Does Your Website Work?
When was the last time you tried out all the parts of your
website? Have gone clicking around your site to see what
your customers are seeing? If you have answered “yes” then
good for you… but even if you have, have you looked on your
own computer?
A friend of mine is a web designer and if you go into her
home office your jaw would drop… you’d think you just
stepped into a spaceship. She has several screen and
several computers running at once. I asked her what all the
computers were for. As a high end website designer, she
wants to make sure that her customer’s websites look good
for everyone viewing the site, whether they are viewing it
on a small screen or a large screen. She’ll create a
website then view it from different monitors to see how it
looks… then she’ll make adjustments accordingly.
Now, I’m not suggesting that you rush out and buy yourself
several monitors to do that job, but there are things you
can do.
First, make sure that all of your links are live. Make it a
goal of yours to click through your site once a week to
make sure the links are live. Of course, if you never
change your site and all of the links are internal, then
you don’t need to do it that often. However, if you change
your site periodically and you link to other sites, your
links could drop so easily! Check to make sure they’re
still working.
Second, have friends or family browse your site
periodically. I have one friend who emails me every time he
changes his site and asks me to check it out. (Please don’t
email your sites for the same reason… my time is limited!
Instead, get some trusted friends or family to view your
sites). Have them give you honest feedback. If you’re
concerned that they will be too nice, put together a
checklist where they have to rank various aspects of your
site on a scale of 1 to 5.
Third, watch your metrics very closely. If you have 5 steps
between your first page and the final purchase confirmation
button, what do you notice about the people visiting each
page? You can expect most of your visitors to see the first
page… then a proportionately fewer number visit the next
page… then a proportionately fewer number visit the third
page… etc. I can’t give you an exact number, of course, but
you should see similar numbers each month and they should
be proportionate. If you lose 25% of your viewers from the
first page to the second, and 25% of those from the second
to the third, and 25% of those from the third to the
fourth, and 50% of those from the fourth to the fifth,
there’s a good chance that something on the fifth page is
driving them away. Identify what it is and fix it.
Fourth, consider a quick customer service survey. You might
want to email customers a survey after they have purchased
something or perhaps you can build into your site a quick
customer service survey just before the purchase
confirmation page. If you have to, consider offering a
coupon to customers for the completion of the survey.
Your website may load well and look good on your computer,
but the reason could be that your site was designed FOR
your computer. If you check it out on other computers and
go through the 4 steps above, you’ll improve the chances
that your website will work for other people no matter how
they’re viewing it.
About the Author:
Diane Hughes
ProBizTips.com
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