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Wording Up Your Website
by Glenn Murray
Back to basics. Forget funky design,
good copywriting is the key to a clear and intuitive website.
Are you losing business because of your
website? More and more customers are logging on to the Web to decide
where to spend their money because it is quick and convenient, and they
can jump from site to site instead of walking from store to store.
Web savvy customers don't need to be
patient, studies have shown that you need to engage a potential customer
very quickly by giving them easy, fast access to the information they
need. Otherwise they will simply move on to the next site.
Appealing design and speedy
functionality are important but they don't ensure that your site is well
structured (intuitive) or well written (clear).
Write First
The real message on most websites is in
the writing, and so it makes sense that the writing should determine the
structure. Unfortunately, this is not the usual case. Most businesses
choose the structure and design of their site first and then try and fit
the writing around that structure. This flies in the face of
commonsense. When you speak to someone, you structure your speech around
your message, you don't decide on a structure then change the message to
suit. So you need to plan what you want to say before you create the
site. Maybe even write the whole thing first and then use the message to
determine the structure.
When deciding what to write, think
about what your customer wants to know rather than what you want to say.
It's a subtle difference, but it is the key to engaging a potential
customer.
Most customers will want to know the
basics:
- What do you do?
- What benefit can you offer them?
- Why should they choose your service
or product?
- What does it cost?
- How can they contact you?
- Where are you located?
Brevity & Clarity
Your website has to communicate a lot
of information and to make matters worse, you are going to have limited
space. Ideally, your customer won't have to scroll on any page (all your
information will fit in a single window) and that single view will need
to contain more than just words. The design and navigation elements take
up about a third of a window, and you should leave a bit of room for
white space (you don't want to overwhelm the customer). As a rule of
thumb you should expect to have about half the window free for text.
How you are going to fit all your
information in such a confined space? This is where writing skills come
in - choose your words very carefully.
Websites can be an extremely powerful
piece of marketing collateral. You can reach millions of potential
customers for as little as a few hundred dollars. Unfortunately, your
competitors are all doing the same thing - it's a level playing field
but there are a lot of players.
It is important that your message is
structured and well thought out, otherwise your site will be a mess and
no-one will bother to read about your business. If your message is
clear, your site will be simple and easy to use. It's all in the words.
Glenn Murray heads advertising
copywriting studio
Divine Write.
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