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A webmaster's work is
never done. What may have
worked a few years ago when
could be outdated today, so
it's important to constantly
improve your Web site.
However, a massive overhaul
is just too much work to
undertake at one time.
Instead, tackle these quick
fixes over time, and you'll
be able to improve your Web
site with minimal pain.
Copywriting
Content, specifically
text, is perhaps your site's
most important asset. Make
sure that it's up to snuff
by following these
improvements.
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Tell readers why they
should perform a task.
If your site is full of
passive suggestions,
toughen it up. People
are trained to follow a
request, as long as you
give them a good reason
to do it.
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Make the most highly
trafficked pages easier
to scan. If
your current site
consists of large blocks
of text, break it up so
that it's easier for the
average Internet user to
read.
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Convey a sense of trust.
If you're experiencing
skepticism, offer social
proof like testimonials
or risk-mitigating
offers like a free trial.
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Stress benefits.
Ensure that your copy
always shows users
exactly how your site
will benefit them.
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Make headlines
meaningful.
Be sure to change any
vague or cutesy
headlines to something
more up-front and
meaningful.
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Repeat yourself.
Check over your copy to
make sure that you're
really driving the point
home by making it in a
number of ways.
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Tell visitors what to do.
Revise your site to
ensure that people know
exactly what the next
step is. If you want a
visitor to click a link,
tell them
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Keep the reader engaged.
Make sure that your
current content gives
visitors a reason to
keep reading throughout
the entire piece;
otherwise, you need to
spice things up a bit.
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Stay consistent.
Check your copy for
consistency, or else
your site may be seen as
unstable or flighty.
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Stay simple.
Simplify your message
simply to avoid
confusing visitors,
while at the same time
improving conversion
rates.
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Structure content
persuasively.
Restructure your content
so that it's more
focused, specific and
credible.
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Offer social proof.
Seek out testimonials
and case studies to show
just how effective your
services are.
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Keep offers simple.
If you're offering lots
of different options,
pare them down.
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Make an offer that
visitors can't refuse.
Check out your site to
make sure that you're
giving your visitors a
reason to pick your
company out of an
overcrowded field.
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Avoid making hollow
promises.
Check out your guarantee,
and ensure that you're
backing it up with
something of substance,
like a money-back
guarantee.
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Keep each block of text
to a single topic.
Make sure that your text
isn't too overwhelming
with many different
thoughts in one place.
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Offer comparisons.
Make it easier for your
reader to understand and
relate to your business
by offering metaphors,
similes and analogies.
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Be concise.
Make sure that your copy
is only as long as it
needs to be to get your
point across reasonably.
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Go with what works.
Study other copywriters
to adopt the words and
methods that have worked
for them. Customize
these words and phrases
until they become your
own.
Usability
If your site isn't
usable, visitors will not
stick around. Take these
small steps, and you'll have
a more user-friendly site
that's ripe for conversions.
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Add a short "about" page.
Put a real person behind
your site by allowing
your visitors to learn a
bit about you.
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Make navigation
consistent.
Make sure that your
site's navigation is on
the same place on each
page so that visitors
don't get confused.
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Make text links clear.
Be sure that your links
are descriptive enough
so that visitors know
exactly where they're
going.
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Use underlined link text.
Get rid of your fancy
link navigation.
Visitors expect to click
underlined links. If you
dislike underlines, use
CSS (Cascading Style
Sheets) to employ a
different method of
highlighting, like a
different text color or
font.
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Never ask for more
information than you
need. If
you're currently asking
for excessive
information, rethink
your data-mining
tendencies. When you get
greedy for data, you'll
turn off some visitors.
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Always have text links.
Although your JavaScript
menu might look great,
some browsers and users
have JavaScript
disabled.
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Have a text-based site
map. With a
text-based site map,
lost visitors can find
their way, and you'll
make it easy for search
engine spiders to find
your pages.
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Link the site logo to
the home page.
Visitors will expect
your logo to link to the
home page, so make it
easy for them to find
it.
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Add a search box.
Are your current
visitors lost? Make it
easy for them to find
exactly what they're
looking for with an
internal search box.
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Use plenty of contrast.
If text seems to melt
into the background,
change things up and
make your text easy to
read by using colors
that highly contrast one
another.
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Customize the error page.
If you have a standard
set of error pages, you
need to step things up.
The error page should
not only reflect your
site's design but also
provide useful links
that will get your
visitor back on track.
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Ask for feedback.
Create a contact form
that makes it easy for
customers to speak with
you about your site.
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Test the site on real
users. Ask
regular people to
navigate your site to
find usability problems.
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Create specific landing
pages. If
you want to sell, make
sure that you have
landing pages for
specific campaigns and
that each of those pages
has a purpose.
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Add more internal links.
If you'd like to get
more traffic to your
income-producing pages,
add some internal links
to your most highly
trafficked pages.
Search Engine
Optimization
Follow these tips if
you'd like to see an
improvement on your
search-engine rankings.
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Replace underscores with
hyphens. In
search-engine results,
words separated by
underscores will run
together, while hypens
will create a space
between each word.
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Implement 301s to
consolidate page rank.
If your site lives on
both non-"www" and "www"
domains, redirect one to
the other in order to
consolidate.
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Add a dynamic meta
description.
Make sure that your meta
description makes sense
so that your excerpt in
search-engine results is
more appealing.
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Use heading tags.
Let search engines know
what's important by
highlighting titles and
more in header tags.
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Update content often.
Give search engines a
reason to keep coming
back with fresh content.
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Ensure that your host is
up to snuff.
Make sure that your host
is providing maximum
uptime so that your site
is visible at all times.
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Create a robots text
file. Make
life easy for crawlers
by creating a file just
for them.
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Make sure that your
domain is brandable.
If your name isn't easy
to say or remember, you
need to find something
that is.
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Build link popularity.
Actively seek out
relevant, inbound links
to your site to build
trust and profile with
search engines.
- Turn off
music. No one
wants music to greet
them every time they
click a link, so turn
off the music — or at
least offer an easy
option for disabling it.
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Give pages real names.
For example, if your
page is about red
widgets, its filename
should be, or at least
include, the words "red"
and "widgets."
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Take off the black hat.
If you've used tactics
like keyword stuffing,
remove them from your
site. They may be
working now, but in the
long run, they'll only
hurt.
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Open up the drop-down
menus. Let
your user see all of the
navigation options
available, or you'll
confuse them.
- Ditch
registration.
Don't turn off users by
forcing them to register
to access content.
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Ditch frames.
Frames are horrible for
search-engine
optimization and design
in general. Just stay
away from them.
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Fix broken links.
Don't send search
engines and users down
dead ends. Clean up
links for better
search-engine
optimization and
usability.
- Avoid
resizing the user's
window. Let the
user be in control of
their browser, or your
site will lose
credibility.
Accessibility
If your site isn't
accessible, you could be
making things frustrating or
even impossible for visitors
with disabilities. Take
these steps to make your
site more inclusive.
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Create accessible forms.
Make sure that your
forms can be filled out
by all visitors.
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Specify spacer images as
empty. Make
sure that nonvisual
browsers know to ignore
your spacer images by
noting them as empty.
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Set captions on tables.
This will ensure that
your captions render
correctly even in visual
browsers.
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Modify color.
Ensure that pages are
readable by using
appropriate colors.
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Summarize tables.
Add a summary of tables
so that visitors with
screen readers will
understand what they're
all about.
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Provide real lists.
Use list tags to ensure
that lists render
correctly for disabled
browsers.
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Remove text from images.
Using image text will
make it difficult for
those using screen
readers to read text.
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Offer an alternative to
JavaScript links.
Many browsers for the
disabled don't support
JavaScript, so make it
easy for them to have
access to "real" links.
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Identify the language.
Screen readers need to
know how to pronounce
words, so let them know
what language your
site's content is in.
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Add titles to links.
Ensure that links are
descriptive enough for
visitors by adding link
titles.
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Create accessible tables.
Make sure that tables
are accessible to all by
using scope, header and
ID attributes.
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Allow text resizing.
Make it easy for readers
to resize text if
necessary.
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Supplement navigational
aids. Offer
additional navigational
aids to help visitors
who use text-only
browsers.
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Define keyboard
shortcuts.
Set up keyboard
shortcuts so that
disabled users can
navigate your site with
ease.
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Provide alternate text
for images.
Alternate text will let
disabled visitors know
what images represent.
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Set a document type.
Let readers know what
sort of programming
language your site uses
so that content can be
displayed correctly.
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Present content first.
Make sure that text-only
browswers aren't being
presented with your
navigation before main
content.
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Set horizontal rules.
Instead of just using an
image to break up your
pages, use
horizontal-rule tags and
CSS to display them
properly for disabled
users.
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Accessible pop-up
windows. If
your site uses pop-up
windows, make sure that
they're accessible.
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Create meaningful page
titles.
Make sure that your
site's page names make
sense for their content.
Design
Spruce up your site's
appearance using these
design fixes.
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Place important
information "above the
fold." Move
your most important
content high on the page
so you can be sure that
visitors will see it.
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Keep background colors
and images at a minimum.
Backgrounds are often
less than visually
appealing and can make
your site load slowly.
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Reduce choices.
Avoid overwhelming your
visitor with lots of
different options.
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Design small.
Cut your Web pages down
to 50KB or less so that
they load quickly for
anyone.
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Nix banners.
Abandon banners for a
more effective design
element, or they'll be
ignored.
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Stay consistent.
Check to make sure that
colors and design are in
the same general scheme
so that visitors know
they're still on your
site.
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Validate design in
alternative browsers.
See how your design
renders in browsers like
Safari, Opera and
Firefox to make sure
that it looks right no
matter who is viewing
it.
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Minimize columns.
Reduce columns to avoid
distracting the reader
with excessive visual
choices.
- Lose the
splash page. No
one wants to sit through
a fancy Flash
introduction. Replace it
with a helpful home page
instead.
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Create a tagline.
Stand out with a
striking tagline that
will draw visitors in.
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Ditch frames.
If your site uses
frames, you need to move
on to another method,
like CSS or SSI
(Server-Side Includes).
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Make sure that text
outnumbers HTML.
Provide good content
with text rather than
HTML.
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Slow down the technology.
Although you may have
state-of-the-art
computers, many of your
visitors don't. Get rid
of memory-hogging
technologies like
JavaScript.
- Remove link
cloaks. Make
sure that your visitor
knows exactly where
they're going, or you'll
lose credibility.
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Limit each page to one
topic. Give
each page a singular
purpose to avoid
confusing visitors.
- Ditch crazy
fonts. If
you're using a
ransom-note font, it's
time to switch to
something simpler.
Chances are, your
visitors' browsers are
rendering it as Times
New Roman anyway.
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Reduce your graphics.
Graphics not only slow
pages down, but they
also steal attention
away from what's
important: content.
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Add functional links to
the footer.
Make it easy for
visitors to find contact
information or your
privacy policy just by
scrolling down.
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Standardize link colors.
Make sure that users
know which links they've
visited and which they
haven't.
- Update
information.
Put on a fresh coat of
paint with a new header,
logo or other design
element.
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Convert PDF files to
HTML. Make
browsing flow a little
smoother by converting
PDF files to a format
that's more easily
readable in a browser.
Legal
Keep your site safe and
protect your content using
these improvements.
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Update the privacy
policy.
Ensure that your site's
privacy policy fully
discloses everything it
should.
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Revise "deep" links.
Update links so that
they point to the home
page of a site rather
than a specific page, or
make sure that you're
attributing them
correctly.
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Legitimize images.
If you're using images
that you don't legally
own, it's time to update
them with your own
images or those that
you've purchased.
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Pay taxes.
If you're making money
from your site, it's a
business and is taxed as
such. Take care of your
taxes or you could end
up in hot water with
Uncle Sam.
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Protect content.
Keep your content safe
from thieves by
copyrighting it and
taking steps to shield
it from unscrupulous
eyes.
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Form a legal entity.
Get liability protection
by forming an LLC
(limited liability
company) or other formal
legal entity.
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Register a trademark.
If you own your domain
name but not a related
trademark, a trademarked
entity with the same
name could take it from
you, so be sure to
register it before
someone else does.
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Store a Web site cache.
Keep a copy of your site
handy in case of
copyright disputes or
loss.
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Revise the email
campaign.
Make sure that your
email campaign complies
with the CAN-SPAM Act.
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