Does Your Website Turn People On or Turn Them Away?
Websites either repel or attract. Each person who views your site will decide in a couple of seconds whether to stay on the site and read what you have to say, or hit the “Back” button and go somewhere else instead. You can’t worry about keeping every single person on your site— the trick is keeping the people you want, and letting the others go. To put it another way, you want to send the right message to the right people.
There are “wrong people” to have looking at your
As long as your front page makes sense, it should be fairly easy for you to discourage the wrong people from using all of your bandwidth. The more important thing is encouraging the right people, once they’ve found your site, to stay there. This shouldn’t be terribly difficult, either, but there are all sorts of things you can do to drive people away.
There are some technical issues to consider first. If your site is slow to open, you’re shooting yourself in the foot. Slow pages are one of the most common reasons for users to abandon a website. Don’t load your site down (especially the front page) with large images, Flash animations, or anything else that cause a delay on the user’s end. Think of Google’s front page as an example—it’s just a logo, a search tool, and a bunch of white space, and it opens instantly. Granted, you’ll probably need to put more than that on your front page, but try to keep it simple. Also, if you’re having problems with your hosting service or ISP, don’t turn a blind eye to them. Make sure that anyone who wants to see your
Do everything you can to make your
Be sure that your content is appropriate for your audience. Don’t make it too technical or too simplistic. You’ll insult your customers if you err on either side. Keep it appropriate in other ways as well—think “Rated G” or “Rated PG.” Unless your business requires you to be edgy or adult-oriented, you don’t want to risk your site being blocked by a parental filter or corporate “watchdog” program.
Finally, don’t impose your own personality on your website. You may want to have that “personal touch,” especially if you expect your customers to be interested in you as an individual, but you can achieve this while still remaining professional. Don’t try to sneak political commentary, bad jokes, or unnecessary personal information onto your site. You may think it will make you look unique, but it will actually just make you look crazy.
Your customers will visit your
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