Archive | July, 2011

Being Predictable: The First Essential of a Customer Centric Business

25 Jul

This year marks our tenth anniversary here at Different. Over that time we’ve always tried to stay true to our philosophy that great UX is always grounded in solid research, designed to exceed expectations, and tested thoroughly. But when you use that process, what consistent criteria to you use to define experience?

That question led us to develop the Essentials of Customer Centric Business, and as part of our anniversary celebration we’ve decided to share it with the UX and business community. At first glance it can appear to be just another UX infographic or a version of Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. But, as we will demonstrate, it contains many layers and provides a great deal of practical information for UX practitioners and businesses alike.

This month we’ll start by discussing the first essential: being predictable. Over the next six months we’ll continue across all seven of them here on UX Magazine. It’s our hope that you will find this series as informative and valuable as the essentials have become for us.

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Have you ever walked up to a door and grasped the doorknob expecting that familiar turn, click, and open, only to be startled when it did not operate as you expected? Recently a visitor to a hotel described how a closet in his room had a doorknob that looked like it should turn, but did not. Instead the knob was simply screwed in and the door held shut by a magnet. He described how that bothered him and that he never got used to it. Every time he went to use that door it bothered him. Its behavior was unpredictable, both in its lack of intuitiveness and its inconsistency with every other “door experience” he’d ever had.

Well, what is true for doors is also true for a lot of other things. Much of the research conducted by Different shows that many customers are not satisfied with their service providers or with the products that they use because of a lack of predictability.

You may think that predictability is a no-brainer, or even boring. But we think it’s underrated. Many organizations large and small lose business as they fail to deliver a predictable experience to their customers. Common examples include inconsistent levels of knowledge among staff, unintuitive products, and poor management of customer expectations.

What Is Predictability In UX?

The immediate temptation we all have is to define predictability in relationship to repetition or consistency, but this is just a part of its meaning. The root word it descends from is the Latin “praedictus,” which translates as “to foretell.” So we must always remember that predictability comes into play during completely new experiences as well as in comparison to previous ones. So in order to apply it correctly we must define it thusly:

“Predictability in UX can be defined as how much a user can successfully foresee the result of an interaction.”

This can involve the meeting or matching of their expectations, whether in an initial experience or a repeat one. Conversely, unpredictability occurs when customers do not know what to expect or they expect something different to what they experience. In the example above, the customer predicted that the door would work as he expected, and then it didn’t. Similarly, online shoppers expect their purchases to be shipped quickly and providers who don’t meet this expectation are unlikely to get repeat business.

However, predictability extends further than these examples. It’s also about successfully matching a customer’s mental model of what an experience should be. Mental models are internalized expectations of how the world works that customers use to predict outcomes.[1] Meeting and managing these predictions are critical to business success.

Why Is It Important?

Why is predictability such an essential component of an experience? The clear outcome of a positive, predictable experience is the effect it has on customer satisfaction. Generally, it enhances the perception customers have of the company, and affects sales growth positively. Take McDonalds, for example; when it came into the market it created a worldwide phenomenon. Customers were given the same predictable experience every time they bought—no-frills, fast and friendly service, with food that tasted exactly the same every time, no matter when or where. The concept worked so well that, at one point, McDonalds was opening one store a day.[2] It is easy to see how they have mastered a component of predictability through consistency.

Having predictability creates a positive psychological impact on customers. Customers given information about what to expect in an interaction feel confident and prepared, and are therefore more relaxed during the interaction. By the same token, a lack of predictability affects customers negatively. Unexpected events can capture their attention [4] and distract them from their goal or purpose as they seek to understand how their expectations were misaligned.

For customers, predictability provides three major benefits:

  • A sense of control
  • Trust and safety
  • Reliability

Recall the last time you went grocery shopping; for items that you buy regularly, you know the exact location in which they can be found every time. This predictability gives customers a sense of control in an environment that can be otherwise stressful due to overstimulation and a division of attention between social awareness and the task of locating things. Woolworths in Australia is proud of the fact that the majority of their stores have the same layout. Any supermarket retailer will tell you, the one thing that causes more customer complaints and defections is moving a product from one shelf to another, so move the tomato sauce at your peril!

Unpredictability can create uncertainty and undue stress that erodes customers’ sense of safety, which in turn reduces trust in the provider. During the recent global financial crisis many financial markets became volatile and moved in ways that felt random. As a result, investors were filled with fear and decreased their activity, or withdrew from the market entirely. This had the effect of compounding the problem and deepening the crisis.

Feelings of trust and safety are most critical where serious matters such as money and life are involved. What if you could not rely on the predictability of your local ambulance or fire service? Predictable services or products in sectors such as government, financial, medical, aeronautical and emergency services are crucial in maintaining peace and stability in society, as well as preserving lives.

The success of companies such as Toyota is built on perceived reliability, which is another form of predictability. Its ability to maintain consistent build quality year on year, producing cars that rarely break down has earned Toyota its reputation of being reliable. Toyota was able to penetrate the saturated US car market on its reputation of being reliable and it now holds the enviable position of top-selling auto manufacturer globally.

How to Achieve Predictability

Incorporating and achieving predictability in your service, interaction, or product is an important undertaking and requires much consideration and planning. It is essential to understand and match customer expectations and provide service or product consistency to generate a positive user experience. Ultimately predictability will impact your overall customer satisfaction and sales.

Make it intuitive

Again, it is critical to remember that predictability is about the ability of customers to foresee the future course of events as they interact with a company. It’s more than merely being consistent. Some companies attempt to resolve this by educating customers about how their internal processes work. But this tactic is a poor fix because they’re just trying to get customers to think like them. The correct solution is to understand what customers expect and then align internal practices with that. When customers experience this, they often report that the experience felt “intuitive” and went exactly as they had hoped.

It is essential to begin with research to understand their mental models, and where your product or service disconnects from them. Companies looking to improve predictability need to understand why customers call customer service or go online for help, as these are instances where their mental models don’t match the product or service model—in other words, they can not predict how the thing works. Analyzing service calls or online forums and bringing the issues to the development team is one way to start putting predictability back into the user experience.

Woman on hold with customer service

For example, telecommunication companies tend to focus on improving conversion rates through creating diverse product offers, but often pay less attention to the root causes of abandonment in their sales funnels. Many of their signup processes don’t align with customer expectations, causing errors. After futile attempts to recover, frustration with a lack of progress outweighs the customer’s desire to persist. When designing systems like these, it must be remembered that ease of use is a factor in whether the workings of the system can be predicted by users.

Implement standards & guidelines

Implementation of standards and/or guidelines in services or products will help ensure predictable customer experience as they limit the number of different ways an interaction can work. Therefore, there’s less for customers to learn and they can predict the interaction more readily. Apple products clearly demonstrate that standards and guidelines create predictable experiences. All iPhones, iPods and Apple computers have an almost identical look, feel, and interaction model, as do their stores. This predictable experience contributes to positive customer satisfaction and uptake of their various products.

Contrast this with the Android phone experience. Clearly, balancing consistency and customisation is a challenge for them, as the user experience from one Andriod phone to another can be quite different. Google allows hardware vendors to heavily brand the Android experience through look, feel, and function. As a result, some devices differ dramatically. This impedes customer satisfaction when switching to different models of Android phone and prevents customers predicting whether any given Android phone will be a good one. Overall, this unpredictability degrades the Android brand.

Mitigate unpredictability

What happens when customers encounter unpredictability? How do you rebuild trust and put predictability back into their experience? When a normally predictable product or service becomes unpredictable, customers become extra stressed because their trust is violated. In these situations, a proper response is critical to reestablish trust. During this kind of crisis, swift corrective measures and management of expectations can curtail lasting negative effects. Last year, Toyota’s crisis concerning brake failure struck the heart of their safe and reliable image. Only fast action on their part to recall vehicles and launch a thorough NASA-powered investigation avoided a publicity disaster [5]. A lesser response would have eroded customer’s perception that Toyotas were a predictably good car. It was the swift, decisive response and obvious dedication to putting the issue right that reestablished Toyota as a brand that could be trusted.

When a product or service is unpredictable, such as a financial instrument or medical diagnosis, the most constructive way to tackle the problem is to be transparent about the process with customers. Let them know how the product or service is governed. For instance, a doctor being transparent about the treatment plan for a patient about to undergo cancer treatment allows the patient to feel a sense of control in the face of a medical crisis. Such transparency empowers customers and reduces the element of fear around the unknown. It puts some predictability back into the experience.

Risk management (aka insurance) can also mitigate inherently unpredictable product or service elements, by providing comfort and security to customers to alleviate fear. This is why many financial institutions offer insurance on high-risk financial products. It neutralises the customer fears of unpredictable results.

 

For the UX Practitioner

Revealing the underlying causes of a failure in predictability.

The key to finding the causes of predictability failures lies in the contrast between how a product or service actually operates versus what customers expect. To define this contrast:

Start with the customer

  • Submerge yourself in the customer’s experience through a series of thorough contextual inquiries. Nothing beats true in situ (observing customers doing things in the field) feedback from people who are living it.
  • For longer processes, consider a diary study where real customers record their thoughts and feelings for you and report in regularly.
  • Consider secret shopping the experience yourself and documenting it as you go.
  • Map this data into an end-to-end journey and define the major phases with the smaller phases contained within them.
  • Note break points where customers expected something different than what they got.

Rinse and repeat with the business

  • Submerge yourself in the business process by following it from beginning to end.
  • Interview the key stakeholders to understand how this process came to be, and the reasons behind it.
  • Spend time with the employees who actually implement the process and document the ways that they enforce or deviate from it when necessary.
  • Map this data into a complete journey and define major phases with the smaller phases and tasks contained within each.

Contrast the journeys

Starting at the beginning of the two journeys, contrast each step and document every possible problem this presents to the customer. Where was what they expected not matched by the business process? Focus on areas where customers express the greatest distress. Contrast the comments they make at these stages against the conflicts you see.

 

The Risks of Predictability

There is very little in the design world where a “one size fits all” approach is best. Predictability as the basic design element of customer experience is no exception. It comes with a price tag, since there can be downsides when predictability is at the core of an experience.

Stifling innovation

Predictability can stifle innovation when standards aren’t questioned and progressed. This introduces your first risk. Before Apple introduced the iPod click wheel and iTunes, every MP3 player had the same user experience dating back to the VHS era. Would Apple have taken a leading position if the standard had prevailed and they never pioneered their new intuitive interaction and enhanced service offer? Apple was able to be different without losing its competitiveness through introducing learnable interface and new service model that was significantly better than the standards at the time.

Raising expectations

The second risk in focusing on predictability is raising expectations. If you maintain a high degree of consistency, customers will experience breakdowns more acutely. A common example of this is timetables. If the timetable states the bus should be at your stop at 7:45am, even a 10-minute wait can feel excruciating. Yet, we all know that the bus timetable has factors beyond the control of the bus company. City Council in Queensland is moving away from timetables for high frequency buses to combat customers’ inevitable disappointment. Instead, these services are based on frequency and operating time, e.g., the service runs every five minutes between 7-9am and 4-6pm weekdays [6]. This focuses the customer’s attention on the likely wait time, rather than on an exact minute of arrival.

Train

Reduced opportunity for delightful experiences

The final risk can be summed up in that old saying that “variety is the spice of life.” Can you imagine how boring the world would be if every experience was predictable? Some companies attempt to change their products with promotional offers during certain periods of the year to draw customers’ attention. In this way, Starbucks maintains regular offerings but features promotional products during special periods and seasons of the year. So, ironically, Starbucks is practicing predictability because its customers know that every autumn, pumpkin chai lattes will be offered, and at Christmastime peppermint tea will be on the menu.

In some cases, though, deliberately unpredictable promotions and sales can be a marketing tactic. They draw the attention of customers to a break in the normal offers by a company. This is commonly referred to as “surprise and delight” and runs counter to predictability. Concierge Traveller, a company that tailors travel experiences for their clients, has a policy of not telling their clients every detail of their itinerary. This way, when their clients arrive there is always a surprise, enabling delight. So when you make predictability a focus, don’t forget to spice it up a little.

 

For Businesses

How do you measure your level of predictability?

Are you worried you’re not predictable enough? The warning signs are actually easier to see than you might think. Take a few weeks and examine a single process in your business structure and predictability issues get easy to spot. Online, paper based, and service interactions can all be examined with this method.

Ask the right people

Start at your call center. When predictability breaks down your call center staff is the emergency crew that handles it.

  1. Have support staff track the number of calls for the process in question and the overall reason for the call:
    1. Customer didn’t understand the product functions or features.
    2. Customer didn’t understand the process.
    3. Customer had unrealistic expectations of time and number of steps.
    4. Customer was surprised by the bill, cost, or fees.
  2. If a large volume of support calls fit the above issues, then there is likely a predictability problem to be addressed.

 

Conclusion

Throughout this article, we have highlighted successful examples of predictability as a part of core customer experience. But a final question remains: how hard is it to achieve the right level of predictability in a customer centric business?

The key thing to remember is that the ability to provide a predictable positive experience has a direct correlation with your ability to successfully match the customer’s mental model of that experience.

You can achieve this best by uncovering that model and then designing to it. You must remember to maintain consistency in experience through implementation of standards and guidelines, which can create its own challenges. Set clear expectations around outcomes or processes, but have a risk management plan in place for unpredictable events. Lastly, remember that there are times to be unpredictable, but they need to be the exception, not the rule. In the end, building for predictability properly can positively impact your overall customer satisfaction and sales.

Mastering predictability is critically important, but it’s only the first step in building a truly customer centric business. Without predictability, other values of the pyramid such as efficiency, convenience, personality and advocacy, have less impact. In the next article in this series we’ll discuss the next level of user experience: efficiency.

 

Source: http://www.uxmag.com/strategy/being-predictable

 

Marco Eychenne

25 Jul

 

Photocrash is a cool exhibition launched at MossGallery in Melbourne, Australia.

It features the work of up-and-coming artist Marco Eychenne.

In their imaginative and surprising mix of realism and surrealism, Eychenne’s images offer delicious food for thought. These are images that have a staying power.

This is art that demands and affords a second look as there are many layers in each image. And every time you look, you see something you didn’t see before.

We love the odd sense of viscose liquidity of the images; the gooey, mixed-up tertiary colors, the glimpses of reality within the fantasy.

Marco Eychenne is fascinated by the celebrity lifestyle to which he puts his surreal twist. There is danger, glamour, desire, power, allure, surprise. And there is also something else, something even more sinister. Maybe transformation, deformity, the stretching of reality to something quite ghastly. Or is it all just a beautiful stretch of imagination? – Bill Tikos

 

Source: http://www.thecoolhunter.net/article/detail/1971/marco-eychenne

Images of the day..

25 Jul

 

Source: pinterest.com

Images of the day..

12 Jul

 

 

 

source: www.pinterest.com

Images of the day..

4 Jul

 

 

Source: www.pinterest.com

Five Copywriting Errors That Can Ruin A Company’s Website

4 Jul

No matter how brilliant a website’s design, no matter how elegant its navigation, sooner or later visitors will decide whether to take action because of something they read. In the end, the effectiveness with which a website converts visitors hinges on words. If a new website is going to hit all the right notes, its content must be just as well crafted as its design and programming. However, as you might imagine, there are many ways to go wrong with content in a Web development project.

Five-screenshot1 in Five Copywriting Errors That Can Ruin A Company’s Website
Image Credit

The errors discussed in this article have the potential to undo a website and are issues that I run up against time and time again in my nearly 12 years of producing Web content. Half the battle in avoiding these traps is simply recognizing them: all too often, content is handled as an afterthought, hurriedly completed to meet a project’s deadline. I hope these content tips will help you stay ahead of the game and build a better website in your next project.

Error #1: Writing Inwardly

Having worked in-house for many years, I’ve fell victim to the inward-focus syndrome on many occasions. It’s easy to do. You spend all day dealing with the intricacies of your products and services. You’ve made a huge intellectual and emotional investment in every product innovation and point of differentiation. You love thinking about your products, you love improving them, and you love talking about them. It’s only natural that you want to shout from the rooftops and tell the world your product’s story in all its splendor.

Problem is, the rest of the world isn’t interested in your story. Customers don’t have time to admire your greatness. They’re too busy searching for ways to make life better for themselves. A high-level Web page answers one question of the reader above all: What’s in it for me? To illustrate, we’ll stick with products, although this applies to other types of pages as well.

Inward-Writing-Focus1 in Five Copywriting Errors That Can Ruin A Company’s Website
It’s not about you.

A well-written category-level product page talks a bit about features, a little more about benefits and a great deal more about the experience. This last element is especially important and exactly where most pages come up woefully short. Let’s use a mundane example of this principle in action by considering a hypothetical Web page for a packaging machine:

Feature: Up to 100 cycles per minute.

Benefit: Faster production.

Experience: Getting more product out the door per shift means you’ll blow away your productivity goals and be a hero. You might even get a promotion.

A typical Web page written about this machine would be 80% features and 20% benefits. However, if I were writing it, I’d budget 50 words on the features, 100 words on the benefits and 150 words on the experience.

Note:

  1. Setting a “word budget” forces discipline. Not only that, it relieves the anxiety over having to determine how to approach each individual product page, thus eliminating one of the biggest causes of delay in Web development projects.
  2. Focusing on the experience forces you to think about the target audience of the page in question. The experience I described speaks to an operations person. If my audience is made up of C-level executives or purchasing agents, then I would need to describe a completely different experience. If I’m writing for all three audiences, I may have to rethink my word budget. In any event, having an audience in mind prevents a Web page from devolving into that cursed, watered-down, “everything for everyone” messaging that says absolutely nothing.
  3. The purpose of a high-level page is to get people interested in the product. Once they’re interested, they may crave more information about features and benefits. Perfect. Tell the long version of your story on a detail-heavy product sub-page. Companies need not neglect features and benefits; they just need to suppress the urge to hit visitors over the head with them the minute they walk through the door.

To see how this plays out in real life, consider this conversion optimization case study, documented on ABtests.com. A firm achieved a 200% increase in conversions by replacing feature-oriented copy with benefit-oriented copy. The high-converting page focuses on what the applicant wants, rather than what the service (DesignCourse.com) offers:

  • “Become an amazing designer.”
  • “Start earning real money.”
  • “It’s fun and exciting.”
  • “No tests, no hassles.”

If you’re still not convinced, listen to legendary copywriter John Caples, who is quoted in Made to Stick (page 179) by Chip Heath and Dan Heath:

Caples says companies often emphasize features when they should be emphasizing benefits. “The most frequent reason for unsuccessful advertising is advertisers who are so full of their own accomplishments (the world’s best seed!) that they forget to tell us why we should buy (the world’s best lawn!).” An old advertising maxim says you’ve got to spell out the benefit of the benefit. In other words, people don’t buy quarter-inch drill bits. They buy quarter-inch holes so they can hang their children’s pictures.

Quick Tips for Writing Outwardly

  • Before you start writing, collect feedback from customers and prospects. Ask them why they buy from you, why they don’t, and how doing business with you has affected them.
  • Start with an outline. Associate every feature with a benefit and every benefit with an experience.
  • Have a customer read a draft and then explain to you why they would want to buy the product. If the customer “gets it,” you’re a star.
  • Do the same thing with a person who knows nothing about your product and industry. If that person gets it, you’re a rock star.

Error #2: Burying The Lead

Burying-the-Lead in Five Copywriting Errors That Can Ruin A Company’s Website
If they can’t figure it out, you’re dead.

Websites are a poor medium for subtlety. Visitors decide whether to stay on your website within a few seconds. If you can’t communicate why a page is important to them immediately, your conversion opportunities will vanish. Look at the two paragraphs below. Which conveys your most important message more quickly?

Your most important message is here., sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.

Or:

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate your most important message is here. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.

Online marketers like to sneer at newspapers, but we can learn a lot from print journalists. For instance, they don’t bury the lead. To illustrate, here are a few leads I recently pulled from the Wall Street Journal:

  • “Companies cranked up hiring in April to the fastest pace in five years…”
  • “European markets snapped a three-session losing streak as gains in the banking sector and better-than-expected US jobs data for April sparked a rally.”
  • “Women may have fared better than men during the recession, but they are not making up lost ground as fast as men in the recovery.”

Now look at your Web pages. How do your leads stack up? Are you leading with the main point? Are you giving visitors a reason to read further? If an in-house writer is not familiar with Web writing techniques, they may approach the project as if they were writing a novel, assuming that visitors will read their new website from start to finish.

This assumption is disastrous. People skim and scan Web pages, their eyes bouncing around like pinballs. For any given Web page, visitors are likely to read the headline and the first few lines of text; beyond that, any body content they read is gravy. Expecting someone to read an entire page of content sequentially from beginning to end is wishful thinking, period. The most important words on the page must be the easiest to find, read and comprehend.

Quick Tips for Unburying the Lead

  • Before writing, ask, What is the key takeaway I want visitors to have after they visit this page? That’s your lead.
  • Highlight your lead idea in a bold font. This is especially helpful when you can’t work it into the first sentence.
  • Use plain language.
  • Keep your most important points above the fold, as sub-headings, as the first sentence of a paragraph and as bullet points.

Error #3: Mediocre Meta Material

Sm Meta Tags in Five Copywriting Errors That Can Ruin A Company’s Website
Meta titles appear in browser tabs.

Some of the most important text in a Web document isn’t the on-page content at all. Certain meta elements have an enormous impact on the user experience, brand awareness and conversion. Meta elements are bits of HTML code that are read mainly by search engine robots. However, two meta tags in particular speak to humans as well, and mastering them is critically important for copywriters.

  • Meta Title
    The meta title describes the subject matter of the page and is ideally 65 characters or fewer. Visitors see the meta title in their browser tab and in search engine results; it is the most important piece of information that Google and other engines read on a given page.
  • Meta Description
    The meta description, ideally 155 characters or fewer, is a snippet of text that is displayed under a link on a search engine results page (SERP). The meta description has little if any SEO value but is important for conversions.

Meta Titles

Because Google values meta titles so highly, including primary keyword phrases in them is imperative, preferably towards the beginning of the title. For human readers, a title tag should clearly and straightforwardly describe the nature of the page. In addition, the tag can also carry a branding message.

Here is an example of a strong meta tag, taken from the services page of a client of mine:

Enterprise-Level Credit Card Processing, Merchant Accounts | BluePay

At 68 characters, we’ve gone slightly over our recommended maximum. But having branding keywords (i.e. BluePay) at the end is OK: Google may truncate the last few characters, but visitors will see the branding message in their browser tab, especially if they bookmark the page. The title tag will further extend brand awareness if the visitor tweets the page or likes it on Facebook:

Sm Fb Post1 in Five Copywriting Errors That Can Ruin A Company’s Website
Title tags appear in Facebook link posts.

Meta Descriptions

Screen-shot-2011-06-14-at-2 29 11-PM in Five Copywriting Errors That Can Ruin A Company’s Website
Meta descriptions appear in search engine results under the page’s title.

A meta description can set your page apart from others on a SERP. Here are seven tips for crafting a good one.

  1. Don’t overuse keywords. This will make your description look spammy. For example, “We have promotional coffee mugs, custom mugs, custom coffee mugs, and custom mugs for coffee.”
  2. Don’t use multiple exclamation points!!!! Excessive punctuation can be interpreted as aggression. It pushes people away.
  3. Avoid extravagant claims. They undermine your credibility.
  4. Include an incentive to click through to your page:
    • “Order one, get one free.”
    • “10% off your first order.”
    • “Learn how our service can reduce operating costs up to 15%.”
  5. Focus on the user benefits of your product or service.
    • Bad example: “High R-factor insulation.”
    • Better example: “Insulation to keep your home warm and toasty.”
  6. Mention your location if you are a local business. This helps searchers instantly connect your business to their need.
  7. Establish your credibility:
    • “In business since 1965.”
    • “BBB accredited.”
    • “Over 5000 satisfied customers.”

(Whereas title tags are always displayed, description tags are not. Today, Google doesn’t always pull meta descriptions into its SERPs; instead, it might excerpt on-page content related to the user’s search terms.)

Quick Tips for Meta Magnificence

  • If an SEO is working on your project, have them generate title tags based on their keyword research, and then tweak as needed.
  • If you do not have an SEO, back up a step and reflect on why you are building the website. I believe that an unoptimized website is not worth building.
  • Title tags should be consistent in style and form to enhance the user experience. Meta descriptions need not be consistent at all.
  • Because of character limitations and the need for concision, writing these tags can be time-consuming. Remember, though: you don’t have to achieve perfection for launch. Tags can be changed at any time, and analytics experts often suggest that they should be.

Error #4: Saying Too Much

Brevity is the soul of conversion. Find out why.

Error #5: Weak Or No Calls To Action

Screen-shot-12-questions in Five Copywriting Errors That Can Ruin A Company’s Website
Strong calls to action from our company’s website.

Assuming that you’ve written a brilliantly persuasive page, it’s still next to worthless without a strong call to action (CTA). It’s flat out wrong to assume that visitors will be so inspired by your brilliant copy that they will pick up the phone and call, or fill out an online form and beg you to contact them.

In the real world of Web marketing, visitors want to be led. If they have to stop and think about how to take the next step, you’ve already lost them.

CTAs generally fall into one of four types, listed here in descending order of commitment:

  • Place an order;
  • Enroll, subscribe, enter;
  • Get a quote;
  • Learn more.

Recognizing the need for a call to action on every page is step one. Matching the right CTA to the page is step two. High-level product category pages normally call for a “soft” CTA, such as “Request more information” or “Schedule a consultation.” In contrast, detailed product-level pages require a “hard” CTA, such as “Order now.”

A call to action must be clear and compelling:

  • “Order now to save 15%,”
  • “Get your artist’s rendering within 24 hours,”
  • “Learn the 5 secrets to permanent weight loss.”

Calls to action are strengthened by:

  • Testimonials: It’s worked;
  • Credibility statements: It’s reliable;
  • Warranty or guarantee: It’s risk-free;
  • High value: It’s worth having;
  • Urgency: It’s now or never.

Unfortunately, the calls to action on business websites often seem like afterthoughts: vague, lame and boring. Remember: customers want to be led. Effective leadership requires more than “Call for more information.”

One last vital point about CTAs: having a primary and secondary CTA on each page is often a good idea. A prospect may not be ready to order, but they may be willing to download a white paper that they would read and remember. Today’s white paper could be tomorrow’s conversion.

Five Case Studies that Illustrate the Power of Strong Calls to Action

  • Hyundai increased conversions by 62% by adding SEO text, bigger pictures… and a CTA.
  • RIPT Apparel added “Limited 24-hour availability” to its CTA and increased sales by 6.3%.
  • Notify, by the Weather Channel, redesigned its landing page to focus on the CTA. Conversion rates increased by 225%.
  • Express Gold Cash changed its CTA from “Submit” to “Request a pack” and improved its conversion rate by 47.7%.
  • Natural Air increased conversions by 590.6%(!) by adding a CTA with pricing.

Two Tips for Strong Calls to Action

  • The main reason why firms don’t include strong CTAs on their website is that they don’t have them. Before getting too far into website development, conduct a brainstorming session to begin the process of identifying action steps that website visitors would be eager to take.
  • For CTAs to be effective, design and content must be joined at the hip. The position of an arrow, the font and color of a button can make or break a call to action. Don’t segregate your writers and designers. We’ve found that a team approach to Web projects fosters continual interaction between all contributors and results in a far better product all around.

Keep Your Eye On The Conversion Ball

In case you haven’t noticed, or you skimmed to the end, as Web readers often do, the errors and fixes discussed above revolve around one thing: conversion. One of my favorite quotes comes from advertising icon David Ogilvy. He said, “If it doesn’t sell, it isn’t creative.” Ogilvy, arguably the greatest copywriter who ever lived, understood the primacy of persuasion. You may prefer a soft sell or a hard sell, but if your Web page isn’t selling, why is it there?

 

Source: http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2011/06/29/five-copywriting-errors-that-can-ruin-a-company-website/

Desktop Wallpaper Calendar: July 2011

4 Jul

Get yours here 🙂 http://www.smashingmagazine.com/2011/06/30/desktop-wallpaper-calendar-july-2011/