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Design Your
Online Success
Teacher: Michel
Fortin
Website design has always been
a fascinating area for me -- not entirely in the realm of graphics
but also of flow, navigation, appearance, and content. I love
to surf the web almost exclusively to learn about different
feels and flavors. In the process of doing so, it amazes me
to see how some sites appear smooth, professional, and refined,
while others smack of being put together horrendously quick
-- even when the company is reputably of high quality.
But website design is, in itself,
a powerful marketing process. Many tend to forget that people
make UPAs (unconscious paralleled assumptions) -- in general
and especially in business. In other words, when they visit
a website they will unconsciously assume that a parallel exists
between the website's design and the business behind it --
not to mention the products or services it promotes. So, if
the design is poor, unprofessional, or unclear, people will
unconsciously assume that the product or company is just the
same.
Regard for the human inclination
to "judge books by their covers" is of utmost importance on
the web, for the appearance of your site (that thing that appears
on a person's computer monitor) is the only thing that separates
you from your customer and thus is representative of the whole.
Therefore, your site can either emphasize, support, or contradict
your marketing message -- and do so almost effortlessly, even
inconspicuously, and sometimes dramatically.
A large airline company recently
conducted a survey among its passengers in order to perform
some marketing research. The following question was asked: "If
your food trays were dirty, would you assume that the airline
also does poor maintenance on its engines?" And the answer
was, as illogical as it sounds, "yes" for an overwhelming majority
of participants.
In the "The
22 Immutable Laws of Marketing," marketing
gurus Al Ries and Jack Trout made what I believe to be
the most powerful notion ever conceived in the world of
business, in that marketing is not a battle of products
but a battle of perceptions. My mentor used to say that "perceived
truth is more powerful than truth itself." Marketing is
all about perception.
A website design can often project
greater perceived value. If you place your website side-by-side
with a competitor, and both of you offer the same product in
the same way at the same price, the company that will win the
customer over will be the one that, through its design, communicates
to the customer that there is an implied added value in their
choice.
In my seminars, I talk about
the ketchup principle. Let's say you've just met a salesperson.
He is dressed absolutely impeccably, gave a compelling spiel,
is knowledgeable about his product, was thoroughly interested
in your needs and conducted a perfect meeting with you. But
throughout the encounter, you couldn't help but notice that
he had a little ketchup stain on his tie. Now, if I were to
ask you two weeks later what you remember the most about your
meeting, the first thing that would pop into mind will likely
be
The ketchup stain!
As the old saying goes, "You
never get a second chance to make a good first impression!" This
applies even to the simplest of things. On the Internet, it
includes your site's design and the image it projects. Therefore,
pay close attention to your website's overall appearance, its
appeal, its colors, its layout, its ease-of-navigation, and
most important its content.
About the teacher:
Michel Fortin is
an author, speaker and marketing consultant dedicated to turning
businesses into powerful magnets. Visit http://www.successdoctor.com/index.htm.
He is also the editor of the "Internet Marketing Chronicles" delivered
weekly to 125,000 subscribers -- subscribe free at http://www.successdoctor.com/IMC/.
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