|
By Whereoware staff on
Thursday, September 29, 2011 8:53 AM
“Can you hear me now?”
It’s a joke that’s funny in mobile phone ads, because with phones, there’s an easy answer: either you hear someone, or you don’t. With email, the line can be less distinct. Colors and a great layout may spur click-throughs (they “hear” you), while lines and lines of incomprehensible prose may halt any chance at revenue, but if you don’t have a call-to-action, it’s difficult for customers to know what to do next.
|
By Whereoware staff on
Tuesday, September 27, 2011 4:27 PM
So you’ve gotten visitors to your site, through email marketing or SEO! Great job. But getting them there is only half of the battle- this is an ecommerce site, so the next step is to entice your customers to purchase.
A common complaint from customers of brick-and-mortar stores is that the cash registers are “too hard to find”. In those stores, however, there are at least salespeople to ask for directions or assistance! On the internet, customers are pretty much on their own, so it’s important to make the ‘cash registers’ (Shopping Cart/Checkout) as accessible as possible.
|
By Whereoware staff on
Thursday, September 15, 2011 9:14 AM
Often times, it’s difficult to get a sense of a site’s performance when you’re flipping back and forth between stats on said performance and an image of the layout itself. Google Analytics’ “In-Page Analytics” feature, a floating overlay that shows layers helpful statistics on top of a real-time image of a page, is a handy way to view both at once.
|
By Whereoware staff on
Tuesday, September 13, 2011 2:11 PM
| When the Google search empire first began, they would just list out all the sites relevant to your search, with a small description of each page under the title. This fueled the development of SEO best practices, including that meta titles and descriptions not only accurately describe the features of a site but also that they do so succinctly, or risk being cut off mid-way (somewhere in the neighborhood of 150 characters for meta descriptions). Then as Google got smarter (as if that was possible), they listed 2-4 popular pages for the top ranking site directly under the site’s home page. These sitelinks meant that you could conveniently access pages within the site right from the search results, rather than clicking through the site to find the page you wanted. |
|
|
|