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Make Your
Website Sell
By
Chris Mole
Hundreds of new business
websites are springing up every week. The owners of these sites
are full of optimism that their venture into e-commerce will
transform their business by bringing in new customers and
boosting their sales.
But the reality is that most websites fail abysmally as sales
tools. Why? Because the owners of these sites have spent a lot
of money creating fancy graphics but paid little attention to
the words on the site. And it's the words on websites that sell.
Your fancy graphics might entertain your potential customers but
they won't make the sale.
Take a look at many of the websites out there in cyberspace.
They are full of spelling mistakes, poor grammar and cumbersome
text that makes you want to do only one thing...click your mouse
button and move to something else.
Small and medium businesses are particularly guilty of this. The
words appear to be an after-thought, hurriedly cobbled together
to fill the space between the images.
Ninety percent of websites are badly written
One of America's e-commerce gurus, Ken Evoy,
believes 90 percent of websites are failing to "get the order"
from potential customers browsing the web, because they are
badly written, or written in the wrong style.
"Remember, people use the Net to find information. And
information is contained in words, not graphics," Evoy says.
"Let's face it, there's some pretty cool stuff on the web, and
it's fun to play with. But don't be tempted. Your sales site
can't be self-indulgent. You have to think customer every step
of the way. Customers want information.
"Compelling text is 1000 percent more important than fancy
design. After all, if a fancy page has no substance, it delivers
no value."
Web selling also has two important features to consider. First,
the customer sought you out. This is a big positive. Second,
there are thousands of other companies on the web competing for
your customer's business. And since you are a 'virtual vendor',
the customer can click you away in a second ... without even
feeling bad about it. This is a huge negative.
When you think about selling on the web, keep these two points
clearly in mind. You have a potential customer browsing your
site, finger poised over their mouse. One click and they're
gone.
Keep your website clean and simple
So what should an effective website look like?
First, keep it simple. It may be nice to have moving images to
greet the customer when they enter the site, but make sure it
doesn't take too long to load. Otherwise the customer will get
impatient and...click...they're gone.
All your site really needs is to be clean, simple and
well-structured. It doesn't have to be fancy. It doesn't have to
be complicated. And it doesn't have to be expensive.
That's not to say your site shouldn't look professional. It's
your store front - a reflection of your business and the quality
of your product - so it has to convey the image you want to
present to the world. But a clean, simple site can do that. Some
of world's biggest "e-tailers" like Amazon.com, and Barnes and
Noble, have very simple logos.
So let's get back to the key to a successful website - the
words. If you want to write the copy yourself, think carefully
about the purpose of the text. You are writing sales copy. And
the secret of all successful sales copy is to think like your
customer.
Your customer asks: "what's in it for me?"
To quote Ken Evoy again: "Web selling is about
selling one customer at a time ... one-to-one selling...you and
the customer talking together about their needs and wants."
Most people make the mistake of writing their websites for
themselves. They tell how wonderful their company is, how long
it's been in business and technical details about the products
they offer. But the customer doesn't want to know about you and
your company. The customer is interested in one thing..."what's
in it for me?"
So focus on the benefits of your product or service. After every
sentence you write, see yourself as your customer and ask the
question: "so what?".
You are selling benefits, not features
For example, let's imagine you are selling a new
email filter that keeps spam out of people's mailboxes. Don't
bore your potential customer with the technical details. Focus
on the benefits of having such a filter. For example, you might
say something like: "Do you waste valuable time dealing with
junk email every day? Ban-It Mail Filter is the answer to your
problem. Ban-it is the most effective filter available to keep
spam out of your mailbox and put back more time into your day."
You are selling benefits - not features. Even experienced
copywriters sometimes get the two mixed up.
You need to have a clear picture in your mind of the customer
you are writing for. Write as if you were sitting in a chair
opposite them and talking face to face. And tell them what your
product or service can do for them.
That in a nutshell is the secret of writing copy for the Web.
If you can do this, the potential of web selling is enormous. It
outranks Gutenburg's printing press, Marconi's wireless and
Bell's telephone all rolled together.
So don't waste the fantastic opportunity presented by
cyber-marketing. Make sure your website copy is doing the job
you want it to. If you don't feel competent to write it
yourself, hire a professional copywriter. The investment will
repay itself many times over.
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