10 Secrets of Sales-Driven Websites
by Jason OConnor
Published on this site: June 10th, 2005 - See
more articles from this month...

What makes a website successful? It depends on what the explicit
goal of the website is. If the goal is to make money, then
a successful site is one that makes you more money than it
costs you to maintain, manage, market and update.
So what should you do to ensure your website generates substantial
sales?
- State Your Goals
In order for a website to make you money, you have to know
what its specific goals are first. Just like any good small
business consultant will advise you to create a business
plan before you start your business, a good Web consultant
will suggest that you create a website plan, with specific,
written goals. "I want it to make me money" is
not enough. "I would like my site to generate 1000
unique visits a month, produce 100 new leads a month, and
create 25 new sales a month" would be much more useful,
even if you don't hit your targets.
- Identify your Audience
You must know who is currently and will be coming to your
website. It is very important to have a clear picture of
your typical visitor. The more specific demographic information
you have, the better. That way you can tailor your website's
look & feel, writing and calls-to-action properly.
- Write Sales-Driven Copy
Once you know who your visitors are, you can craft your
writing accordingly. Clear, concise, grammatically correct
verbiage is necessary to make sales, regardless of your
audience. Furthermore, the less big blocks of text the better.
Bullets, headlines and very short paragraphs are much more
likely to be read online than large amounts of uninterrupted
text.
Your writing should only talk about what you can do for
your visitor. It ought to explain to each reader why buying
your product or service will make their life easier, richer,
more comfortable, or make them more attractive, intelligent,
or successful. In other words, your website copy should
very clearly explain how you will somehow improve each reader's
life. Therefore, the use of the word "you" is
vital in any sales-driven website copy. And your writing
should be descriptive, action-oriented and use active verbs
instead of passive verbs. "You will learn more by...",
"Buy Now" and "Get your Free download"
are examples.
So one secret of a website that generates sales is that
the writing on the site describes specific benefits the
site visitor will enjoy if they buy the product or service.
It is action-oriented, uses the words "you" and
"yours", and stays away from simply describing
features.
- Include Calls to Action
Asking your visitor to do something specific is a call to
action. At the end of every site section or page, you need
to include a call to action. It can be as simple as, "Click
here to register", "Contact Us Now" or "Go
here to download your free Guide". A sales-driven Web
page will describe specific benefits to the visitor in its
headlines, bullet points and short paragraphs, and then
ask the visitor to take an action at the end. Don't leave
your potential customers hanging. Instead, compel them to
do something that will bring them closer to buying.
- Learn from Brick & Mortar Retailers
Show Visitors Where To Go If you walk into any successful
retail store and pay close attention, you'll notice that
there are actually paths already
mapped out for you to follow. This is done on purpose by
the store designers to maximize sales. They lead you down
paths that they know will increase your chances of buying.
They put things in your way that tempt you to buy.
You too should create specific paths in your website that
will take full advantage of your sales and marketing efforts.
If you have a particular page in your site that acts as
your sales page, be sure to make the link to it prominent
on your homepage, and every page for that matter. This sales
page ought to have a call to action at the end of it that
points to your shopping cart or sign-up page. Don't let
your site visitors wander your site. Set up the navigation
in a deliberate way to generate more sales.
A good example of retail stores coaxing more sales out if
its customers is all the small-ticket items they sell at
the checkout counter. These impulse items are specifically
there to attempt to get a couple of extra dollars out of
each customer who is waiting in line. How can this translate
into your website? At the virtual checkout in your site,
add other, less expensive, complimentary items that they
can click to add to their cart right there.
Tell your site visitors what you want them to do and where
to go. Stepping them through your site the way you want
them to go will increase and streamline your sales.
- Don't Distract your Visitors
If you point people to where you want them to go, thereby
increasing your sales potential, be sure not to distract
them along the way. Don't include annoying animation or
Flash unless absolutely necessary. Don't offer lots of superfluous
links on the "Buy Now" page, otherwise a significant
percentage of people who are about to buy will wander away
via the extra links.
- Include Compelling Images
People will almost always look at pictures before they read
anything. Images that invoke emotion are particularly effective.
If you're selling products then you obviously will benefit
if you include pictures of each product. Product images
should communicate how they benefit the potential customer.
If you're selling flowers, a picture of a bouquet on a table
is not as effectual as a woman in a front door beaming from
ear to ear as a man in a suit hands her that same bouquet.
- Offer More Than Just a Sales Pitch
If you include free information on your site, interspersed
with calls to action you are more likely to build trust
and comfort among your potential website visitors. By offering
free information related to your product or service you're
showing your visitors that you have their best interest
in mind. You can't just say "We have your best interest
in mind", you have to actually show it, and free, useful
information does just that. By allowing people to get used
to you by first offering free information, you make it more
likely that they'll buy from you in the future.
- Constantly Build Trust
People don't buy from people or websites they don't trust.
Offering free information is one way to accomplish this.
Others ways include offering a good return policy, posting
a privacy policy link on every page, and making it extremely
easy to contact you.
- Nurture Existing Website Customers
Selling to someone who bought from you in the past is easier
than selling to someone for the first time. Treat existing
customers special by offering them discounts or designating
certain site sections only for their use. Include a bookmark
feature on each page of your site so that visitors can bookmark
your site to return again. Update your content regularly
to entice return visits. Offer ways for visitors to join
a "Buyers Club", to register on the site to get
custom content, or to join a frequent buyers program. Once
a person is comfortable on your site and familiar with your
business, they are more likely to buy from you online.
By stating your website goals and learning who your customers
are, by putting yourself in the shoes of your site visitors
when creating, writing and managing your website, by pointing
people in the direction you want them to go while on your
website, and by building trust, you will see your website
sales increase substantially.

Jason O'Connor is president of Oak Web Works
(http://www.oakwebworks.com)
where you can get a free webmaster newsletter and he also runs Sports,
Las Vegas & Broadway Show Tickets (http://www.bestshowticketslasvegas.com)
Sports, Broadway and Las Vegas Show Tickets.

|