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home business uk - web site promotion

Exerpt from Site-Sell E-zine

March 13, 2000

Issue #009

 

Site-Sell is probably the best newsletter around if you've got a website. The following extract comes from the latest issue. if you'd like to receive future issues, just enter your e-mail address into the box below and click on the "Subscribe" button

 

It May Not be the Beverly Hills Hotel, but...

Edward Palmer (youth-sports.com, youthsprts@aol.com) has won the MYSS! "Analyze This" Sweepstakes. What did he win?

Well, do you remember the SITE-SELL! issue where we analyzed and improved the site of the Beverly Hills Hotel?

http://articles.sitesell.com/bhh/

It was far and away the most popular article ever written in the SITE-SELL e-zine. It showed in practical terms how to use "Make Your Site SELL!" ("MYSS!") principles to"site-sell." It caused hundreds of people to ask for a similar site review. Unfortunately, I just don't have the enough seconds in the day. Large companies have hired me for a day or two at a time for high level planning and strategizing. My rates are crazily high for this kind of one-on-one -- frankly, I'm not worth the $6,000 per day. But they seem to think otherwise, so who am I to say otherwise? ;-)

This demand for site-reviewing did give us an idea to launch a Sweepstakes with me as the prize. No, it's not a date -- you'd find me rather boring, I'm afraid -- all I do is talk about the Net. ;-) Rather, you can win my site-analyzing services. And that's precisely what Edward Palmer has won. At $6,000 per day, he's won a pretty good deal (yes, I really do charge, and get paid, that amount).

In this article of SITE-SELL, I do the "BHH job" on his site. If *YOU* would like to win my services to analyze and improve your site, simply spread the MYSS! word by entering the MYSS! "Analyze This" Sweeps!...Sweepstakes link

OK, on to Edward's site...http://www.youth-sports.com I asked him what the MWR (Most Wanted Response) of his site is. He replied...

------------------------------------------

"The three primary goals of the site are

1) to sell products

2) to be a content resource center for parents and coaches regarding youth sports and sportsmanship

3) to be a place for children to come to for a chance to color online as well as enter the coloring contest and have a chance to win a"B. A. Good Sport" T-shirt.

The "Getting Started Sports Books" are the first sports coloring books that teach fundamentals and sportsmanship. The web site is the only youth sports site that focuses on sportsmanship in youth sports with valuable content provided by youth sports experts, child psychologists and health & fitness experts."

------------------------------------------

When I read Edward's statement above, I started to worry. If you want to sell product, "content-building" can become not only very time-consuming but actually distracting to the sales process. And coloring? Hmmm... we'll see.

BEGIN AT THE BEGINNING

Let's start. Go to...http://youth-sports.com/

Read the rest of this article while following along in Edward's site.

-----SIDEBAR-----

I'm going to be rather hard on Edward's site in places. But don't take that the wrong way. Overall, I think he has found a wonderful niche that has terrific potential. It just needs a little renovating. So now it's time for...

"Web Site Tool Time" ;-)

Meanwhile, please look past some of the site's problems. If you have a child, this site has information and products that *ARE* of value to you. It's a great idea. :-)

-----SIDEBAR-----

Here are Edward's opening headline and statement...

A Colorful Way to Learn Youth Sports

Searching for help on how to teach your children Youth Sports and Sportsmanship?

You've come to the right place!!

Ouch! Really, really poor headline. First, the headline ("A Colorful Way to Learn Youth Sports") looks like a banner, so I didn't notice it at first (neither did my wife when I asked her to review this article!). Surfers quickly train their eyes to avoid anything that looks like a banner. I only noticed that headline on my second visit to the site.

When I finally saw it, I said, "How the heck did *that* headline get there.? Did I miss it?" In any event, maybe it's a good thing that I didn't notice it... The headline says nothing. Instead of grabbing the viewer by the hand and pulling him or her into the rest of the copy on the page, you miss it and when you do see it, you miss the point. Because it has no obvious-and-immediate point.

Only after I spent some time on the site did I understand the "play on words" of this headline -- most people would not bother trying to even "figure it out." Yes, it's cute and clever. But it does not sell. It only confuses. Your opening headline is the single most important part of the site -- this one dies. What does "colorful way" mean to me and what does "Youth Sports" mean to me? Not much. Nothing, actually.

-----SIDEBAR-----

Ed did the headline as a graphic. Which is OK. But it's 17.7K. Way too big. Remember, most people are still on 56K or less, and most will still be there in a year. Optimize those graphics.

-----SIDEBAR-----

THE OPENER

The opening paragraph (what we call "The Opener" in MYSS!") is not bad. It does let the reader know what's coming. BUT...

1) It introduces a term that I am not familiar with... "Youth Sports." Is this somehow different from regular sports played by youths? It raised some confusion in me. And confusion is a bad thing to raise.

LESSON #1 -- Never use jargon.

2) "teach" is a painful word. It implies work and time. Yes, this may be required by the parent, but don't put that up front now.

LESSON #2 -- Avoid words that have unpleasant connotations.

3) It does not address a fundamental pain or gain of theparent.

LESSON #3 -- this is critical. You must promise a major gain or relieve a big-time pain. Let's see if we can improve this a bit...

------------------------------------------

"Is your child having trouble playing by the rules? Maybe doesn't even *KNOW* the rules? You've come to the right place!!"

------------------------------------------

Perhaps with a cute, pouty, tear-filled cartoon-child with arms crossed, ready to "take my ball and go home." No jargon. Cleaner. Avoids painful phrases. Outlines the parent's pain/worry and promises that you have the cure.

I am never, ever happy with my opening paragraph. I re-read ours at least once a week and try to improve it. The Opener is THE key to your site. "Make Your Site SELL!" lists all the key points that must be hit in your Opener. It's the single most important part of your whole site.

THE LEAD-IN TO THE REST OF YOUR OPENING PAGE

From that opening paragraph, you must lead-in cleanly to the rest of your Home Page. Now, "youth sports" is not my area of expertise, so I'll "guess-write" from a personal viewpoint. As an expert in the field, Edward could use this if he felt that these sentiments generalized to most parents, IN A BIG-TIME WAY.

OK, so let's continue...------------------------------------------

"Games and sports are an incredibly important way for your child to interact with others.... to team-play ... to be competitive 'within the rules.' Key life skills such as leadership, team play, and graceful losing are set at this early stage. They are honed over years of seemingly simple play. Your child will use these skills to win, OR lose, in such adult life situations as....

o working for a large company

o marriage

o launching an entrepreneurial venture."

------------------------------------------

See where this is going? As an parent of two girls, 8 and 11, Edward would have my complete and total attention. I will leave no page unturned to give my children this kind of edge in life. Instead, let's see where the rest of this page goes...

Next I see a nice, warm picture of "Uncle Ed" in the right margin. That's where my eye went -- the photo probably grabbed it. You should always do some simple usability testing, as outlined in MYSS!, to see if this in fact is the usual pattern. I certainly would not want this to be the second thing that the visitor sees. Why? Because I want the visitor to read my "key life skills" copy first. This really holds the visitor to my site.

"Mission statements" are deadly boring. But since I'm there now...

Really, I like the photo of Edward (although it's rather large at 19.2K). Usually, I find head-and-shoulder shots like this a turnoff -- much better to show the site-owner in a natural site (perhaps coaching soccer here). But this photo has been nicely rendered and Edward looks like everybody's favorite uncle. Good start to "likeability." Remember, if your visitors don't like you, they won't buy from you.Unfortunately, Ed follows with what I call an "I-me-my" mission statement. Too bad... at this early stage, the customer only wants to know..."What's in it for me?"

Instead, Edward starts "I believe..." and it's all downhill from there. I hate to be hurtful, and the only intent of this is to help, but really... no one cares what Edward, I or anyone else says in our mission statement. At a certain point, they might... but that time is only after they are totally sold that you have something to offer. At that point, the visitor might wonder...

"Hmmm... who *ARE* these people." Right about then, you might get a click on the "About us" button (bottom left margin). That's where Edward's mission statement belongs... merged in with the other copy on this page. As it stands now, it's hurting the Opening Page.------

My eye continued down the right margin. At the bottom, I see Edward's mascot, "B.A. Good Sport" -- it's a terrific little character. Nicely done. Good feel. But he's asking me to click on "What's New!!". Why would I want to do that when I don't yet know what this site will do for me??

At this point, Edward has likely lost me -- I'm very probably headed back to the Search Engine... NEXT!

Let's review...

1) I've missed the headline. If I had seen it, I would have got nothing out of it.

2) I've read a confusing opening paragraph.

3) Then I saw Edward's photo and mission statement, so bypassed important copy that should motivate me to stay.

4) Then I see a cute mascot asking me to click on "What's New." As a joint to the next page, this is likely to lose me. Why? I have no reason to perform a time-consuming click to another page.

Let's assume I do the unlikely and scroll back up the page to pick up the text, where I should have been. Here's

Edward's second paragraph...

"You will find helpful information, advice and instructional products that will help you the parents, coaches and children involved in youth sports. Each section provides you with an in depth look at the particular topic."

------------------------------------------

Uh-oh. Features instead of benefits. He's telling you what his site *is* rather than addressing a parent's pain or gain. Re-read my proposed follow-up paragraph above (starts with "Games and sports are..").

Edward goes on to list each major section of the site and describe FEATURES again. Not a single description motivated me to click. Plus it's a clunky way to "preview the link's destination."

A javascript roll-over could handle this elegantly and give a more professional feel at the same time. If you don't understand this, see how we do it on our MYSS! site... Just mouse-over the button-links at the top of each page.

Finally, Edward closes the all-important Home Page with navigational instructions...

"Need to Find Your Way Around? The easy to use graphic navigation bar on the left and the easy to read text bar at the bottom of each page will help you visit each sport and all the other helpful sections while visiting all the numerous sections within this site.

Bookmark my site and encourage other parents, coaches and youth athletes to visit Youth-Sports.com.This site is your resource center, dedicated to benefiting parents, coaches and children involved in youth sports."

------------------------------------------

Ouch. You should never have to explain navigation to your visitor. It should be intuitive. And in fact, Edward is not doing anything out of the ordinary. So it's not needed.

The last two paragraphs are weak and self-serving. Edward should be finishing with a strong joint that pulls the visitor to the most important next page. The concept of "page joints" is an original MYSS! concept -- it explains in detail how to keep your visitors on your site, and how to keep them progressing through it.

And just before the joint, Edward must gently lead the visitor into the concept that there is stuff for sale here. It seemed to me like a big and sudden jump to see material for sale as soon as I link to "Soccer" or "T-ball" -- I expected information about those topics, not material for sale.

I also found more T-ball products under "Fundamentools" than under T-ball. Very confusing. If Edward wants to make the coloring books prominent, he should simply do so in the relevant sports section, rather than create separate, single-product categories.

NAVIGATION

Let's take a look at how to straighten out the navigation of this site...First, the vertical navbar is confusing. I keep getting mixed up whether the "word labelling" applies to the graphic that is above or below it. So I have to look to the top to figure it out all over again. Know what happens when you keep frustrating your visitor?

Phew! Glad I got that off my chest. ;-)

Next, I would remove counterproductive and under-used areas...

1) Forums -- no one uses them on Edward's site. Forums can be useful. But you need a high-traffic site. And you need the type of audience that likes to kibbitz. And you need lots of controversial topics. Otherwise, they die. And quiet forums are a kiss of death.

2 & 3) "Color online" and "Coloring contest" -- This site is clearly aimed at parents and coaches. My guess is that "coloring" is not used as much as Edward was hoping. I would blend this into the area where Edward sells coloring books. Offer the parent the chance to print out a few pages for offline coloring by their children. I'd probably scrap the contest.

4) Awards program -- Edward sells "B. A. Good Sport" Award Certificates" or allows them to print them. I would move each of these, soccer and t-ball, into their respective product sections. This is extra navigation for too little gain. Remember, the more buttons there are to click, the more tired your visitor will feel before even starting.

5) Photo gallery -- seems like a waste of time. I felt like I wasted a click.

6) Links -- ditto. Wasted my time. It's a lucky thing that Edward's not paying me by the hour. ;-) Not a good idea to link out of a selling site, in any event.

7) Order form -- don't see the point of this. Edward's order process is smooth from each of the individual products. Few people are likely to click on the Order Form and just start ordering.They are far more likely to find a product, say in "Fundamentools," that they want. They click on "Add to Cart" and then a fairly smooth and short "checking out" process starts, including the ability to add any other item to the cart before check out.So the "Order Form" link does not seem necessary.

-----I'd change two links...

1) Archives -- rename to "Youth Sports Newsletter." The links. "Archives" sounds so dusty. I do like the way Edward offers the ability to subscribe to his newsletter on many other pages. This is Edward's important BACKUP RESPONSE (explained in detail in MYSS!). He does not miss a chance to capture the all-important e-mail address.

2) "Coming soon" -- I would tend to move this up under"T-ball" and "Soccer"

OK, now we're down to the "meat" --> links to... T-ball, Soccer, Fundamentools, Articles. I don't get the point of "Fundamentools." I'd drop it and reassign the products into T-ball or Soccer (and other sports as they get added). And the T-ball and Soccer sections need to be sub-divided according to some sort of logic, maybe something like...

o Rules of the Sport

o Sportsmanship

o Coaches' Corner

o Parent's Perspectiveo etc.

Second, I'd divide the "left margin navbar" into three sections (allowing for all the discarded sections discussed above)...

SECTION #1) Top left corner of each page...Home Page About Us Contact Us

SECTION #2) Across the top of each page, left to right...

ARTICLES --> Soccer T-ball Sportsmanship Coaches Parents

SECTION #3) Down the left margin, top to bottom...PRODUCTS Soccer T-ball

Coming Soon Youth Sports Newsletter (?? better name)-----Ahhhh...

Nice and clean. Visitor understands that the left margin is selling products. The upper bar contains all kinds of informative articles. And you can always get back to Home, or contact the company, by clicking on one of the links in the left upper corner.

SITE-SELLING IDEA

Now the key -- each and every article must link to specific, related products. When a visitor clicks to a certain article, that person automatically qualifies as having an interest in that topic. So s/he is only one click away from buying a related topic. This will be the single most powerful sales tool on the site.

If Edward has the programming power available, I'd even track each "article-visited" with a cookie. Then, at certain times, if the product link was not clicked, I'd dynamically insert product suggestions. This is something that we are developing for our site, now that we are adding one new product per month.

UNDERUSED STRENGTH

That little mascot, "B.A. Good Sport" ("GoodSport" is a cuter a single-word last name for the character), should be the tour guide for the whole side. He should be doing much, much more than just telling me what's new. This little guy can add much needed character to the site.

Do a variety of drawings (not all in the same pose, as he is now). Put him in a variety of situations... soccer, t-ball, whispering, shouting, happy, worried... but always talking to us. This is a winner guy who needs to be used better.

UNNECESSARY WEAKNESS

Those "Web ring" and Link Exchange banners on some of the pages. Makes the site seem small-time. They hurt credibility and therefore hurt sales -- they are not worth whatever minimal traffic they bring.

BOTTOM LINE

This site has wonderful potential. It's a great example of how entrepreneurs can enter a niche and do well with it... or not. It's all in the execution, which is good news.Why? Well...

As we saw in the first article in this issue of SITE-SELL!, entrepreneurs often make bad basic decisions, right at the start. If you do that, it does not matter how well you execute. You just don't have a chance. Edward has not made a bad decision. I think that he has the beginning of an excellent niche site. He just has to execute improvements.

The proposed changes in this article will...

1) Make the point of the site far clearer. My wife did not understand what the site was about until she read this article. You have no chance at a sale if someone spends 10 minutes clicking around your site and is still asking "What is this site trying to do?".

2) Make the visitor far more likely to stay and explore because "there's something in it for him/her."

3) Make the site easily navigable and usable. Do all you can to reduce user frustration.

4) Eliminate the fatigue feeling -- too many navigation options, half of which are dead-ends of no value, is not a good way to gain the favor of time-pressured surfers.

5) Most importantly -- it will sell much, much more product.

-----SIDEBAR-----

Something tells me that Edward's site is about to get a whole lot better. If *YOU* would like to win my services to analyze and improve your site, simply spread the MYSS! word by entering the MYSS! "Analyze This" Sweeps!...

Sweepstakes Entry

----SIDEBAR-----

If you have a business you'd like me to feature on the site, send details of the opportunity to the address below.

If you'd like individual advice on where to start, contact me with a few details about yourself, including name, address, particular skills and the type of work you would and/or would not be interested in.

enquiry@homebusinessuk.co.uk

or write to:

Mrs L O'Connor, 91B Acton Lane, London, NW10 8UT
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