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6. They don't mind scrolling up-and-down
With those nifty mouse wheels, folks stopped getting unhappy about scrolling - it's no
longer a usability issue, unless you create a 5000 word page or some sill iness. You don't
have to make a home page, or any other page of your web site, fit in a single window. Long
pages are OK!
7. Lists make their lives easier
You can write a list in a paragraph, so that colors look like red, green, blue.
Or, you can write a list in a list, so that colors look like:
Red;
Green;
Blue.
Your audience wants the latter.
8. They brow se in an F-shape
Read Jacob Nielsen's excellent article about the f-shape browsing pattern: Click here.
Put the most important stuff in the critical points of that F-shape, and you'll get better
results.
9. They can't remember your web address
Seriously. No one ever remembers a web address. Oh, sure, if you're 'nike.com' or
'cnn.com', they do. But if you're 'portentinteractive.com' or 'conversationmarketing.com',
good luck with that.
Give people plenty of ways to subscribe, bookmark or otherwise remember you. And
reserve different permutations on your web address, to protect your brand.
10. They don't want to log in
Don't make them log in to check out. Let 'em just click 'check out'. By all means, give them
the option to save their information and create an account. At the end of the checkout
process. At that point, the warm fuzzy feeling any consumer gets from burning
hard-earned cash is enough to get them to trust you.
11. They don't even want to think they have to log in
I know what you're thinking: "Oh, fine, I'll just put a login form on the left, and then put atiny little button on the right that says you can check in as a guest."
No. This:
Internet Marketing
Strategy
Internet Marketing
101
Search Marketing
Blogging
E-mail Marketing
Tools
Tutorials
Web Analytics
Web Design
Find Great Keywords& Track 'em
The InternetMarketing List
13 Ways to Generate
Customer Hate
Things I Wish I KnewWhen I Started in
Marketing
Internet MarketingTrends to Ignore
Copyblogger
Trump U's MarketingMaestro
Problogger
PR Communications
SEO Fast Start
SEOMoz Blog
SEO Design Solutions
Seth Godin
Web Metrics Guru
Web Strategist
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Tells me, the customer, "You are not part of our exclusive club. Click 'continue' and buy,
but you are a loser."
In all seriousness, customers don't trust the internet. Never mind that they're 10x more
likely to get their credit card stolen in a restaurant. They see the web as a massive
interconnected den of thieves. If you even imply you're going to save their information,
their trust is lost. Don't do it.
12. They don't even want a tiny hint or implication that at somepoint in the future they might have to log in
Just let them check out. For the love of all that's holy and good in the universe. Can we
ust drop it?
13. They don't w ant an 'experience'
In the immortal words of Jakob Nielsen: "Most people just want to get in, get it and get
out."
Adding dynamic "web 2.0 stuff" (shudder) just because the other guy has it is foolish.
Anything that makes me click twice instead of once is going to impress me the first time,and then alienate me after that. Examples include:
Drag-and-drop shopping carts. Clicking is easier.
Home page preloads. Clicking 'skip intro' is still extra work.
Fly-in, fly-out or slow fade-in, fade-out effects for product zoom images and such.
Every time you do that, you make the customer wait. Why?
Customers and visitors don't want an experience. They want service. Only designers and
geeks like me equate a great product/service with clever use of javascript libraries. The
other 99% of the population wants to get in, get it, and get out.
Don't take my word for it. Look at the web site of one of the penultimate design companies:
Apple.com. See any special effects?
14. They do want your newsletter
Hard to believe after all the spam hysteria, but a sizable chunk of your audience still wants
to receive a newsletter. So make it easy for them to find it.
I was one of the worst offenders in this department. On our corporate site, we had a little
e-mail icon, buried 1/3 of the way down the page, for our newsletter signup.
We made a very simple change, adding a signup form on every page next to the icon, and
we've seen a lift in signups just a week later:
15. They don't care how clever you are
If you can say "Ian Lurie arrested in drunken rampage", just say it. Don't say "Pugnacious
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Portent Prez Pegged by Police". The former tells me what's going on. The latter is funny but
unhelpful.
16. They aren't enticed by mystery
Your online audience is enticed by clarity, a cool product, a great story and such. They're
not enticed by the mystery of it all.
So a headline like "Great abs!" isn't as helpful as "10 exercises to get great abs". And "All
Wired Up" is utterly worthless compared to "Wired Magazine Has A Great Year".
17. They get lost a lot
It's easy for a site visitor to get lost. A broken link here, a missing button there, and wham,
they're frustrated and confused.
Have a user-friendly 404 error page, a good onsite search tool and really clear navigation.
Then review the onsite search data and the 404 errors, and see what they tell you about
what your customers want but aren't getting.
18. They aren't using cell phones. Yet.
If you do business in North America, chances are your customers aren't browsing your site
using a cell phone. Even this blog, which has more than its share of geek visitors, gets few
mobile views:
Plan for mobile, by all means. Learn how to create a mobile style sheet. But don't derail an
entire project, or increase the cost 100%, just to be mobile-compatible.
19. They don't search for your name
Your audience doesn't know who you are. They aren't searching for your name. They're
searching based on a question, and they'll find you if you can pose the right answer. So,
while ranking #1 for your company name is great, it probably won't help your bottom line.
20. They still use Internet Explorer
Not everyone understands that Firefox is the Risen Savior just yet. Most of your audienceis probably using Internet Explorer:
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And a lot of them are still using (choke) Internet Explorer 6:
Design, develop and plan accordingly.
21. They're buying nice monitors (and computers)
On the other hand, most of your audience is upgrading their computer's graphics
capabilities. You can safely design a page that's 900 pixels wide:
Be sure to check your own site stats before you make a change.
22. They need to want
People buy what they want, not what they need. We all need car insurance. We all want
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iPhones or other shiny things.
I don't know about you, but I don't get the same happy feeling in the pit of my stomach
when I consider my next car insurance payment as when I contemplate a new HTC Hero.
We can bemoan this, or go with it. Customers need to want. A truly great marketer
explains why they want what they need.
I am borrowing the needs and wants principle from some brilliant marketer
whose name I cannot find or recall. I 'm not smart enough to come up with it
on my own.
Here's the thing...
This list always gets longer. Look at your analytics report. Learn from the way your
audience responds to what you change on your site. Use your brain, and never stop
questioning why things are happening the way they're happening.
And feel free to add to this list, below.
Other stuff to do
Follow me on Twitter
Don't rely too much on the marketing plan.
Work on your marketing copywriting.
Subscribe to this blog, even.
Download my free e-book on social media monitoring using Google Reader.
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« Just stop. OK? | Main | Performance-based Pricing for SEO won't work »
23. To make your site stand out it's sometimes worth breaking a few rules (if you're
exactly the same as everyone else don't expect to be noticed).
Mike says: August 9, 2009 21:49
Things You Don't Know About Your Customers | Internet Marketing ... http://www.conversationmarketing.com/2009/08/22-things-you-dont-k ...