Good Content
Pays!
by Stephen Dill
Traffic to a site can be a blessing or a curse. Visitors who find
what they are looking for, are engaged in what the site offers,
and/or come away with a positive impression become the site owner’s
best allies and customers. But lead a visitor to believe that they
will find what they are looking for and then not provide on your
promise and you will find yourself being stabbed in the back repeatedly
by people you will never know. As discussed in another article,
“What Are the Benefits of Good Design on the Web?” the
task of the site owner is not simply to ask all the right questions
and make sure the designer interprets the answers correctly. Just
as challenging is the need for the correct content—content
that is largely dictated by the answers to the same questions so
important to good design: Who are the visitors? What are they looking
for? What is their situation, are they rushed? Are they knowledgeable?
Are they looking for opinions or facts? Are they the kind of prospect
the site owner is looking for?
Much is made of the importance of “fresh” content, but
I posit that the right content is ageless if it’s still relevant
to the audience it’s targeted toward and the business objectives
continue to be met. A constant infusion of ill-aimed content on
top of bad or incorrect content is no answer to the challenge of
gaining and keeping customers. So the question is, “What’s
the right content?” As Michael Gerber states in his must-read
book, E-Myth Revisited, “It is in the understanding of value,
as it impacts every person with whom your business comes into contact,
that every extraordinary business lives.” Deep knowledge of
your customers will define your entire business and make clear the
boundaries of your content.
Content development is often a missed opportunity for creativity.
Here a team can and should gather to read and digest what the psychographics
profiles indicate the interests and motivators of the audiences
are. As a hedge against myopia, your team should include one or
more from outside your company or immediate colleagues. The same
scenarios that influence the designers should be the frameworks
for role-playing within the content team.
No matter the intent of the site – whether e-commerce, private
intranet, public promotion, nonprofit research, or secure account
management – the measurement of success, the determinant of
how much the site is returning on the owner’s investment,
is found in the server logs. They tell the story of the visitor’s
travels through the site. If the content is good, visitors will
linger when they find content that resonates with who they are and
their situation. If they stay less than a minute, going to another
site from the first page they land on, you are looking at either
a visitor who realized they were not looking for what you were offering,
or a visitor who was turned off by the content they perused in those
first 30 seconds. Good content engages; good content pays!
Stephen Dill
SRD InterActive
srd@srdinteractive.com
www.srdinteractive.com
Stephen Dill is a seasoned marketer with expertise in the development
and use of interactive channels and their integration with traditional
marketing channels. Stephen has held leadership and/or consulting
positions in small companies, Fortune 500 companies and the military.
He has extensive experience in conceptualizing and articulating
new concepts, organizing teams and managing projects through to
completion.
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/
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