Writing Website Content that Sells is a
Big Factor in SEO & SEM
Hook
Your homepage is the first thing that your website visitor sees,
so it better be good. It’s your hook. But contrary to popular
belief (and sometimes natural intuition), your goal for a
homepage is not to inform or to tell anyone anything. Your #1
goal for a homepage is for your website visitor to click forward
and not back. That is, it is to convince them that you have
something on your website worth spending their time on.
If you’ve ever taken a sales class in anything,
they’ll tell you the first step to selling is making the
customer say “yes” to something, anything.
That’s why telemarketers always ask you stuff like,
“What would you say if I told you I could save you 10% on
your phone bill every month, and it would only take you 10
minutes of your time today?” Because what are you going to
say? I don’t want to save 10%? Of course not. You have to
say, “Well, I guess that sounds pretty good.”
Clicking is the web version of saying “yes” in the
sales world. So your first step is to make the customer want to
click forward. Fortunately, you don’t need to tell them
much to do that. To do that they only need to be able to answer
two things:
What’s in it for me?
Where do I click?
If they can answer those two questions quickly, then you stand
a darn good chance of selling your product. If you babble too
long...Well, unfortunately web surfers are finicky, impatient
creatures that are all too happy to click the back button.
Once you can get them to start clicking, then they have
already taken a proactive approach to your site, and they will
start reading deeper. So don’t cram your homepage with too many
details. Tell them just enough to make them click forward. Don't
worry, once they get interested, website surfers will read
deeper.
Line
Once you get your website visitor into your site, you need to
make sure they feel comfortable and welcome and that they follow
the line you want them to take: to the telephone, to the order
form, to the buy now button... To do that, you need to know how
to write website content.
Website content should be some 50% - 75% shorter than content
created for print. Font’s should be larger, sentences more
concise, paragraphs shorter, and space should be used frequently
(but not after every other sentence). Why? Because reading on the
web is hard. Computer screens just don’t make comfortable reading
platforms. So, concentrate on making it easy for people to scan
pages. Break things up with headers and well-considering
spacing.
Easy and short, however, does not mean that you can leave out
the details. Once you get your visitor to start clicking, then
they are going to want the details. They better be there, and
they better be easy to find. The web is a medium for propagating
information: So give it to them. If you don’t, they’ll buy from
someone who did.
So how do you get a lot of content onto a short web page? You
don’t. You create a lot of unique web pages.
If you have 10 products, make a main products page and 10
products web pages. Don’t try to cram all the details about every
product onto one page. If you have a long industry article, break
it up into several shorter pages and provide a way for readers to
click forward or backward within the article at the end of each
article page. If your services require extensive explanations,
break up the info. If merited, each service can have its intro
page, benefits page, installation page, FAQ, order form,
whatever.
But beware. There is a careful balance between short and
stupidly short, between breaking up pages and breaking up flow,
and between giving your reader places to click and confusing them
to holy heck with too much navigation. The solution? Never lose
sight of your reader. Put a little thought into how you are going
to break up your pages. In fact, put a lot of thought into how
you are going to break up your web pages. Professional website
content writers spend as much of 1/3 to 1/2 of their time
plotting navigation, creating outlines and drawing page layouts
before they write the first sentence.
And Sinker
The goal of your homepage is getting your visitor to click
forward. And the goal of your site is to get your visitor to take
action. That is, to buy your product. Your ordering process must
be simple. And, if at all possible, it should be automated and
online. If your product or service doesn’t lend itself to a
shopping cart system, then at least make sure that you've got a
simple online request form where potential customers can input
answers to some basic questions about themselves and request a
free quote or a call from a customer service representative.
During the ordering process, never ask your customer to fill
out more than you absolutely need to complete their order. If you
can get away with asking for just a credit card number and name,
do it. Loosing people that already decided to buy because you
just had to know their demographics is not a good thing.
Not sure if your ordering process is simple enough? Here's a
stretch: Go through it yourself. Too many website owners have
never once been through their own ordering process. Still not
sure? Ask your son or daughter. If they can’t do it. It's too
complicated.
About the Author:
Wintress Odom a full-time professional freelance writer with over
half a decade of experience in writing technical and advertising material. She runs a successful copywriting agency,
The Writers for Hire.
Article Copyright © 2007 The Writers for Hire, Inc. All rights reserved
For more information and articles on search engine optimization and our services, please see:
Article - search engine optimization process overview
Article - a website is not one-dimensional
Article - search engine trends
Article - designing websites that work
Article - link popularity
FAQ's - search engine optimization FAQ
Resources - optimization resources and tools
Services - search engine marketing
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