Making Over My Own Site
By: Pedro Sostre
It is the hardest makeover I've faced, but the site is
aging and doesn't make the grade.
Being "Dr. Makeover" comes with
plenty of pressure. There's an expectation
that everything I touch
will be inherently beautiful and optimized
for peak performance. I have a
dirty little secret, though: I rarely spend
much time working on the design aspect
of my own sites. What's that old saying
about the cobbler's children?
So I've decided to put some shoes on
my own kids' feet and I'm making the
process public. For the next two issues,
I'll provide a behind-the-scenes look into
one design firm's struggle to redesign its
own site. I'll share failed designs. I'll ask
for your objective opinions. And, hopefully,
when it's all said and done, I'll have
a better site and you'll have a clearer understanding
of what it takes to design a
successful online venue.
While I generally recommend redesigning
websites every 12 months,
the site for my design firm – SostreAssoc.com
– has had the same look
since early 2005. That's right, over
two whole years. Well overdue from
a time perspective, but does it really
need a redesign?
The current site has a pretty good
conversion rate for this type of business.
Although I don't feel it's the best
it could be, some people still like it and
by most accounts it doesn't seem to be
overtly hurting sales. If it ain't broke,
don't fix it, right? Wrong.
Just because sales are coming in at a
normal, healthy pace, doesn't mean the
website is performing optimally. Industry-
standard conversion rates are often
in the single digits. Three percent. Six
percent. That means that roughly 90
percent of your site's visitors are choosing
not to do business with you (or me,
in this case)! Of course, a 100 percent
conversion rate is nearly impossible for
several reasons, but setting your sites to
that lofty goal can be more beneficial than
simply striving for industry standards.
A good way to determine if your site
could perform better is to review how it
performs against its transitional goals.
Start with a list of all the elements that
contribute to the success of your site. Of
course, there is the main conversion goal
(in our case, increase the number of contacts
we receive), but there are also a number
of transitional goals we use to get users
to take that conversion action. In our case,
the list looks like this:
Goal: Communicate our services
Besides the overtly generic tagline, "Consulting,
Design, Development," it's not
immediately clear what services our company
provides. If people don't know what
we offer, how can they buy it? Grade: D
Goal: Establish our credibility
The site uses third-party references (citations
and client testimonials) to establish
credibility. Grade: B
Goal: Convey our thought leadership and expertise
Our clients are always surprised at the
level of thought and expertise that we
bring to the table, but our website does
very little to communicate that expertise.
Case studies that explain exactly how we
solved tough problems for our clients could help in this
situation. Grade: D
Goal: Showcase our product
In the Web design industry, our client
websites are our products and they have
to shine. While we have a news section
that highlights when a client site goes
live, there is not even so much as a thumbnail
of one of our client's sites to be found
on the home page. This is very, very bad.
Grade: F
Goal: Make visitors aware of my writings and conference appearances
Some people visit the site not to hire Sostre
& Associates, but to find more of my
writings or see me at an industry conference.
I wrote a book for a major publishing
company. Can you fi nd it on the home
page of my site? No. I spoke at several
conferences in the past two years. Were
those events highlighted on the site? On a
good note, I do include a link to this Revenue
magazine column. Grade: D
Goal: Foster strong search engine rankings
The current site gets a fair amount of traffic from search engines but it still
doesn't
come up for many top-tier, highly trafficked terms. Grade: B
Based on that evaluation, my cumulative
grade is a D, and that means it's definitely time for a redesign.
In the same way we used transitional
goals to evaluate our existing site, we're
going to use those goals to drive our redesign
priorities. The "problem" with transitional
goals is that none of them are really
more important than any other one.
In addition, we have outlying goals like
generating SEO traffic and promoting my
writings and conference appearances that
are not directly related to the main goal of
getting users to contact us.
The typical, old-school conversion process
involved a linear conversion funnel
where you took prospects from Step 1 to
Step 2 in progressive order to close the
sale. Online, there is no linear funnel.
Visitors don't always go from one Step 1, to
Step 2, to Step 3 in orderly fashion. Some
visitors only want to see the work, while
others want to see what services we offer
and still others want to start out by reading
about our expertise.
Think of it this way: Traditional sales
are like being a chauffeur. You drive visitors
from one place to another, taking
them where they want to go. Online, the
visitor is in the driver's seat and you aren't
even sitting in the car. All you can do is
post road signs and hope they're clear
enough to lead the user where they want
to go. And that's where it gets difficult.
Individually, it's easy to design a site
that executes one of the transitional goals.
Create a site that communicates services?
Easy. Design a site that showcases a product?
Simple. Develop a site that improves
search engine rankings? No problem. But
how do we put it all together so that everything
is in balance? That's exactly what
we've been struggling with for the past 12
months. Since I started the redesign over
a year ago, I've designed about 30 different
layouts for the site, but I haven't been
happy with any of them.
This is where you come in. Send me
(pedro@sostreassoc.com)
your thoughts
on the current site, or on any of the failed
designs. Then next issue, we'll take this
discussion to the next level.
PEDRO SOSTRE is pioneering Conversion
Design and its ability to turn online
shoppers into online buyers. He is the
co-author of Web Analytics for Dummies
and serves as CEO of Sostre & Associates,
an Internet consulting, design
and development firm, which also promotes
affiliate programs on its network
of websites. Visit www.sostreassoc.com
to learn more.

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