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Create a website

August 24, 2016 By Haley Graves

Create a website that helps your customers find what they need

websites-can-help-grow-your-business

Remember the last time you lost something? How frustrating and time consuming the search was? Searching for information on the Internet can feel the same way. How many times have you gone to a website looking for one simple piece of information and you end up saying ?nevermind? because the website?s navigation is just too confusing. You know the information exists, but you don?t have the time or patience to continue searching. So you do what every other person with an internet connection does: you Google it to find another company that offers the same products and/or services.

A recent survey by AnswerDash reveals how and why we leave websites:

  • 75 percent of people 18 to 24 years old and 57 percent of those 55 and over abandon a site within two minutes if they can?t find what they need.
  • Of those over age 55, 28 percent said they spend only 4 minutes trying to accomplish their task on a website before leaving.
  • Across all age groups, average abandonment time is 90 seconds.

Here?s another informative statistic: 57 percent of web users will abandon a site as soon as they have a question without a ready answer.

For small business owners, this means two things. First, a website is a must. Second, when building your website, you need to think like a customer and understand best practices for web development, design, search engine optimization (SEO), and user experience (UX).

Help customers navigate

For any new business, the company?s online presence needs to be topnotch. Basic functionality should never be an issue, and content should be fresh and up-to-date. Sites that are most inviting are clean and flow logically.

Here are eight keys to consider when creating your new site:

  1. Timeliness. Your site needs to be current and updated. Consider blogs, forums, or other tools that are updated regularly with new and engaging content.
  2. Navigation. Keep navigation organized and straightforward. Consider grouping similar navigation items together. If your site is going to have more than six pages, consider a sitemap. (For SEO, you will likely want a sitemap anyway. We?ll cover that in a later post.)
  3. Simplicity. Content should be concise and easy to find, preferably not across multiple pages. No one wants to click through 10 different pages to find that one piece of information they need. As with navigation tools, group similar pieces of content together. Use headings and highlighting to set content apart. Also, within the article, DO link to relevant content. For example, if you mention tips to design a great logo (https://atbrand.com/branding/design-a-logo), you?ll want to provide a link to easily access that content.
  4. Engagement. If users are bored, they will not stay long and they will not come back. Make sure the site is clean but still eye-catching. Add interactive elements where they make sense?don?t force them.
  5. Structure. While the site shouldn?t be so bland that users don?t remember it, don?t stray too far in the opposite direction and make the site outlandish. If it?s in your budget, hire a designer who can help you choose the right colors, fonts, and design elements to make your site unique and attractive.
  6. Optional audio and video. Using audio and video on your website can be engaging, but let the user choose what he or she wants to see or hear?do not start audio and video streaming as soon as the user arrives. And be mindful that audio and video can use more resources, which may require you to select a more advanced (and more expensive) web hosting service, or your site may load slowly.
  7. Registration as a barricade. You need a good reason to force users to register to use your site. If the site has a customer portal, then registration makes sense. However, having users register just to browse the site is a barrier, telling them only certain users are welcome.
  8. Ad overkill. Using advertising appropriately can be a legitimate income-generator for your business. However, advertising in excess can be distracting and frustrating. Users want to review your content without ads popping up all over. An ad should not be the first thing a user sees, nor should ad space outweigh content space.

Information courtesy of Kissmetrics.

One last note

Your website should be informative; try to anticipate users? questions and provide them with answers. However, when users have questions you have not considered, make sure your ?help? tool is portrayed as just that?your company?s offer to help and not a secret society for only the most technologically savvy customers to find.

Remember, the most important thing to do when building a website is to help users find answers. Do this, and do it well, and you will give yourself a great chance to earn more business.

Filed Under: Branding Tagged With: small business, start-up, Website Design

Four brand building basics best left to the pros

July 14, 2014 By At Brand Staff

Pet Store Logos

Running a small business can be financially challenging. Thus, many small business owners feel as though they can cut costs by creating business cards and other corporate identity materials themselves?wrong.

When your small business is your livelihood, wouldn?t you want to present your company in the most professional light possible? While hiring professional help may seem like an unnecessary cost, in certain aspects of your business it can actually save you time and earn you more money in the long run.

Here are four brand building basics you should consider turning over to the pros:

  1. Logo Design. If you think of your business as a house, your logo is more than the welcome mat, it is the entire entrance?a vitally important design element that helps introduce and shape the way people experience your brand. Even more than that, the logo is the primary identification mark of your business. It needs to be simple, clear, and versatile. Your logo also needs to be valued and respected for what it is, a supporting element, not the defining element, of your brand?s visual identity. Yet it will always command a prominent place in the identity hierarchy, which it needs to be professionally designed to sit boldly front and center.
  2. Business Cards. While companies like Vistaprint, Overnight Prints, and Zazzle offer hundreds of free templates, do you really want to use the same uninspired template as thousands of other companies? Probably not. Instead, your business card should be unique and make a lasting impression with potential clients and employees. It should be an extension of your brand. In fact, you should consider bundling all? your brand identity design needs together?business cards, stationery, envelopes, labels, brochures, postcards, and other promotional items. The best part, you can still use online digital printers to print your materials. It?s the best of both worlds?great looking designs and quality printing at a low cost.
  3. Website. People prefer to do business with companies that have a professional website. If you take the DIY approach, you risk the chance of not being taken seriously. Perhaps more important, website development is governed by its own set of rules?CSS and programming languages?that every excellent web designer is well versed in. Why? Because designing websites that are both beautiful and beneficial is about striking a balance between code-generated design and graphic and traditional media elements. If you can strike that balance, not only will you have a great looking website, but you will also have a website that search engines and, by extension, visitors can find.
  4. Content. Content for marketing, advertising, and web is crucial to the success of any company. Essentially, you want to develop content that is not only SEO-friendly but also engaging. However, if you know your writing skills are not up to par or have asked yourself what is SEO, you?re at a major loss. Hire a professional writer or SEO company to develop relevant content for both your target audience and popular search engines. If they can assist you with copywriting, editing, and proofreading, you?ll get a much better return on your investment than if you do it yourself. You may know what you want to say about your business. A great writer will help you say it better than you can say it yourself.

Filed Under: Branding Tagged With: Business Cards, Copywriting, CSS, Digital Printing, Logo Design, Overnight Prints, SEO, VistaPrint, Website Design

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Featured Articles & Tips

Create a website

Create a website that helps your customers find what they need Remember the last time you lost something? How frustrating and time consuming the search was? Searching for information on the Internet can feel the same way. How many times have you gone to a website looking for one simple piece of information and you …Read More

Design a logo

As part of your brand, make sure your logo hits the mark You never get a second chance to make a first impression. This phrase has been uttered countless times, and nowhere is it more relevant than in the launch of your new business. During a time when everything is moving so fast, how do …Read More

Naming your business

Brand experts who create ?sticky? business names focus on purpose and relevance? Are you great with names? Say you meet someone at a networking event. Will you remember their name tomorrow? Next week? Next month? If you?re like most people, the answer is no. In fact, you?re likely to forget their name within minutes?and sometimes …Read More

Business Branding Articles

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