A business owner's guide to website redesign

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A Business Owner’s Guide to Website Redesign 7 steps to a more effective website

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Transcript of A business owner's guide to website redesign

Page 1: A business owner's guide to website redesign

A Business Owner’s Guide to Website Redesign7 steps to a more effective website

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Step 1: What do you want from your website redesign? 3 Step 2: Protect your website’s search engine authority 5 Step 3: Make your homepage clear & encourage interaction 7 Step 4: Create original content that attracts visitors 8 Step 5: Converting visitors into leads 10 Step 6: Conduct conversion experiments 12 Step 7: Look at your analytics and review to improve 13 Conclusion: Your website redesign checklist 14

Contents

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Are you thinking of redesigning your business’ website? If you are, then this whitepaper is for you.

Before picking up the phone to a designer or letting anyone else loose on your website, it’s important to be clear on what you’re hoping to achieve.

There are many really sound commercial reasons for redesigning a business’ website, but just as many that are a little vague and potentially misguided. The former can lead you to increased traffic and business, while the latter could waste your time and money.

Here are some common examples of both:

Step 1: What do you want from your redesign?

Vague reasons Sound reasons“We need a new corporate “We want to get found by more look and feel.” prospects & increase our traffic.”

“It’s been quite a while since “We want to convert more our last redesign.” prospects into leads.”

“Our competitors have been “We want more customers.” redesigning their sites recently.”

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Vague reasons for redesigning a website are usually driven by hope and optimism. There’s a feeling that a new website will help create impact and new interest around a brand. Unfortunately, this is rarely the case.

The chart below is based on extensive research carried out by HubSpot. They’ve found that the initial enthusiasm created by a new company website soon fades away, unless it generates a clear return on investment in terms of new customers and increased profits.

Source: HubSpot, Website Redesign Strategy, 2010

Step 1: What do you want from your redesign?

Which way forward? Develop or redesign

In Internet marketing terms, website development is now as much about business results as it is design. A beautiful website, although aesthetically pleasing, must be secondary to attracting more quality traffic and generating new business leads.

It’s worth asking yourself whether you could achieve your goals by simply developing your existing website. By the time you’ve finished this whitepaper you may decide that this is a better route for you.

Marketing Takeaway

It’s important to go into any website redesign for the right reasons and with clearly defined goals. It’s worth considering:

• How much do you want your new site to add to your bottom line?

• How many new customers do you need to attract to achieve that?

• How many leads will that require and how much extra traffic will you need each month?

If redesigning your website still makes sense after reviewing your reasons, crunching these numbers and setting your goals, it’s time to move on to step 2.

Happiness Your CompanyYour Prospects

TimeLaunch 6 months 12 months

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Step 2: Protecting your search engine authority

Once you’ve decided to redesign your current website, it’s vitally important to follow the correct process. If not, you run the risk of losing the search engine authority that your existing site has already built up. This authority is an important asset for any business and needs to be protected.

What are your website’s assets?

Your current website’s assets include its content, inbound links and keyword rankings. To preserve your position in the search engine rankings, you must ensure that they are all transferred as part of the redesign process.

To help achieve this, it’s worth going through the following checklist:

Determine how many pages your current website has.

Determine which pages are the most popular.

Work out how many inbound links these pages have.

Establish where these links are coming from.

Look at which other pages have inbound links.

Work out which keywords are driving traffic to your site.

Determine which pages rank well for your main search keywords.

Using this information, you’ll be able to preserve your website’s searchengine authority.

You’ll want to protect the pages that are most popular and have the mostlinks as these are the ones that underpin your search authority.

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Changing your name can become a disaster

If you’re redesigning your website because your company is changing its name, then there are other important considerations.

It’s likely that you‘ll be moving to an entirely new web domain (for example, from www.ouroldname.co.uk to www.ournewname.co.uk). If this is the case, you’ll need to think about setting up permanent redirects (known as ‘301’ redirects) from every page on your old domain to the equivalent page on your new one. This is because search engines use inbound links (links on other sites to your site) to help measure the authority of your site. Don’t fall into the trap of only setting up a redirect for your homepage.

Even if you put these redirects in place, it’s a good idea to identify your current site’s strongest inbound links, so you can contact these sites and ask them to update your company name, web address and the anchor text (the text used on the link). If for any reason you can’t put permanent redirects in place, then this exercise is essential.

Marketing takeaway

Although you may need professional search engine optimisation help to protect your website’s search authority, it’s definitely worthwhile.

Without following the correct process, a website redesign can do more harm than good to a business. Your new site will end up starting from scratch in the search engine rankings, which could mean a significant loss of traffic and business.

Step 2: Protecting your search engine authority

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Step 3: Make your homepage clear & encourage interaction

For the majority of businesses, their website’s homepage is their most popular web page. For this reason, it’s important that your redesigned homepage includes certain essential elements.

Your new homepage’s first impression must be all about simplicity. It needs to be easy to use with clear navigation. As the graph below shows, 76% of consumers prefer websites that make it easy to find what they want.2

Source: HubSpot, The Science of Website Redesign, June 2011

To make your website intuitive to use, try to simplify the choices a visitor must make. For example, if you offer 25 services, put them under 4 overarching umbrella services so your visitors won’t be overwhelmed.

Also, make sure you highlight both your company blog (or equivalent area of your website, such as your ‘News’ or ‘Advice’ page), as well as your social media networking pages on your homepage.

Marketing takeaway

Your homepage is the public face of your business. You only get one chance to make that all important first impression, so make sure you carefully format your homepage. The focus should be on clear navigation, as well as encouraging interaction and engagement in the future.

What is the most important factor in the design of a website?

The website makes it easy for me to find what I want: 76%The website offers a cutting edge

interactive experience: 9%

The website has a beautiful appearance: 10%

Other: 5%

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Step 4: Create original content that attracts visitors

Original content is the key to successful inbound marketing and improving any website’s marketing performance. It will help you increase your traffic, as well as the number of leads and enquiries you receive.

Start with business blogging

The most effective way to start adding new marketing content to your redesigned website is through a blog section, or similar. Of people that use the Internet every day, 65% read blogs and 38% read between 5-10 regularly.

Just take a look at the statistics below, which are taken from recent research3:

• Of the companies surveyed, those with an active blog attracted 55% more website visitors on average.

• Of these, 57% had acquired new customers through blogging in the last year.

• On average, their websites had 97% more inbound links and 434% more indexed pages, both of which are vital for search engine performance.

• Two-thirds saw publishing content on their business blogs as ‘critical’ or ‘important’ for marketing their business.

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Source: HubSpot, 100 Awesome Marketing Stats, Charts and Graphs, 2011

For more on the benefits of business blogging, please see:

Marketing takeaway

Original content is a website’s lifeblood. It shows your visitors what you doand helps build trust and credibility.

Starting with your blog, your business needs to be continuously publishing content that helps keep prospects engaged, informed and interacting with your business. If you don’t, it’s likely that your competitors will.

Step 4: Create original content that attracts visitors

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55% More Website Visitors for Companies that Blog

97% More Inbound Links for Companies that Blog

Don’t Blog Don’t BlogBlog Blog

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Step 5: Converting visitors into leads

However well your website is redesigned, not every visitor will be ready to make any enquiry or become a customer on their first visit. It’s likely that many will be doing research before making a purchase, either about your industry in general or your specific products and services.

For your website to be an effective marketing machine it needs to turn these visitors into leads, by giving them a reason to offer their contact information such as their name and email address. You can do this by adding calls to action, offers and dedicated landing pages to your website.

The power of compelling offers & a call to action

Compelling marketing offers can take may forms, such as whitepapers, FAQs or ebooks, or perhaps a free consultation or review. What’s right for you will depend on your business, your sales process and your audience.

Your offers should be highlighted by a clear Call to Action, which appears across your website. Here’s an example:

Each Call to Action should take your visitors to a targeted landing page where they’ll complete a short form providing their contact details in exchange for your offer.

This is where you’ll start to see real marketing results from your website redesign.

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Optimising your landing pages

The ability to add landing pages to your redesigned website will be essential for successful Internet marketing.

You should be able to build your landing pages without the need to involve your web design agency or IT department. It should be something that you can do in minutes.

To be most effective landing pages need to:

• Highlight the benefits of your offer in a clear, simple and concise way.

• Keep your landing page’s data capture form above the webpage’s fold, so your visitors don’t need to scroll down.

• Have less navigation options than other pages on your site as this boosts conversion rates (your site navigation should be returned once the form has been completed and the visitor is taken to a ‘Thank you’ screen).

Here’s an example of an optimised landing page that includes all of these elements:

Marketing takeaway

Offers, calls to action and landing pages are where the magic happens on a business website. They are how you’ll capture potential leads, which you can then develop through other marketing activities such as ongoing lead nurturing through email marketing.

Quite simply, if you can’t easily add these elements, then your new website is very unlikely to improve your business’ marketing performance.

Step 5: Converting visitors into leads

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Step 6: Conduct conversion experiments

Assuming that your new website will give you the ability to add offers, calls to action and landing pages (again, it should!), it will also be important to test different wordings and layouts to determine what works best.

You’ll want to do this by looking at their conversion performance in terms of visitors to leads. In this way you can constantly improve your offers and landing pages over time.

If your offers and landing pages don’t seem to be reaching their full potential, here are some ideas to try:

• Include a link to them in your email newsletters.

• Have your pay-per click ads go right to the landing page.

• Use them as the next step after a trade show or event.

Marketing takeaway

If you want your website to be really effective as a marketing tool, then it’s best to see an initial redesign as just the start of the process. Your site needs to evolve and improve over time. This is especially important for your landing pages, as they should be the most important pages on your website. By measuring and constantly improving their performance, you can convert more of your website visitors into new business opportunities.

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It’s important to stress that your redesigned website must give you the information to continually improve its performance.

It’s an old adage that you ‘know that half of your advertising is working, but not which half’. Well, that no longer needs to be the case with your website. With properly set up measurement and analytics it should be simple to see what’s working and what isn’t.

In particular, you should be able to see the following with the click of a mouse:

• How many people are visiting your website?

• Where are they coming from?

• How many of these visitors are converting into leads?

• Which offer encouraged them to convert?

• How many of these leads became customers?

Only by having this data at you fingertips will you be able to determine which parts of your website need revision.

Marketing takeaway

Measurement and analytics are key for pinpointing the potential in your website. By making small but informed adjustments to your site, you’ll be able to make it even more effective at generating visitors, leads and ultimately sales.

Step 7: Look at your analytics and review to improve

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We hope that you’ve found this whitepaper useful. To help you with your website redesign, here’s a checklist so you can double check that your new site has everything you need:

ü Are you clear on why you’re thinking of redesigning your site? Remember a lot of businesses don’t just need a new ‘look & feel’, but a more effective approach to their Internet marketing.

ü By how much do you need your website to improve your bottom line?

ü Have you worked out how many extra visitors, leads and customers you need to achieve that?

ü Do you have a plan of action to protect the search engine authority that your existing site has already built up? This can help avoid damaging your online presence.

ü Will your new homepage have the essential fundamental elements needed to support your marketing efforts? Will it be clear, intuitive and encourage interaction?

ü Does your website have a business blog section (or similar) so you can regularly add new marketing content? Creative and original content is the most powerful way of attracting and retaining visitors.

ü Is it straightforward to add compelling offers, calls to action and dedicated landing pages to your website, so you can encourage visitors to volunteer their contact information?

ü Can you easily test different offers and experiment with landing page layouts and wording to determine what works best?

ü Do your new website’s analytics let you see where your traffic is coming from and what parts of your marketing are working (and what isn’t)?

Conclusion: Your website redesign checklist

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And finally…

Website redesign projects can be expensive and time consuming. To get a return on your investment, you’ll want to make your website more effective from a marketing point of view too.

Inbound marketing tactics such as search engine optimisation, blogging, and social media are much more effective than a one-off website redesign. They can be easily integrated into your website and some relatively small changes could help it become a powerful traffic generating machine.

Would you like a free, no obligation inbound marketing consultation and audit of your current website? Please just call 0845 034 5603 or visit our website at www.concentricmarketing.co.uk.

About Concentric Marketing

Concentric Marketing is an inbound marketing agency and Gold Level HubSpot Certified Partner.

We help our clients be found by their online audience, whether they’re new customers or clients. Our focus is on enhancing this process of digital discovery through search engine optimisation, content development and business social media communications.

We take a proven approach, built upon a process of research & planning, conversion optimisation and continuous evaluation, to achieve measurable results and a real return on investment.

Conclusion: Your website redesign checklist

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1MARKETSHARE.HITSLINK.COM, OCTOBER 20102HubSpot, THE SCIENCE OF WEBSITE REDESIGN, JUNE 20113HubSpot, 20104HubSpot, State of Inbound Marketing Lead Generation Report, 20105HubSpot, Webinar Redesign Strategy, 2010

Sources (unless stated)