| A
professional website is, above all else, professional. What constitutes
professional though? This question has been asked by many, and the
answers are varied as those asking the question. There are at least
a hundred or more possible aspects to consider, some consisting of
parts of others, such as demographics and content. Each factor has
its own effect on how customers perceive a website.
Being professional is an attitude portrayed by you,
the business owner, your business and your website. You don’t
have the luxury of smiling real big, wearing your best suit, and
shaking hands with the customer. Your website has to do that for
you. This brief list of what to do and what not to do when creating
a professional website is only the beginning, one small step towards
success.
DO’S
1. Know your visitors.
Your site should be designed to fit their needs and wants. If you’re
selling, know the demographics of the people you’re selling
to. If you’re just providing information, know who you are
targeting. Rule of thumb: know more about your audience than they
know about you.
2. Know your product.
As strong as that may sound, people know when a site offers products
or services that they themselves know little about. If you are letting
someone else write the content for your site and that someone doesn’t
know the product, then, your customers won’t know it either.
Anticipate questions from customers and answer them before they
are asked.
3. Have your site visually pleasing.
Just because bright red and bright blue are your favorite colors
doesn’t mean that they should be the dominant colors on your
site. Red and blue are at different ends of the spectrum and will
give viewers a headache if viewed too long. You want to make viewers
feel welcome, comfortable, and that they are able to trust you.
4. Outline the concept of the site before
created.
Know the answers to those golden questions: who, what, when, where,
why and how. While these questions apply to your demographics they
are also helpful in deciding what information is truly important
and what isn’t. Pinning down your tacit knowledge is often
a challenge, and not all tacit knowledge is valuable. What do you
want the customers to know and what do the customers want to know?
5. Make your prices readily available.
Hide your prices and customers will wonder what else you are hiding.
Don’t wait until after you ask for their credit card information
to tell them how much it costs. You don’t make sales that
way; what you do make is frustrated customers who tell other potential
customers to stay away from your site.
6. Keep your site credible.
Back up what you say with statistics or links to articles that support
your claim. If you have experts in your company, highlight them.
Show the customers that there are REAL people running the business.
Update the content as often as possible – if updating the
content isn’t possible, add links to news articles and update
those links. It is time consuming, but in the end it is worth the
time and effort.
7. Ask for input from people who know nothing
about your product/service/business.
This is the best way to get true feedback. People who know nothing
about what you are doing can find the smallest mistake and ask the
best questions. They can give you fresh perspective on your site
and sometimes your business. They don’t know what you know,
and they often see what you don’t.
8. Use images that portray confidence.
You want the customers to trust you right? Then show them that you
believe enough in yourself and your product that there is no doubt
that you are trustworthy. Dress for success. You wouldn’t
wear snow boots on a hot summer’s day, would you? Then don’t
let your site wear images that could make you look cheap and untrustworthy.
9. Keep your site translator-friendly.
This can sometimes be challenged as we tend to use different terminology
than other countries. What we would consider ‘normal phrasing’
may be considered ‘odd’ of offensive to someone else.
Avoid slang and test your site with a translator. See which words
are translated and which ones aren’t, then try to figure out
why.
10. Be consistent throughout the site.
Making each page of your site different can be entertaining to teenagers
and new internet users, but most of your potential customers aren’t
new to the internet. If a viewer feels as though they’re on
a different site each time they click a link on your site, they
are likely to go to another site. Consistency counts in site design
as professionalism, and your customers will expect it.
DON’TS
1. Don’t guess who you’re trying to reach with your
site.
‘Guesstimation’ is for horse shoes and card games. If
you don’t know your demographic, then you might as well have
thrown your site together.
2. Don’t get too technical.
Your customers are the ones reading your site, so it should be written
for them. Sure, your competition might read your site as well, but
they already know the business jargon. Besides, you aren’t
trying to sell to them anyway. Remember; other business owners may
browse, but your customers are your buyers.
3. Don’t give your customers a headache.
There are 256 colors available for site design. 216 of those are
browser ‘safe’. Just because there are an abundance
of colors does not mean that they all should be used at once. Warm
colors shouldn’t be used with cool colors because of the conflicting
hues. Meanwhile, bright colors make the eyes work harder to focus
and after a few minutes will likely give your viewers a headache.
4. Don’t keep content that isn’t
being read.
Keeping track of what your customers are actually reading is very
helpful. You want a customer to peruse your site as completely as
possible. The more they know, the better your chances are that they
will purchase or sign-up. If a page isn’t being read then
try something else. Rewrite it. Add psychological triggers. Rephrase.
Find a way to make the page valuable.
5. Don’t repeat the same information
on every page.
The viewer doesn’t want to read the same material over and
over. Give them new, fresh information on each page. If they want
to go back and read the previous page, give them that option.
6. Don’t hide contact information.
You’ll find conflicting information on this topic. Some designers
will tell you to put your contact information on every page, but
customers tend to find that redundant. One page with multiple ways
to contact you is more effective even if the customer never visits
the page. Just having the page there tells them that you can be
reached and that you really are there for their convenience.
7. Don’t use animations.
Some would say use animations to draw attention to your ad, product,
‘new’ idea/newsletter/etc. but by following that suggestion
you frustrate the customer. Flashing, moving objects distract the
eyes. A customer is there looking for information, if their eyes
are distracted while reading, their comprehension decreases while
their frustration rises. The use of colors such as yellow and orange
become helpful in this area. Bolding or italicizing words is another
way to emphasize phrases or items you want the customer to notice.
8. Don’t use multiple fonts.
It only takes the eye seconds to adjust to a new font, but those
seconds are distracting to the mind. Different sizes, styles, and
colors are confusing. Choose one font and stick with it. Consistency
is more important than creativity when it comes to text.
9. Don’t take control away from the
viewer.
Creative cursors, full screen browsers, and other ‘entertaining’
aspects of site design are great, if your target audience is teenagers
or new internet users, but for a professional website they give
the appearance of being cheap, second rate, amateurish. 10. Don’t ‘bunch up’ the
text.
Add spaces between paragraphs so customers don’t feel overwhelmed
with information. Placing a small picture pertaining to the content
gives the eye time to relax before reading further. |