Converting
Searchers to Customers
Getting visitors to your Web
site is only half the battle. To be victorious, you need to
convert visitors into customers by making purchases, signing
up for services, or otherwise fulfilling your goals. At a
session called "After They Arrive," industry
experts discussed the dos and don'ts of converting
visitors to customers.
"Too many sites are
product or service-centric and fail to engage or connect with
new visitors," stated Usborne. " Sites would do
better to make their home pages more about their customers'
needs and less about the company's products."
Usborne presented the following
guidelines to consider when building your web site:
"Many sites are horribly
hard to navigate," stated Usborne. "If people cannot
find what they want quickly, they will simply give up. And
even when they do find what they want, the checkout process
kills more sales than it confirms."
Effective copy is essential to
the sales process. Sites need to have copy that drives
customer actions and deliberately, effectively closes sales.
"Many a sale has been lost because the site didn't give
enough information about a particular product or service, said
Usborne. "The more expensive or complex the product, the
more you have to say in order to close the sale. Don't be shy
about using long copy in the right places."
Usborne also emphasized that
personalization can make a big difference. Web site owners
should great efforts to customize the visitor experience, in
order to make sure that the experience matches the visitors'
needs.
Michael Sack of Inceptor spoke
specifically about driving return-on-investment (ROI) through
search engine optimization. "Search engine strategies
should always be integrated with conversion marketing,"
stated Sack.
According to Sack, conversion
marketing is the process of leveraging the content of your web
site to drive qualified traffic to increasingly accurate
destinations within your site. Before visitors arrive at your
site, web site owners should:
(1) Make the most relevant
content (products, services, articles, information, etc.)
visible at the search level.
(2) Connect the search results
to specific pages, sometimes called landing pages, on your web
site. For example, if a person is looking for a specific
product, you don't want that person to go to your site's home
page. You want that person to go directly to the page
highlighting the product he is searching for.
(3) Make it easy for your
site's visitors to find your site or to get what they want.
Once visitors arrive at your
site, Sack explained, you can measure the effectiveness of
your web pages. Content, calls-to-action, pricing points, and
click-through paths are all valuable information that can be
tested.
Sack offered an analogy to a
supermarket. "The supermarket knows where every product
is placed in its store to increase the likelihood of a
purchase," he explained. " Why shouldn't web sites
do the same thing?"
When tracking results, Sack
recommended finding which search engines and directories
deliver the best traffic and which click-through paths deliver
the most conversions. By connecting the best performing search
phrases and to the best performing click-through paths, web
site owners will get the best results.
Stay Current With Changes in Search Engine Marketing.
There’s no
such thing as a learning curve in the field of Search Engine
Marketing. Just about the time you’ve got it figured out, it
branches off in another direction. That’s why you need a
partner who can advise you on what lies ahead. Keep up-to-date
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