2011年1月29日 星期六

Moving Toward Ecommerce Site Design

Ecommerce has been a major player in the retail market place for more than a decade now. Initially invented in 1979 by Michael Aldridge, a British entrepreneur, the trend only exploded with the widespread popularity of the internet. Industry statistics this year estimate that 44% of consumers will shop online for holiday gifts this year, and as the market share is ever increasing, a number of companies continue to turn to the world of online shopping almost every day. For most companies looking into this type of website, however, there are a number of different concerns that must be addressed before you can ever begin to build a site that attracts customers and promotes sales.
Industries where Ecommerce May be Useful
Before a company ever starts down the path toward online sales, it may be helpful to take a look at which industries get the most out of the process. The answer is a pretty simple one – almost any industry. Take the city of London, for example. Long a mecca of shopping for people around the world, you couldn’t visit this city’s unique shops without actually visiting the UK. With the popularity of ecommerce, however, everything from famed department stores like Harrods to much smaller venues like Honest Jon’s are finding real success in the online marketplace. Whether you market auto parts to do-it-yourselfers or used books, you’re likely to find a home in the world of ecommerce.
The Site Design
Designing your site is key to the process of online shopping. That, however, is the case with any online venture. Customers must be able to find exactly what they’re looking for. Wandering around the forlorn virtual aisles of your e-store will do little but make them abandon their shopping cart and visit a competitor, leaving you without the online sale that is so essential to your bottom line. Here are just a few of the most important tips necessary to help your customers find the product they want:
Keep the Number of Clicks Required to a Minimum: If your customer has to click eight times to buy a single used book, you have a real problem on your hands. Perhaps one click is the search through the various categories. The next click leads them to a category description. From there, perhaps they have to click on a sub category. The process can get endless and frustrating. The rule of thumb is that more than four clicks to the point where they must provide their personal information is unnecessary and can cause a poor buy rate.
Add to Cart or Buy Buttons Must Be Obvious: It’s the first rule of any website design. Your customers have to understand what they are supposed to do, and nowhere is this more true than in an online shopping experience. Your customers should never have to scroll below the fold to find the right button to push to purchase their item from you.
Show the Price: This one may seem like an obvious marker, but many online retailers require more than one click before the potential buyer can look at the price of any given item. If you don’t show them what the item costs immediately, you risk losing them right away.
Security Concerns
As essential as site design is with ecommerce, perhaps the most important factor is the security of your customers. You must implement all of the necessary security protocols and scripting requirements during the actual site build for two major reasons. First, online shoppers are savvier than ever these days. They understand the risks of identity theft and poor transmission of information via the internet, and not creating the secure environment necessary to purchase an item from your shop will only lead them somewhere else where they can have the security they need before they make a purchase. The second reason security concerns must be addressed involves your company. Without the right level of security, products could actually disappear from your warehouse without the proper payment from customers, and that could put your entire company at risk.
Choosing the Right Web Design Company
The key in addressing all of the concerns surrounding getting a functional ecommerce site that actually improves your bottom line is working with a web design company experienced with a variety of different platforms that can address the needs of your company. As you choose a web design company that’s right for you, you may want to consider the following:
Look carefully at the company’s portfolio. Any good company will have many site designs they can point to so you get a feel for their past work. Navigating these sites, and maybe even making a purchase from them, will help you get a better sense of how your final product might look.
Evaluate their services carefully. Great looking products aren’t all a web site design company needs to get your business. They also need to have an extensive list of services that meet your shop’s needs. Creating the site is only half the battle. Having a site design company that can teach you how to interface with it is another thing entirely, and it must be part of the services if you’re going to have a successful experience online.
Read reviews, and talk to other customers. Looking carefully at feedback is the final essential component. Find out if there are other customers you can speak with, and look extensively at the available online reviews to find a company that best meets your needs.
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Ecommerce sites are only increasing in popularity as more and more retailers discover the power of online sales to help boost overall numbers. The key, however, is addressing all potential problems before you begin to launch.
Moonrise Productions is a San Francisco SEO company specializing in social network web design and also providing mobile app development, contact us and we’ll get it done right!

Rethinking the website redesign

Thinking of redesigning your website? While it’s tempting to throw out the old design in favor of an exciting, fresh concept, it may not be a smart business decision.
If you work in web design, you’ve probably been approached by the small or medium business owner looking to redesign a website. (Is it just me, or do you also hear a large proportion, particularly in the technology sphere, say they want to redesign their sites to look more like Apple’s?)
Aside from the fact that your business is not Apple, there are plenty of reasons why you may want to think in baby steps rather than giant leaps when it comes to redesigning one of your company’s biggest assets.

What’s wrong with your website, exactly?

Before launching into a redesign, you’d better know why you’re doing it. “Because I’m tired of the look” doesn’t qualify.
If you want to change the look of your website because it isn’t bringing in the business you thought it would, a redesign is likely not the answer. You’ll be better off rethinking your online marketing strategy. (I know, it’s just that getting a new website design is so much more fun than all that hard thinking, right?)
A good designer might help you figure out why your site isn’t bringing in enough leads or sales, but you should be looking beyond design, too.
The changes you make on your site should correspond to the strategy you take for building your business, so think first about what you want to happen. More traffic? More media coverage to build exposure and inbound links? More interaction on your blog? More pass-alongs and downloads of your white papers? More direct contacts? Then think how a new design would address those goals. Most likely you don’t need a full redesign.

So, your site definitely needs an updated look. Why not go for a complete overhaul?

To avoid alienating existing customers
Picture this. A friend, customer, nephew, whoever, wants to recommend your services to a colleague. He pulls up your site at their next lunch meeting, prepared to show some pages on your site that he thinks will be useful. Oops, where did those pages go? Hey, this doesn’t even look like the site I knew… and so on.
To retain any built-up brand identity
Perhaps you aren’t getting as much business as you’d like from your site. Still, from the time your website was first published, it started to build brand equity. Those colors became associated with your brand, the overall style spoke of the personality of your company. The people who did come across the site came to know you as that site. Perhaps some of those people are still in the sales funnel.
So, don’t go from a red and black color scheme to pale blue. You can update color schemes without completely changing your colors. If you want a lighter feel, a good graphic designer can help you build it in while keeping your basic colors.
To see improvements more quickly
A full website overhaul takes a long time. It makes more sense to start with those things that you know will make the greatest impact. Perhaps stage one of your redesign would involve updating the layout to give more prominence to your email list signup and more accessible resources for prospects, the media and bloggers in your industry. Perhaps you design targeted landing pages that don’t carry all the distractions found on your existing internal pages, for example.
To measure the effect of your changes
If you completely redesign your site and your sales or leads remain the same, you’ve made no progress. And worse, you won’t know why. Implement changes bit by bit, and you may be able to see which changes are responsible for a big impact jump in performance and those that do nothing to help you meet your business goals.

When a complete redesign is appropriate

I’m not saying it’s never a good idea to completely redesign your website. If the focus of your business has changed, it certainly makes sense to overhaul your website to match it. If your site wasn’t professionally designed in the first place, you’d do well to get it up to par, even if that means starting from scratch. And sometimes moving to a new platform, such as WordPress, means you’ll have to change some things up anyway.
But for the most part, small businesses would do well to redesign for their business goals, changing things bit by bit. And for Pete’s sake, don’t aim to look like Apple—get your own personality.

Who Is Matt Cutts: SEO Guru or Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing?

Everyone in the SEO community sooner or later (rather sooner though ;) stumbles upon the name of Matt Cutts. Often referred to as 『Google guru』, he is a major celebrity to SEO folks. Whenever he posts on his blog, gives an interview or makes a YouTube video – he always makes heads turn. So, who is the real Matt Cutts and what makes him so important?
The answers is simple – Google. Cutts is one of those 『insider guys』, whom receptive ears of SEOs are always open to. Since Google is ever so secretive about what’s going on or about to happen within its Empire, SEO folks grasp any opportunity to learn something useful from what 『Google people』 condescend to share. And Matt Cutts seems to be the most generous one.
Quick facts about Matt Cutts
* Matt Cutts joined Google in January 2000 – at the time the company had less than 100 employees.
* Cutts is currently the head of Google Webspam team (part of Google’s Search Quality group) and striving to keep Google a spam-free environment
* He got the nickname 『porn cookie guy』 for giving his wife’s homemade cookies to any co-worker who noticed undesired porn in the search results
* Cutts always carries a notepad on him in which he writes down domain names of websites he comes across. At home, he checks if the results Google returns for each name are accurate
* Cutts loves dressing up for Halloween and going to the Burning Man festival in the Black Rock Desert, Nevada
* He has bachelor’s degrees in both computer science and mathematics from the University of Kentucky
* Before Google, Cutts worked for the US Department of Defense and the Numerical Design Ltd gaming engine company.
* Matt Cutts’ fans and followers are called 『Cuttlets』
* He admitted to using the 『GoogleGuy』 identity in some of the Internet posts undefined
Good Cutts, bad Cutts – Google vs SEOs
Things Matt Cutts does and says often create controversy in the SEO world. On the one hand, on his blog and in his YouTube videos he seems to provide a lot of helpful SEO advice and shed light on unclear Google policies. That’s why he’s often referred to as SEO guru.
On the other hand, some savvy SEO specialists only chuckle at some 『pieces of advice』, generously provided by the SEO mogul. They say that, in fact, Matt Cutts is a cunning wolf in sheep’s clothing who only asserts Google’s interest and rarely says anything useful. They say Cutts brings more harm than benefit to the SEO world.
1/2 of what Matt Cutts says is Google propaganda
One-half of everything Matt Cutts says benefits Google in one way or the other. He never misses an opportunity to stress that Google is all about striving for ultra-accurate search results, making the world a better place, etc. At the same time, he manages to defend even the most hypocritical of Google’s policies (for example, Google being against purchased links, but selling and displaying paid ads themselves), repeatedly landing on his feet.
1/4 of what Matt Cutts says is SEO advice
It would be unfair to say that Matt Cutts does not provide SEO advice, he certainly does. He has made tons of really educational YouTube videos, posted lots of useful thing on his blog, gave a bunch of enlightening interviews. The only thing is, Matt Cutts only says as much as he can without treading on Google’s interests. What he’s often accused of, though, is that his 『useful tips』 are nothing new to skilled SEOs and that he only pretends to help while cracking down on even white-hat SEO techniques at the same time.
It all started when Cutts declared that Google is going to penalize websites for buying/selling links and encouraged users to report websites that use purchased links. The SEO community erupted: 『Right, only Google is allowed to sell links!』, 『Matt Cutts is a two-faced SEO guru』, etc. But, again, that was something to be expected from the head of Google Webspam team. The middle ground here is to use whatever Matt Cutts says to your advantage. It’s like getting insight into your adversary’s forces: you might not like what you see there, but it’s still good to know. From this point of view, yes, he is of great use to SEOs.
1/4 of what Matt Cutts says is self promotion
In order to promote Google, Matt Cutts also has to promote himself – and that’s what he does the rest of the time. On his blog, he takes users behind the scenes of his public life, and we see Matt climbing Mt. Kilimanjaro or taking part in a sprint triathlon, etc. Luckily, he has a good sense of humor, and that is, probably, another secret of 『the Matt Cutts phenomenon』 that made him one of the biggest public faces of Google.
From Matt Cutts blog:
I spent a year as an engineer in the ads group, but that was a long time ago (28 dog years, at least). So asking me detailed AdSense or AdWords questions is sometimes like asking a cat how an airplane works:
Q to cat: How does an airplane work?
A from cat: Meow?
Who else besides Matt Cutts?
Is Matt Cutts the only SEO guru out there? Well, of course not, there are other SEO experts who have been around for ages and can hit you with a gem of an SEO advice.
The first one who comes to mind is Danny Sullivan aka 『search engine guru』. Danny Sullivan is a veteran of the search engine business who has been researching and writing about them since 1995! His 『Webmaster’s Guide to Search Engine』 that came out in 1997 was a revolutionary coverage on the art of improving site rankings.
The founder of Cre8asite Forums and President of SEO by the Sea, Bill Slawski, is another SEO mogul who took interest in SEO as early as in 1996. He has written for Website Magazine, Search Marketing Standard, and Target Marketing and created many SEO whitepapers for www.seobythesea.com. Bill Slawski is also known as 『patent guru』 for blogging on search-related patents.
Barry Schwartz, CEO of RustyBrick and the founder of the Search Engine Roundtable is another celebrated SEO guru who has been writing about search engine marketing for almost a decade now. Barry is on the board of advisors for such industry’s big names as Google, Yahoo! Search, Microsoft’s Bing and is one of the most quoted SEO specialists.
Dan Richmond with www.seoinpractice.com – is kind of a low-key guy with lots of secrets around him. Looks like he is fully dedicated to making a fortune with practical SEO, with next to no publicity around him whatsoever. While Dan’s hiding behind Link-Assistant.Com’s public image as a leading developer in the field of SEO software, his most widely known project is the practical guide to SEO – SEO in Practice – which is competing with Aaron Wall’s SEO Book on Google’s page 1.
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Andy Beal is best known as an expert on online reputation management. His website – www.marketingpilgrim.com – is one of the world’s top Internet marketing resources, and he himself is a trustworthy consultant for ABC News, BusinessWeek, Inc. Magazine, Forbes, etc.
As you see, there are other SEO moguls out there to listen to besides Matt Cutts. He stands out – and rather stands apart from the expert crowd because of his 『Google insider』 status and plays on the other half of the field. So each time 『GoogleGuy』 opens his mouth, we still go to listen what the rest of the gang have to comment.
Ally Crooks is a journalist, Internet marketer, freelance SEO, sociologist, and a mother to two identical looking little boys.

How to Create a Successful Viral Marketing Campaign

On the 『Ask a Question』 marketing page on LinkedIn.com I often see the following question: How can I make my <Fill in the Blank> go viral on the web?
It could be a website selling weight loss pajamas … an eBook on fractal theory … a copywriting home-study course … or anything else the marketer wants to promote.
Of course, what the marketer is really asking is: How do I get my valuable, clever, entertaining message about my product to spread like a virus across the web … so I can make LOTS of MONEY FAST?
Viral Marketing is to Marketers What Immediate Gratification is to Consumers
Everyone wants what they want … NOW!
Fat people want a skinny pill. Skinny people want a muscle pill. Poor people want a get-rich-quick pill. And flacid male people want a blue pill from Pfizer.
And marketers want to wake up in the morning and see six zeroes added to their PayPal account overnight.
Blame it on YouTube
Whether it was a video of an embarrassing, unlikely yet subsequently wildly talented performer on a TV talent show … or an awe-inspiring video of dung beetles doing it to the beat of Eminem … which then spread virulently across the web from one person to another by text, chat, email, Facebook, Twitter, phone call or over-the-shoulder viewing on a Blackberry in the office … marketers quickly realized that viral is the new, best, must-have marketing pill!
So how do you create an emotionally and intellectually appealing promotion guaranteed to garner a gazillion views within 24 hours of it being uploaded to the web, and quickly make its creator RICH?
How do you harness the wind?
Viral by Any Other Name Would Still be…
… Engaging, stimulating, mass appealing, and ultimately ineffable!
The problem is: How does anyone know how or when the unruly, fickle and transcendent zeitgeist … or just your target market … will react to any statement, opinion, proposition, expression or product you proffer?
As a book, Harry Potter went viral. As a movie, Avatar went viral. As a marketing methodology, Mass Control went viral.
No doubt they were in the right place at the right time to strike a perfectly pitched note that resonated wide and far.
So will every fantasy novel, alien movie or marketing platform go viral – even if theme and content are duplicated exactly? Of course not.
If Harry Potter, Avatar, and Mass Control had been released one or two years earlier, or later … would they have had the same effect, the same appeal if the political, economic, or social landscape had been different?
And what if the same story line or marketing message had been crafted and delivered by someone else … not J.K, Rowling, James Cameron or Frank Kern … would they still have been a success?
If you fall in love with a blonde, tall, athletic, tanned, funny and intelligent woman, or man … will you fall in love with each and every person who looks and acts exactly that way, too?
When you gaze into your lover’s eyes … will you ever see, can you ever feel, ever be enraptured in that same way by the eyes of another person just because they may be brown or blue and almond shaped, too?
What makes a joke hysterically funny when told by one comedian and flat and stupid when told by another?
What can be taught? What can be learned? What can be patented?
The 3 Guardians of Viral’s Holy Grail
If you’re a marketer, three indispensable components must be present if your marketing message and your product will ever be disseminated at anything close to viral speed.
* One, you must have a quality product – one that eminently satisfies a proven and measurable need or hunger. It must have value beyond its price.
* Two, your marketing platform and creative has to match and cater to the personality and sensibilities of your target market. You must understand them, speak like them and walk some distance in their shoes. You must have a passion to help, not to just make money.
* Three, your target market has to be clearly defined and approachable. It can be delineated by gender, age, income or any other demographic or psychographic attribute, singularly or in combination, so long as they communicate with one another and can be reached initially by you. A communication network must be in place.
And the degree to which those three criteria are met, will determine the light speed and the distance at which your message and product will travel.
Concentrate on one component to the exclusion or the diminution of the other two will effectively produce a crashing and forgettable thud rather than a viral, self-perpetuating marketing bang.
Unfortunately, most marketers who ask: How can I make my <Fill in the Blank> go viral on the web … just want a magic pill that requires no effort, much less an understanding of what works and what doesn’t.
What they have yet to understand is that in the marketing world, going viral, as in getting big-buck lucky, requires the convergence of the tangible with the intangible; it is the hallowed marketplace wherein opportunity and preparation gleefully meet.
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A great product, a well-planned launch and a continually evolving and adaptive marketing campaign – none of which happens magically or overnight – is marketing’s true, only, and attainable Holy Grail.
Going viral only happens, if at all, afterwards.
Barry A. Densa is a freelance marketing and sales copywriter. Read more of his irreverent musings, and download a FREE copy of his NEW eBook, containing 21 of his most outrageous rants, when you visit his blog: Marketing Wit & Wisdom!