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The content of your website is your #1 sales tool. Pictures, tools, and other fun stuff can be important in making your site visibly and functionally appealing, but it is the content that sells. Well written and user focused content allows your visitors to "find out" more about your products and services, as well as how your company will be able to meet their needs.
Content weighs heavily both in terms of how users interact with your website as well as how visitors (both human and search spiders) are able to determine what you offer and what each page of your website is about. While solidly optimized content is important for search engine rankings, considering the usability of your content is of paramount importance for attaining good conversion rates. Voice: The content of your website should be written in consistent voice from page to page. This voice needs to be one that is relatively consistent with your industry and resonates with your target audience. Active words: Active words help the user engage with the content making them a participant rather than just a passive reader. The site's content should be full of active verbs that inspire visitors to take action. Typographical errors: Website should be free of all typographical errors. Both spelling and grammatical errors can be an indicator that you lack professionalism. They must be eliminated to maintain overall trustability. Skimmable & scannable: Visitors skim through and scan content to find what interests them before they actually read each word. As much as possible, use short paragraphs, headings, bullets and stick to a basic reading level. Customer focus: Present your content in a way that speaks to your visitor's overall wants and needs. Focus on them, not on you or your company. Personality needs: Content should use language that speaks to individual personalities of your visitors. Providing information that certain personalities "need" helps speak to those visitors more directly and move them through the conversion process. Benefits vs. features: Present the benefits your visitors will receive. Don't write exclusively in terms of what your product or service does, but what benefits your visitors will get from your product or service. Spammy text: Content should always read naturally and should never feel “stuffed” with keywords. Never hide content on the page, but us it effectively as a sales tool. Calls to action: Each page should contain a close and one or more calls to action. Once you have effectively provided the necessary information, compel the visitor to take a desired action. Bonus Tip: Linking out: Whenever possible and only where relevant, link your text out to other areas of the website as they are mentioned within the body copy. Selectively link out to external sources that reinforce the information you are providing. All too often site owners want to sideline the content. They feel that pictures, tools and products are the only things that visitors want. Yes, these are an important part of the sales process, but so is the text. Properly developed text informs and persuades. It entices and encourages. It draws and drives. More than anything else, text sells. | |||||||
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June 16th Thanks MarketingMag for your kind comments. I can't say that I intend to follow this up more specifically, but I have written a number of articles on copywriting that you can find either on my blog (www.emarketingperformance.com) or at Search Engine Guide (www.searchengineguide.com/stoney-degeyter/). Reply
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June 13th Hey St0n3y, agree with the other commenters here that this is a great post. Full of excellent advice - I just would love to see more detail on some of the points. Any chance you'll be indulging in some follow-up posts that take each area individually and start to break it down into even more specific advice? I am writing a chapter for a book right now (or perhaps a more honest description would be to say that I am three weeks late in getting around to writing a chapter for a book) about writing for the web. I've been discussing precisely some of these points in the chapter. If you want to work on some additional content for some further posts in this area, would love to partner up on some content. What say? Anyway, looking forward to reading more from you (I'm a Gooruze n00b), Scotland Reply
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January 2008 Absolutely - reminds me of my old directing marketing days and Drayton's copywriting tips. I think the biggest trap I see is benefit vs feature - I see our team guilty of it often, maybe it is the technical speak that gets in the way of common sense - if only there was a spell checker for benefit vrs feature Reply
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