Website Design & Being a Trusted Expert – Part 2

Written by Jason Katzenback on September 2nd, 2009
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Do Your Visitors See Their Perfect Reflection In Your Website?

Continued from Website Design & Being a Trusted Expert Part 1

The first thing a buyer wants to see when entering your site is something they can relate to; the site has to resonate with them.  If they can see something of themselves in the site, they will inherently trust it more.

You need to think about the site organization – you need to make sure that there are the appropriate links that relate directly to what buyers are looking for, and that follows their thought process so that it looks logical and organic to them.

Once you’ve identified the situations that your targets are finding themselves in that causes them to seek you out, and you have the starting point for how to organize you navigation.  Make your buying process follow the path of solving those problems. You then have the opportunity to communicate your expertise in solving these problems, build an empathic report with them, and move them further along to completing the buying cycle.

Who your target audience is will also influence the formats in which you talk to them. You need to think about your buyer’s preferred media and learning styles. Some groups will love to read long copy, while others prefer things short and to the point.  An older target audience might not enjoy videos or podcasts as much as a younger audience.  Whatever the personality of your target audience, your site also has to have its own distinct and memorable personality.  And you need to make sure that, once you’ve decided on what that should be, that you stay consistent with that tone throughout all of your communications.

Price point is also important when it comes to how much sales copy to use. If you are selling a low priced offer (less then $97), you do not need 30 pages of sales copy… keep it to about 4 full page scrolls max. If you are offering a free trial (Pay $1 now and then get access for 30 days), then use even less copy. Focus on the benefits and let the free trial do the selling for you. In fact (obviously depending on the target audience), for free trials, short pages with a video and few bullet points work VERY well!

As you start to get repeat visitors, they will develop an emotional and personal relationship with you.  They will expect to see and hear things in a certain way from your.  To change that voice drastically without any warning will undermine the trust you’ve built with them.  That’s not to say you shouldn’t be testing things (that’s a whole other series of posts) but you need to make sure you’re not making dramatic changes in the personality of your site without cause.

Don’t forget the importance of images and pictures in setting up the personality of your site.  They are powerful tools that, when chosen correctly, can really resonate emotionally with your audience.  When chosen incorrectly, they can be off-putting, and ruin the atmosphere that you’re trying to create. This is a good place for testing – most people focus on the hard things, like the offer, or buy-it-now buttons, but you’d be surprised at the difference an image can make in your conversion rate.

A few important things to understand about images.

  • “I Am Not That Old Am I?” – People want to think they are younger then they are… so if you are relating to a target audience that is 50, have pictures that have 40 year old looking people.Use common sense here… if you are targeting a teenagers, do NOT but pictures of children (I hope you realize that is obvious).
  • “Show Me How I Will Look After Your Product” – You want to show what the end result of what your offering will provide. This is why you don’t see weight loss supplements with only fat people on the page and dating sites with only lonely losers on the page. Show pictures of happy couples, six pack abs, laughter and other happy things. Obviously it depends on what your selling, if you are selling a product focused on potty training, a picture of a guy with six pack abs is not really a good choice… but a happy kid on the potty with happy parents, that there is a good one.
  • “Show Me Where to Go” – Use arrows to highlight where to take action… this has proven over and over again to increase conversions. We all hate to admit it but we all want to be told what to do… we just don’t want others to know that. Make it as brain dead simple as possible to see exactly where your customer is to go on the page, and arrows work very well.

Make sure that there’s a way for visitors to provide feedback to you.  Make the ‘contact us’ information easy to find, use ‘rate this’ buttons for your products, and have either forums or comments enabled on your blog so that people can express their opinions easily.  You can get valuable information about how well your site is resonating with its intended target (or not.)

Here’s what you need to do:

  1. Make sure all of the technical aspects on your site work properly – no dead links, no images that fail to load, etc.
  2. Come up with a site navigation/site map that is designed and organized with your potential buyers in mind – not how you organize your company. Also on the main page that you actually are selling, try to have the navigation moved out of the “above the fold” area. Keep them focused on the offer.
  3. Make as many places for a two-way conversation that you can: easy to find ‘contact us’ information, a forum, comments on your blog, customer ratings on products.
  4. Make sure that the ‘soft’ elements, like graphics and images, match your buyer personas and are going to resonate with them and make them perceive you as a Trusted Expert.
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20 Responses to “Website Design & Being a Trusted Expert – Part 2”

  1. Cynthia says:

    Great Advice! I have one site, down and several in the making. I will put this to work big time..You are awesome!

  2. Cynthia says:

    Great Advice! I have one site, down and several in the making. I will put this to work big time..You are awesome!
    Oops…forgot to say great post! Looking forward to your next one.

  3. Great article Jason.
    I am definitely going to go back to the drawing board with my readers in mind to conduct some navigational changes.

    Igor

  4. Jason Berkes says:

    Great Post! Jason your are awesome.

    Thanks

    Jason Berkes

  5. bet says:

    Good advice, thanks. I am at the point of trying to clone myself so the work will get finished.

  6. sean says:

    Thanks Jason, There will be arrows on my gvo hosting site this afternoon! Who can argue with proven statistics?

  7. Shane Hale says:

    Very nice article! I always had trouble with price points and web design thanks for clarification.

  8. Suze Ortoman says:

    Excellent organization advice. There’s nothing that will get me off a site and back to surfing quicker than a disorganized Website. Good article.

  9. This was a great post! I recently had custom wordpress templates done for 2 of my blogs. The redesgin makes a world of difference. The cleaner your site looks the better. If your using a free template someone has seen a thousand times or it is a mish mash of junk your not going to get sales, leads or repeat visitors.

  10. Great post Jason. This series that you’re doing on becoming a trusted expert is some of your best posts in the past year that I’ve been following.
    Thanks
    Rick
    http://strategiconlineprofits.com

  11. sterndal says:

    great advise

    i especially like this: “Don’t forget the importance of images and pictures in setting up the personality of your site.”

    i’ve always had a hard time picking up the right images for my blog

    now i have an idea on how to solve my dilemma

    thanks!

  12. Tom Harvey says:

    John

    Great advice (as always). Once again its the simple things that are often overlooked, particularly dead links and poor pictures which aren’t thought out or relevant to target audience.
    Definately some good tips to bear in mind.
    Cheers

    Tom

  13. Thanks for providing mind blowing advice. Most of my doubts out clarified through this post…

  14. Some sound advice that sounds fairly obvious to me when I think about it, but would’ve never even considered if not reading this article.

    Kinda the aim really, right?

  15. Nice post, especially the “Don’t Make Me Think” aspects, like the bit about arrows.

  16. Jeronimo says:

    Great post, the buyer’s trust is extremely important.

  17. The one think we’ve realized is that the fewer options we give people on each page, the better we end up doing. Thanks for the reminder of a few more things we can do to improve our web presence!

  18. Joseph M says:

    good advice,
    i have some webs i need to redesign, i’ll check some of the things from your article, good work.

  19. Good post. Authority is seriously important here. You have put some really good advice here Jason.