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Website Articles - Website Redesigns
Should
You Fire Your Web Site?
If
your Web site isn't doing its job--selling--why are
you keeping it on your sales team?
HomeOfficeMag.com, by James Maduk
Ask yourself this: If
your Web site were one of your salespeople, would you
keep that employee on your team? In other words, is
your Web site doing its job--selling?
Almost every viable business
today has a Web site that serves a number of purposes.
Even a basic Web presence ensures a visitor that the
company is for real and still in business. At larger
companies, the IT or Web department controls the messaging,
content, look and feel. Support may have a section to
offload customer service. Highly integrated businesses
may even tie distribution and the supply chain to the
site, allowing customers to check their orders.
It doesn't matter if you're
the only "salesperson" or you have a dedicated
sales team; brochures, product sheets and a shopping
cart system aren't enough to build any online or offline
business. You want your Web site to engage, enroll and
compel customers. You want it to qualify prospects,
present solutions and close sales. You want it to grab
a visitor's attention, create some interest, build desire
and get the visitor to take some action. You know--the
stuff that salespeople do.
Getting Leads
Is your Web site getting good leads? Not all Web site
visitors are created equal. Don't assume that just because
they happen to be on your Web site they are interested
in buying your product or service. There tends to be
four types of Web traffic:
- Browsers: people who might have
arrived on your site by mistake, curiosity or another
form of general marketing. These visitors come with
no intent.
- Suspects: visitors who have already
made a decision to fix a problem but still haven't
decided on a solution. These groups are looking for
something but aren't sure what they want.
- Prospects: visitors who know both
the problem and the solution and are making a decision
on who is going to supply the solution. Where are
they going to access the solution?
- Customers: those who have already
made the decision to buy from you and want to place
an order.
Navigation
Does your Web site navigation qualify or disqualify
your traffic? The navigation of your site must be able
to identify and direct the leads that it receives into
the appropriate part of your sales process. Does your
site map the accepted AIDA (attention, interest, desire,
action) sales process to each of the types of visitors?
Browsers and suspects
need to see a strong USP (unique selling proposition),
have their attention grabbed and interest created. Prospects
want to know what's in it for them. You want to build
desire by conveying real benefits. Customers want a
fast and simple way to do business with you online.
Presentation
Does your Web site give good presentations to the right
people? Like any good presentation, your site has to
be tailored to its audience. The content that builds
desire for one personality style may confuse or bore
another. Your sales presentation, the content, should
be specific to the various buying styles of your visitors.
Closing the Sale
So your site does the presentation, but does it ask
for the order? There must be a point of action with
a specific decision for the visitor to make. Is the
purpose of the site to make sure that the visitor fills
in a survey, follow-up or request-for-info form? Is
it to make sure that they join the site by subscribing
to a newsletter? Perhaps you want the visitor to call
in to book an appointment with a live sales rep, or
even better, to complete the entire sale online using
your e-commerce system. Make sure your site asks for
the order.
If you need help determining
your Web site's weaknesses, there are many applications
available to help you track page hits, page views, length
of visit and so on. Most important, you want to know
where the customer was in the sales process when they
came into the site and where they left.
Imagine the next sales
meeting when it's time to look at the sales funnel and
your sales forecast. You'll go through the numbers,
looking at the number of current opportunities. How
many new leads were added to the sales funnel? How many
of those suspects are qualified? How many presentations
were done to the qualified prospects? Finally, how much
business is going to close this week, month or quarter?
Salespeople aren't paid
for what they know. They're paid for what they sell.
Should you include your Web site on your sales team,
or should it be replaced?
--end--
We have the tools, skills, and experience
to build you a professional website. We have the know-how
to drive traffic to your site, resulting in new customers
and more new business.
If you like what you see or would like
to discuss your needs, simply contact
us for a free initial consultation.
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