Home
Free
Expert
Advice
Free
Software
Free Offers
Get Your
Biz Online
FUN
We Want
Your
Feedback
Contact Us
Search
This Site
Search
The Web
Vacation FREE w/
Our Free
Newsletter!

Email stays
private

Suggest
This Site

to  Friends
& get the
code for
your site.
Free.

                                                   

banner1.gif (7306 bytes)

Put Your Site in Focus
by Jim Smoot

Send this report to me by auto-responder

All too often folks on the internet get an idea for a new web site, build it, then register it with every search engine and link site they can find. Many times, however, they move to the registration part without ever stepping back to really look at their site with a critical eye. Most of these sites can be described with one phrase; Lack of Focus.

One of the hardest, but possibly the most important thing to do with your site is to look at it with "new eyes". But sometimes it's hard to be objective with a new web page. After all this is your baby. You've spent time and effort putting your ideas down, and you don't want to have to throw any of them away or perhaps even (gulp!) start all over.

If you want to be effective in internet marketing, you must reassess your site from time to time, and the best time is before you get a bad site listed.

Even if you have been listed, this would be a good time some spring cleaning of your site. A chance to go back and refocus on whether or not your site reflects your business in a positive light.

Why Am I Here?

For the most part, web surfers are an impatient group of people. They don't want to wait around while you sing your own praises, or drone on about how wonderful your product / service is. If you have a point, make it. Tell me what it is your selling on the first page. If you want me to spend my money, tell me how much before I spend too much of my time scrolling through your site. I don't want to have to work that hard to find information. If I can't find it quickly, I'll move on to a site that will give it to me.

Bullet vs. Buckshot

If your business has a focus, so should your site. It probably doesn't do you any good to offer domain name search information if it's buried beneath Save the Earth / Local Info / Professional Tennis information. Not that there's anything wrong with any of them, but there's no consistency. If you're putting up a page to share your passion on a subject, that's fine. It's not a way to market a business though.

Fresh Content

There is a lot of information that has a very long shelf life. But there are a lot of sites that need to be updated on a regular basis. If I go to a page that's congratulating the 1996 Atlanta Braves as the new World Champions, I will have serious doubts about the relevancy of the rest of the information.

The same is true with dead links. It makes the site appear neglected if you are asked to click on a link, and it doesn't go anywhere. Some sites are very "link intensive", with lists of links that are related to a similar subject. If this describes your site, you should probably offer your visitors a chance to let you know if any of the links you list are bad. This saves a lot of time for you, as well as helps keep your visitors from leaving, never to return.

Do You Need A Compass To Find Your Way Home?

I have visited some sites where I almost have to leave a trail of breadcrumbs to find my back through the site. The best way to prevent this from happening is to be sure that you are offering a way back. If you are doing this with a tool bar, it would be a good idea to offer a text link as well for those who browse with the graphics turned off. Make sure that their location within the site is well marked, and give them the option of moving back one level as well as returning to your home page.

Check Your Load Times

Earlier I mentioned how impatient web surfers are. Here is where you can lose them before they ever read a word of what you have to say. Sites that are graphic intensive, or that are loaded down with all the latest technological programming tend to load very slowly. My advice is "less is more". Unless it is critical to the overall focus of your site, it would be better to tone it down a little than to have a site that takes forever to load.

Get A Check-Up

A good place to have your pages checked out is Web Site Garage (http://www.websitegarage.com). This is a free service that checks load-time, broken links, popularity, and overall design. They then generate reports detailing problems they have found. It only takes a couple of minutes, and is well worth the effort.

The key is to revisit your site from time to time and look at it from the customers' point of view. What would you think of it if it were someone else's site? Most important, if changes need to be made, make them. If a customer leaves a bad site, the chances of them ever coming back are very slim.

(Jim Smoot is an author, internet marketing consultant, and publisher of the Business Advantage Newsletter. Get a FREE subscription be e-mailing to cjweb@hotmail.com. You can contact Jim at jsweb1@juno.com, or by visiting his site at http://members.xoom.com/cjweb1/home.html.)

banner1.gif (7306 bytes)

 

Get our newsletter and
take your next vacation FREE

Site Highlights

HOME

Free Traffic to Your Site
NEW!!! GUARANTEED Traffic to Your Site
Design Host Contact Us Free Autoresponders
Articles Win Awards Search
OVER 2 Million Free Ad Links
Download E-Books  FUN Top-20  

Copyright © 1998-2005 Stealth Promotions
This page last edited April, 2005
Contact us offline:

3300 Bee Caves Rd Ste 650 #1291
Austin, Texas 78746
webmaster@stealthpromotions.com

+1-512-825-0323 Phone
+1-512-328-8323 Fax

Privacy

Other Web Sites:
Guaranteed Traffic
http://www.traffictoyou.com 

Full-Featured Autoresponders for Less
http://www.RapidReply.net

Stop IP Spam Cold
http://www.ipplug.com 

High Tech Employment Opportunities
http://www.protechsearch.com

My Most Recent Blog Postings