First Published: 22 January, 2020
When someone lands on your website for the first time, you effectively have 3 seconds to communicate to them.
Here are our key tips
This helps build trust and makes it easy to buy from you. And while your homepage normally receives the majority of visits, treat every page as if it’s the first time the customer has found you, allowing them to quickly find what they need.
Action Point: Ask a total stranger to visit your site and ask them the following:
If not, re-write your copy and possibly look at rearranging a few key elements on the site.
Nobody likes a slow website! Research by Google found 53% of mobile site visits leave a page that takes longer than 3 seconds to load. And more importantly, the data shows:
“While more than half of overall web traffic comes from mobile, mobile conversion rates are lower than desktop. In short, speed equals sales revenue.”
Action Point: test your speed using Google’s free Page Speed Insights tool
Another useful Google tool – Test My Site – shows the impact on revenue when you improve site speed. One of our client’s current site speed is 2.5 seconds and their goal is to reduce that to 2 seconds which could translate to a potential increase in annual revenue of almost $6,000. Worth doing? You bet!
Is your website mobile friendly? I really hope so because 81% of Kiwi’s own a smartphone and according to Google’s Consumer Barometer
“For many people, Internet access is smartphone-centric. Smartphones are used to come online at least as often as computers / tablets.”
How visitors interact with your site on a mobile is different from desktop. For a start, they’re using their thumb and fingers on a tiny screen and if you have “fat finger” syndrome like me, it doesn’t take long to get annoyed if you keep accidentally pressing the wrong thing!
Action Point: Test how easily a visitor can use your page on a mobile device
https://search.google.com/test/mobile-friendly
Perhaps I should have made this #1 because if you’re spending time and money driving the wrong people to your site then none of the above really matters.
So before you begin your website conversion journey, please do this first:
Now do an audit of any campaigns you’re running and get rid of those that are driving the wrong traffic to your site.
Blog provided by This Side Up
Need help? We’re just over here
Contact us if you have any suggestions on resources you would like to see more of, or if you have something you think would benefit our members.
Get in TouchSign up to receive updates on events, training and more from the MA.