 |
Further
Reading ...
|
|
10 Things Your Website Must Do Whether your company sells products or offers services, you will want to make sure that you use this list as a guide for your website. Define your 'position' and communicate it prominently. Tell website visitors on your homepage what you do...
New Year's Netiquette Resolutions Happy New Year! New attitude? New habits? How about 10 Little New Year's Netiquette Resolutions? Almost every New Year's resolution is based on improving attitudes and changing habits. From loosing weight to getting out of debt to trying to...
What are Pixels… and other tips for photographers. What are pixels? When you take hold of a digital camera, or even a traditional one, you constantly read or hear about "pixels". "This digital camera has 8.0 megapixels." "This one has 6.5 megapixels." So what are pixels exactly? According to My...
A Guide To E-Marketing E-marketing has become a popular tool for small business owners to promote their products and get the word out about what they have to sell. It is a very important area that should not be overlooked when you are trying to market your business. ...
|
|
|
Can Web Copy Writers Learn From Direct Mail Techniques
|
 |
Written By:
Steve Jackson
|
|
|
Would you send a million letters costing tens of thousands to print and mail, in a direct marketing campaign, without testing the letter content first? It's what many website owners do when they don't test and measure their own website copy and content then spend thousands on web marketing campaigns to drive traffic to their websites. In a direct mail campaign the mailer knows based on test mail outs what to expect and therefore what his return on investment will be. They basically write, re-write and re- write again until they have the content that gets the desired response. Many moons ago I used to work full time writing for direct mailing companies and the mailers would ask for 3 or 4 different versions of the same message and this was the reason. They tested each one with a short mail out (about 1000 per mailshot) and gauged response to find the best percentage. So the direct mail marketer has a solid figure to work on. He knows if he spends figure 'a' on direct mailing he will get figure 'b' response. Why can't the same apply to website marketing? We think it can. We tested this theory for 8 months and for the last 4 months have consistently been hitting the same percentage level (roughly give or take 0.5%) of conversion. By defining your website goal and objective, experimenting with copy, content, persuasion, design, colour and architecture it is possible to predict what the response of your website conversion will be. In other words you can confidently predict how many people will do what you want them to do every month. Month after month. Easy? no, it takes a lot of work but it certainly is possible. In a number of tests conducted on a website designed with web services for sale through a period of 8 months from January 2003 till August 2003, it was proved beyond doubt that a consistent level of conversion of new visitors can be achieved. Conversion Chronicles is the result of these tests. It was found that: 1) Headlines can improve the click through of a page by up to 35%! Over two months on one page we tested the headline and looked to see how many more visitors moved onto another page. The first month with the headline "Just On Site, Improve the way you do business online" only 15% of readers went onto do another action and stayed on the page (reading presumably) more than 3 minutes. With the headline "Do you know if your website is a success or a failure?" 50% completed another action and stayed on our website for more than 3 minutes. A terrific improvement when you consider it was only one line of text we changed. Ok, we think the content was pretty good anyway but the first headline was poor and so - continued below ...
|
|
|
continued ...
readers just immediately left rather than read. 2) Scan proofing greatly improves the chances of clickthough in your pages. By writing for a reader who scans rather than reads and making the key words appear in bold so that (if feasible) the bold words string together in a rough kind of sentence we found a similar increase in response to the page. There was again over a 30% improvement by scan proofing the text. If you want to find out more about scan proofing read the e-book available from http://www.conversionchronicles.com. There is a section dedicated to it. 3) Active voice writing (referring to the reader as you and your) dramatically improve the rate of readership and conversion. When I say dramatically, it is pretty dramatic to see 4 times as many people respond to text which says exactly the same thing but written in a different way. Again there is a whole chronicle dedicated to active voice copy writing so read it if you don't understand what I mean. Of course it depends on the service, the kind of incentives, the clarity of your content and the overall architecture to the pages. We found all this by using a constant measure in conversion (the percentage of subscribers from visitors rather than the number of subscribers/enquirers) and a constant control in the email address that was used to subscribe to. The implications of this are that if you can do this with your website you are in an informed enough position to make a descision on what to spend to drive more traffic to your website. If you get the conversion consistently right then there is no reason to expect that the conversion rate percentage will change simply because more qualified traffic arrives. The key word here is qualified. If the visitor isn't interested he won't stick around so you still need to carefully plan how to get the traffic (the job of SEO experts). So if it costs you 'a' to drive 1000 visitors to your site and you know your average conversion rate is going to be 10% you know that 'b' = 100 of those visitors will on average be in your database. You then can do the maths and figure out what the campaign is going to be worth to you. Simple when you think about it. In other words you have done what the direct mailing marketer does, tested, experimented and then spent the money rather than blindly hope that more visitors equals more sales. Have you tried it on your website? If not why not?
About the Author
Steve Jackson is a respected writer, editor of Conversion Chronicles and authour of the e-book Learn Before You Spend - 6 ways to measure web traffic. You can get a copy (worth $30) by subscribing to http://www.conversionchronicles.com
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
| _Additional Resources ... |



|
The Importance Of Internet For Real Estate Professionals
The Internet has become a fixture of our day to day lives. Gone are the times when a computer and a broadband connection were luxury items. More and more people are relying on the web to learn information about the real estate process, as well as...
Cookies aren't just for eating anymore Confused about cookies? Not the chocolate chip variety; the computer-related kind. Here is some information that'll help you understand what cookies do, why they do it, and how to control them. First, a definition. Cookies are tiny text files which...
SPAM: Are you taking the Asterisk*? SP*M is the scourge of the Internet. Everyone hates SP*M. Even SPA*MERS hate SP*M! For the average email user it's an annoyance. But for the Internet marketer it represents a serious threat. If you're sending ezines, autoresponder messages or...
|
|
|
|
|
|
 |
|
|
|