So That's What Goes On A Home Page!
In the early days of the World Wide Web, the word went around
that the thing to do on a home page is to heartily and sincerely
welcome the visitor. Today, this is unnecessary, cliched and
ineffective. Instead, an effective home page needs to quickly
orient the visitor to what the business or professional practice
offers, distinguish these offerings from competitors' and direct
the web site visitor what to do if they are interested in
learning more.
It's especially important to make a strong and clear
presentation on the home page if you want perfect strangers
coming from a search engine to spend more than 10 seconds on the
site when determining whether or not it is relevant to them.
Getting business from such strangers is one of the major payoffs
of having a web site, and they lack the patience of someone who
has already had contact with you or been referred by a trusted
source. Even people seriously inclined to hire you don't have
endless patience to wade through hot air, jargon or superfluous
preliminaries.
Therefore, a home page must make it possible to answer these
questions within 10 seconds:
* What is being described or sold here? What kind of business is
this? * Why should I do business with this company rather than
its competitors? * What should I do to find out more or get in
touch?
In judging web sites for the Webby Awards, I have seen as many
rich, large companies as small ones overlook the first essential
for a home page - set the context. Orient the visitor. The
perfect stranger may need to know things that you assume
everyone already knows, such as:
1. What business are you in? Include a commonly understood
industry name or the generic name of your primary product or
service prominently in the home page copy, if it's not already
part of your business name or in the tag line. When this
information isn't plainly and obviously stated, many visitors
are screaming to themselves, "What IS this?" as they hit the
back button on their browsers.
2. Who do you serve? So many businesses - banks, restaurants,
dentists - leave it unspoken what state or province and even
what country they are in when that's essential to someone
figuring out whether or not this business meets their needs.
When location plays a crucial role in service, make it
unmistakable where the business is. Other times, the answer to
this question is more subtle. You need to indicate that you work
with Fortune 500 companies, or mostly with authors, or with
ambitious fitness professionals and health club owners.
3. Why should someone do business with you? The best kind of
answer to this question involves presenting the benefits someone
gets from buying your products or services. Indeed, I recommend
putting such benefits right in your home page headline. For
instance, for a caregiving support site I created this headline:
With Support, Caregiving Becomes a Rewarding Journey. For a site
about a book on outstanding women scientists and artists, the
headline read: Learn From Accomplished Women Role Models How to
Create a Fulfilling Lifelong Career. Note the inviting tone of
these headlines. Within the paragraphs of the home page copy,
refer again and again to what customers get and what makes you
different from competitors.
4. What should I do next? Even though you provide navigation
links for people to choose where to go next at the site, it's
effective to say explicitly what someone with such and such an
interest should do. Your call to action might have more than one
part, such as: To learn more about how Hyana Heights Club helps
you stay healthy and fit, click here. To book your free tour and
complimentary aerobics class, click here.
Use these guidelines to create or redo a home page, and you'll
enjoy a significantly improved response from your web site both
from people landing on your site from search engines and those
already somewhat interested in what you offer. There's much more
involved in turning web site visitors into customers, but you'll
certainly thereby have laid the groundwork for a reasonable
return on your web site investment.