How to Make Your Website Fail

January 4, 2009 · 0 comments

10. You Hired Your Nephew

So you heard that he has created a site or two, besides he knows how to use your audio system. Thinking of the money you could save, you decide to give him a chance. If you have fallen into this trap you’ve with little doubt found out what the popular adage means to “get what you paid for”. Not only do you now have a website that is no benefit for you, but you have lost out on the benefits of well designed and marketed website could have done for you.

9. You Outsourced Your Work to a Near-Third-World-Country

Isn’t it just so tempting to hire a programmer or designer outside of the country? I once failed to listen to the advice of other professionals on a personal project of mine and paid dearly for it. If you think communication is important in business, be ready to try doing business with a major disadvantage if you choose to do a website this way. If you are lucky to find someone that does speak enough English so you can understand each other, be ready to make a lot of phone calls at midnight to carry on this communication. And finally, you’ll learn like I have and many of my colleagues that you’ll be promised professionalism and competency and receive neither. The many stories I have heard, mine included, these business arrangements typically end in legal threats and unsatisfactory or unfinished work.

8. You Downloaded a Web Template and Tried to do it Yourself.

Imagine finding out that someone decided to compete directly with your business. After a little bit of research you find that this competitor has no experience in your industry, has no relevant education and plans on putting little money and time in competing with your business. While you’ve received a related degree in your field, you’ve had years of experience doing what you do best and you have even excelled at it. Of course you have little reason to feel threatened by this newly learned competition. If you’ve decided build a website yourself and haven’t succeeded online and haven’t figured out why, bluntly speaking, look at your competition. When seasoned web designers and marketers are working on your competition’s web presence, there is a reason why your losing valuable clients to them.

7. Your Website is Outdated

If you don’t take your business seriously, how can you expect your clients to do the same. Your visitors are looking for the latest and greatest products or services. In short, get with it, or fail.

6. The First Page on Your Website Says, “Click to Enter”

It is starting to become rare to see these pages, for good reason. Visitors appall them, have better respect for you visitors and you’ll see more of them stick around.

5. You Can Count the Number of Pages on Your Site with One Finger.

Limiting the time your visitors spend on your site is one problem, but giving them no reason to come back is your other problem. The Internet is about Content, and if your website lacks in this regard, don’t expect your website to amount to very much.

4. Your Site Catches No Interest

If you can’t catch your customers eye on any of you product, services or content, your website has no chance. There are hundreds of tactics to catch your visitors interest. For example listing benefits for your potential customers, and not features. Using catchy one liners to compel your visitors to learn more. Or giving your audience real life application. Just know that if you can’t keep your audiences’ attention, you lost them in a flash.

3. Your Budget Only Included Web Design and Development.

If you forgot to appropriate sufficient funds to get visitors to your website, your website does no good for you. Not only do you need a website to succeed, but you need visitors as well, and just by building a website will not bring anyone to it. Without traffic, you will fail.

2. Your Website is Too Generic

A good looking website and a well branded website are two very different things. A good looking website might impress your audience but a well branded website will influence your audience to a profitable action. If you’re running a business, the latter is the smarter choice. Every aspect of your website should be communicating the same message, from your design, to your logo, to font, text and style. Keeping these aspects of your website consistent will create a stronger and more influential brand.

1. You Didn’t Monetize Your Site

Sometimes people get so caught up in making a website that they forget the whole reason why they made it in the first place. If you didn’t make your website obvious and easy for your visitors to make profitable actions, you’ve made it that much harder for your website to succeed. Before any design and development, you must first make a plan of how and what your website needs so your website is productive and successful. When your visitors come to your site, it should be designed in such a way that promotes your visitors to specific and measurable action. Every aspect of your site should be helping to accomplish your predetermined objectives, because without keeping this end goal in mind your visitors won’t fulfill those desired objectives.

Author, Speaker and Expert web designer and Marketer, Matthew Henage, is a leading expert in creating profitable websites. Henage is the CEO of Utah web design company, Superior Design Inc., a leading web design firm in the state of Utah.

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