Top 10 Website Mistakes: Are YOU Making Them?
by Karyn Greenstreet
Published on this site: June 9th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

Although personal and business websites have been in existence
for more than 10 years, I'm still seeing small business owners make
the same mistakes on their websites. Here's a list of the ones that
will drive people away from your site and cause you to lose business
(and your reputation as a professional business person).
- "Under construction" signs on your site. Websites
are intended to be Living Documents. They are supposed to change
and grow. Putting an "under construction" sign on your
website marks you as an amateur. If your site isn't ready to show
to the public, don't publish it to a public location.
- Visitor counters. Visitors generally don't care how
many other people have visited your site. If the visitor counter
shows a low number, that can be a psychological turn-off to people;
if it's too high, people might believe that you've forged the
number. Take the visitor counter off your site and use your website
statistics to get a more accurate assessment of the people visiting
your site. If your hosting company doesn't provide good statistics,
get a new one. Check out our article on how to choose a hosting
company:
http://www.passionforbusiness.com/articles/choosing-
hosting.htm
- Lack of copyright statements. Everything you write,
and your website design itself, is copyright-able. Make sure you
include copyright statements on every page, and update the year
in the copyright statement as appropriate. Nothing screams "not-up-to-date"
like having a copyright statement from 1997 on your site.
- Overuse of technology. There are some really great,
cool and wild techie things you can program into your website.
But if they are going to distract the visitor from your message,
or if they're going to slow down the loading of your page, ditch
the extra technology in favor of simplicity. This includes large
Flash shows when your site opens, animated graphics and other
large graphics, as well as scrolling text and audio that comes
on as soon as the person hits your website. Recent surveys show
that people crave simplicity and easy navigation in sites.
- Passive verbs. Use active verbs and active sentences
when writing your site's copy. Active verbs are powerful and lend
energy to your site. Need to brush up on using active verbs? Check
out this site
http://webster.commnet.edu/grammar/passive.htm
- Long sentences. When people read long sentences, they
have to keep the first part of the sentence in their mind when
reading the last part. People are easily distracted. Help your
visitors by keeping your sentences short and crisp.
- Long pages. Studies show that most people will not read
a long page of text off of their computer monitor. They'll either
print it or they'll scan it looking for major topics and bullet
points. Keep your pages short. If you have a lot to say, consider
creating a series of pages that explain your topic, with good
navigation between each page. Also, since people DO print web
pages to read later, make sure your contact information is at
the bottom of each page.
- Not identifying the benefits of your products or services.
People make purchases for two reasons: to get rid of pain or to
get pleasure. People want to know how your products and services
will help them with their specific pain/pleasure situation. Instead
of telling them that your widgets are made from steel and are
3 inches across, tell them that your widgets will stop their faucets
from leaking for a lifetime.
- Forgetting to ask the visitor to do something. In marketing,
this is known as a Call To Action. Tell your visitors what you
want them to do next. Sign up for my newsletter. Call me. Order
today.
- Believing in "build it and they will come."
It might have worked in the movie Field Of Dreams, but the reality
of internet marketing is: build it, MARKET it, and they will come.
Once you've built your website you have to tell people about it.
Think of your website the same way you'd think of a box of marketing
brochures: if you don't get them into the hands of people, they're
not worth the money you spent to create them.

Karyn Greenstreet is a self-employment expert and small
business coach. She shares tips, techniques and strategies with
self-employed people to maintain motivation, stay focused, prioritize
tasks, and increase revenue and profits. Visit her website at www.PassionForBusiness.com

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