We all have hit sites
that seem like nothing but a catalogue of stuff being sold. Flashy, blinking
banners; bellowing sound, if you allow it. I don't know how they can sell
anything. I run quickly without even a thought of looking back. When you are
selling products produced by others, let the producer do the selling. (If they
can't get it done, you have the wrong producer and product.) All you should do on
your site is to recommend the product and you should do so Indirectly, with little
fanfare. Look at it this way:
When a visitor
arrives at your website, the question is always what's in it for me. So you
answer this with good useful site content. You provide the information the
visitor came to find. Maybe it is air fares to Europe, the cost of renting a
house boat for two weeks next summer, all known symptoms of hoof and mouth, or
the latest rumours about the price of oil.
Your website has a
purpose for being. If all is working well, your visitor arrived in accord with
that purpose looking for information you can provide. Do so immediately. To hit
a visitor with a sales pitch is dumb. All surfers know where the Back button lives. And they use it frequently.
One way of looking at
your point of view as a webmaster versus that of your visitor is to think in
terms of MWR (Most Wanted Response). That is, think of what you most want your
visitor to do relative to what your visitor most wants. It doesn't take a lot
of brain power to realize you and your visitor do not ultimately want the same
thing. For example, your visitor wants information; you want a sale.
Taking this a step
further, it should be obvious that what you want is meaningless to your
visitor. Thus you are whipping a dead horse if you do anything other than seek
to provide your visitor with exactly what is wanted. That is, your MWR must be
for your visitor to find what is needed. To work toward any other objective is
to fail.
Suppose your visitor
is looking for information about pruning rose bushes. Then her MWR is to find
that information. Your Most Wanted Response at the time of her arrival must be
to provide it. If you can, you have accomplished a great deal. You will have
drawn her into your site. You have been allowed to demonstrate your resources
and expertise. While you may not have made a sufficient impression to assure
she will return, she probably will not unless you provided what she wanted.
Now suppose you have
a marketing deal with a garden tools wholesaler. That your visitor is interested
in how best to prune roses, may mean she is also interested in good pruning
shears. Which of the following will bring more sales? A sentence within the
article: "The first step toward good pruning is making sure you have top
quality shears. My favourites are made by Johnson. They are simply the best.
Pop up a secondary
browser window and in two inch red block letters toss up: SALE! Save 30% if you
act right now. If you think the second approach is even feasible, you are right
in only one sense. It is feasible. Some will jump at a sale. Some will even do
so when they have no real need for the item on sale!
But you cannot build
a loyal customer- base with the latter approach. The soft sell in the middle of
an article in which you are providing needed information will take you much
further in the long run. If your visitor clicks on your link, it will be her
choice. Thus at the other end of the link, you will know she arrived by choice.
Enthusiastic support is called for. But so is lightness.
Grace and style
help as well. Something very simple may work best. Being the gardening
fanatic that I am, I think I've tried every gardening tool made. Those I
haven't tossed, lie rusting in the garage. These days, I've given up looking. Johnson
tools always deliver. They work better and last longer than any other tools out
there. Now look what has happened. If your visitor clicks on this link, she
arrives at Johnson's showplace with an open mind, probably hoping to find a
better tool.
With less than eighty
words, you have converted a total stranger into an
excellent prospect. Even
if your visitor did not click on either link, you still
have a big win here.
For one, you have not offended her with a blatant sales pitch. More important,
she found what was needed, good information about pruning roses. In this, there
is at least the beginning of trust and an appreciation for your expertise. From
here, she may explore further or come back later.
While we would like
to believe this approach always brings a return visit, it just isn't so. A
visitor who does not buy on the first visit, and does not come back, is a sale
lost forever. But the more important view is to look at this from the other
end. If your visitor does not find what is needed, does not recognize your
authority and expertise, there will be no coming back; period. At bottom, your
Most Wanted Response at the time a visitor arrives is to provide precisely what
is needed. It is the only way that offers the chance of a future visit and a further
opportunity to make a sale.
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