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You have 1 or 2 seconds to make an impression, and 2 or 3 seconds more to make a sale, or forget the web hosting business!!
Web hosting as a business has taken off in the last 12 months, with a vengeance.
How many web sites are on the Web today? They all have to be
hosted somewhere, the result being, there are now thousands of web
hosts around the globe today. How do people decide to choose you?
Potential customers will talk to friends; perhaps ask a local web
design group; or consult their ISP (Internet Service Provider);
but this may result in knowledge of only one or two hosting
companies. There are hosting directories, and review sites which
may be governed by whoever pays for the largest ad or personal
opinions that seem popular. The visitor will still have to make
the final decision.
If these visitors make their own decisions, and there are
thousands of web hosts to choose from, there are very few seconds
to deliver your offer, which must be instantly obvious. What can
you do to turn this streaming traffic into sales?
First View – The look of your web site
Are the design, content and delivery up to customer expectations?
If the presentation has obviously been thought about; a
conscientious effort to delivery and content; then it is likely
the visitor will believe that the hosting company will also look
after their site conscientiously. If the presentation is poor,
then forget it, there are more than enough web hosts that look
good. Of course, to the other extreme, if the web host’s site
looks a million dollars, it is likely that the visitor will be
expecting to a pay a ‘million’ too!
The Initial Offers – What are your best packages?
With the sudden growth of the web, the hosting industry has had to
take a retail approach to content delivery. In the retail trade
the offers are so many, that the customer has to learn to speed
read, or speed view. Visitors to web hosting sites have not got
the time to read all the details on each of every one of thousands
of sites, so speed viewing is a must; or is it?
Web hosts who have nothing to sell usually hide this fact by
showing columns of text, expecting the visitor to sort out what is
good to them or not. The usual explanation for this is “ The
visitor knows what they want and will find it without our hassling
them.” The expectation is that with less hassle the visitor will
more likely become a customer. Not true.
Web hosts that have special offers, great deals, or offer
specialized packages for say private, business or corporate
customers; will tell you just that. Think about it, why hide the
fact you have a winner? By taking a retail approach to a very
retail business, the real dealmakers are not ‘backward in coming
forward’.
Obviously making everything on the site an ‘excellent’ offer is
the other extreme. Most web hosts offer 90% of what their
competition offers, so to point out every good point offered would
be overkill. The likely result would be that you would show the
visitor that you are new to the industry, and less experienced;
not good in times of future support.
By pointing out the great points in the best reasonable packages,
you will catch the eye of the traffic, until previously, zooming
past you. What to do when they have stopped for a visit is another
matter.
Congratulations on getting the traffic to stop and browse – What
next?
Getting the zooming traffic to stop and browse is difficult
enough. The look of your web site can catch that peripheral vision
of theirs; in an instant they can decide, “I will stop here and
have a look”. The offers of 3 or 4 of your accounts, too good to
be true, or at least warrant further investigation, entice a
visit.
These ‘highway signs’ make you stop and pull over. What happens
once the visitors have pulled in? You will have to hold them
there, before they up and leave just as quickly. The ‘restees’
have seen the site, they have sampled the best on offer; now what?
You know you have a captured audience, all be it for another 2 or
3 seconds. Be careful not to send these valuable potential
customers off clicking around your site. They clicked on your
special package, the offer on the front page, so take them
directly to it.
The visitor has been enticed to your web site; seen good offers
and one or two of those are just what they are looking for. Take
them direct to the page with the offer; include the price; include
basic details that quantify very quickly the worth of the package;
and, provide an order form. Do not smother these account pages in
common details, or details of other accounts.
There should be only two main pages, the front page and the
account package page, that which the customer clicks to. The front
page is attractive and entices you to stay, the offer encourages
you to spend a few more seconds on the account page consisting of
title, offer, basics, price and order form; all this should be on
a secure page ready to take credit card information.
No two visitors are the same. There are those that will just sign
up straightaway and those that will ‘further investigate’. Put the
remainder of your account packages’ details, along with the
‘about’ information, the ‘help’, the ‘support’ etc, on other
pages, using links on navigation bars for easy access, keep the
offer clean.
You have one or two seconds to sell your product, don’t use it to
educate your potential customer, let someone else do that! Give
them what they want, this is now a very retail industry, if you
are stuck for reference material, then visit a supermarket or
local store, retail research has been around for years
About The Author
By
M6.net
Priyanka
Internet Promoter
http://www.m6.net
Fast, reliable and flexible web hosting at discount prices,using
CGI,PERL,.Net, PHP, ASP,Frontpage,MS-Access,SQL Server
applications on Windows 2000/2003 server with 24 hour support. |