to register as worthwhile!

A lot of marketing people still seem to see a website as another piece of collateral, like a brochure. “It’s done, I can see it so let’s move on to the next piece.”

So, ask yourself, do you even know what you are getting? Do you know the parts of your website that work, or don’t work? You could start by loading on a good stats package - Google Analytics (free) or my favourite is Hitslink. You could also start to actually talk to people. Ask them to be frank and become objective about their responses. The old analogy of the “weakest link” on a website is so, so true. If you can start to fix the broken stuff, then the marketing may look after itself…

Posted in: web design- pay-per-click

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