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10 Tips for
Designing an Ecommerce Web Site
Teacher: June
Campbell
Want to sell your goods directly
from your site? Here are 10 tips:
10. Design for your target
market. Find out who your potential customers are and
why they come to your site (i.e. where they are on the consumption
cycle.)
9. Identify your objectives
for the site and introduce content accordingly. One Internet
marketer tells the story of erroneously marketing an automotive
book as an aid to car repair then discovered that the real
market for his publication was buyers of new cars.
8. Be cautious about using
offline marketing material on the Web. Print material
often does not lend itself to Web content and usually needs
to be modified.
7. Engage the viewer with
dynamic environments. Allow the customer to experience
the site - not just view it. Chat features, forums, solicited
feedback, and database delivery of custom content go a long
way.
6. Provide good navigational
structure, including search capabilities for larger sites. Viewers
enter your site at various webpages - they should be able
to navigate easily no matter where the place of entry. Your
sales area should be free of links to other Internet sites.
Why encourage customers to leave when you've worked so hard
to attract them?
5. Test the interface. A
Website interface should enhance the user's goals, not distract
from them. Strive to meld site components (i.e. graphics, text,
sound, etc.) to create a unique atmosphere and identity.
4. Design with usability in
mind and abide by basic design principles. Utilize white
space (less is more), fonts that are easily read, pleasing
color schemes, universally understood symbols, and backgrounds
that don't distract from the message.
3. Write for the Web. Write
in the second person. (i.e. You will appreciate our new product
because ...). Keep sentences short and no more than 3-4 sentences
per paragraph. Make use of hyperlinks and interactivity unless
doing so would take visitors away from your sales area.
Remember also that your visitors
will be situated in other parts of the world, and they may
not understand jargon or North American slang.
Lastly, research shows that Web
surfers detest the use of marketing hype. Subtlety counts.
2. Give something away and
reward visitors from coming to your site. Offer free
information, articles, contests, industry news or personalized
services.
1. And most importantly, always
answer the question, "What's In It For Me." In other words,
talk "Benefits" not "Features." Sound familiar?
About the teacher:
For Information
about writing business proposals, joint venture contracts, business
plans and more? Visit June Campbell's business resource site.
Nightcats Multimedia Productions: http://www.nightcats.com/
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