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10 Deadly Website Sins
1. Not updating the content
on the website.
Where would you rather be for a long period of time, a
library full of books or a room with several mediocre paintings? If you had to
return, where would you rather go?
2. Thinking that just
because you have a website, business will come flowing.
Bringing visitors
to your website takes a consistent effort and time.
3. Not marketing your site.
Make sure that you put your www address on every bit of paper you ever send to
clients. Include it in your email signature, have it visible in your premises,
and tell people about it. Add your site to search engines and web directories.
Now you've got it – flaunt it!
4. Not having website
statistics.
You need to be able to see which is your most popular page,
how many people are looking, if what you thought is your best product is your
most popular, etc. It is this intelligence that will allow you to make your site
tightly targeted to your specific potential customers needs and wants.
5. Hiding your content
behind fancy graphics.
Pictures and graphics are a great way to make a
site look interesting, but if you do have textual content, make sure it is easy
to read, spell checked, understandable and current.
6. Having a slow site.
Pages should take no more than 10 seconds to appear fully. Any more than that
and the boredom factor starts to set in. If you do have something that you know
will take a while to appear, tell the viewer, and give them something to read
while it is happening, it will make the wait less obvious.
7. Not having a picture of
yourself on your website.
In the day of virtual communication, it is
often nice to see whom you are dealing with. It does not have to be a grand
scale portrait, just a tasteful shot so people can actually see you, and start
to build some trust.
8. Rely too heavily on
techno wizardry.
Some people are still looking at websites on basic
computers and some people don't like to spend time waiting for things to appear.
This means that if your site needs the best equipment to run and a long time to
wait, you may be missing out on potential customers.
9. Having crowded pages.
It takes approximately 20% longer to read something on a computer screen than it
does on paper. Make sure your pages are not cluttered so people can read things
comfortably, and do not jam pack the page so viewers have to search around to
know what to look at first.
10. Having broken links!
This means that you have a link to another page, but it is not there and comes
up with an error message. This can defeat all the work you have put into having
a great site, as it can look unprofessional. Keep an eye on this if you have a
page of external links.
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Credits: Originally submitted by Guy Levine, The Technology Coach, at
thetechnologycoachingco.com.
Copyright 2000, 2001, 2002 by Thomas J. Leonard.
May be distributed if full attribution is given and copyright notice is
included.