links
The First Click: Re-thinking a Homepage
Jan
Our goal, the first click
All of our SEO efforts to promote the website homepage are useless if we do not think about what we really want from our homepage. What makes a website homepage successful? For the homepage we get clients requests like:
- I want to display a bunch of images in a slideshow!
- I want to show how big my company is, the huge number of employees, and how we are all around the world.
- I want my logo to be in the middle of the page because it is so nice and expensive.
- I want a Flash animated intro (yeah, still some people ask for this… so 90’s!).
Think about the most successful websites in the world, like Facebook, Wikipedia or Amazon. And now think about their homepages.
What guidelines do they follow? Certainly none of them do anything like a flash animation intro. If these sites were not famous, would you say they have a good homepage? Maybe you would say they are not flashy enough! Think, are these the homepages you would ask for your website?
Think about it, what you want from your homepage is actually very simple, all you want is your visitors to think:
"I want to know more!"
And right after that, they will surely make their first click.
This first click is the foundation of any successful homepage, no matter how you put it. If someone lands on your site and they feel they want to click somewhere interesting then your homepage design is done.
The best request for a homepage is:
- I want people to be interested and make their first click.
Now that we know the goal of our website homepage is a first click, we should think about how to get it from the visitors.... and which guidelines to follow for this.
Talk to them (not THEM, the costumers)
You want to tell the costumers what you can offer them. They don’t want to know how many offices you have, or how big and professional your company is, or how cool your new logo is; they want to have a reason to stay.
Guideline 1: Sell it
You probably are selling something, so say what you are selling right away. Many websites start with something like:
"We have various solutions for companies in many fields that want to have a presence online."
"What? I am getting out of here!" says the first nice potential costumer. So, do not be afraid to say what you have right away:
"The best rockin’ Websites for your company!"
This may be a very simple example, but many corporate websites homepages struggle with this. Of course you know what you want to sell, so sell it in the homepage. Don’t be ashamed of showing what you have to offer right away. People will not stay if you do not give them a reason to stay. Imagine Amazon saying:
"Please, browse our website to find something you may need, we have many products of many types in all kinds of prices."
Instead of what they have right now (is just the meta description, but is a good example):
“Online shopping from the earth's biggest selection of books, magazines, music, DVDs, hardware, electronics, etc.; just about anything else.”
Amazon makes very clear exactly on the homepage what they are offering and soon enough they will get our first click. This is an important lesson for your homepage: sell it. And yeah, you can talk to THEM also.
Guideline 2: Make visitors feel related
You probably have some a great business strategy and clear customer segmentation. For example, if you have "potential clients in China" vs. "potential clients abroad", then your page should have links like:
- Are you in China?
- Are you outside of China?
Then it is pretty clear what they should do: give their very first click on the section that is relevant to them. This way they will want to know more. You want visitors to feel related to what you have to offer.
Guideline 3: Tease
Get your click by giving them different teasers of the content you want to promote. Give your users some information but not all. Make them click on see more links.
You probably have various services, products, or sections you want your visitors to go to, and it is impossible to show it all in the homepage. Think of it as newspaper headlines, the full content of the newspaper would never be on the headline, it is just enough so people want to see more about it.
Have the homepage design with:
- Short but attractive text: "Get new pants now".
- Links to latest content you want to promote: "Check my blog about tiny elephants".
- Use only a few paragraphs so that people don't have to scroll down way too much.
The homepage will be much more interesting than 5 paragraphs about your company history, your biography or things like that. No one will read 5 paragraphs about how your company was founded on the homepage.
Finally
You have to think about making it look professional or beautiful: selecting the right pictures, choosing the right colors, creating the most appropriate layout. Also good SEO in the homepage is the first step to any kind of SEO. And do this thinking of your targeted costumer; you probably want a professional homepage design here.
Of course there is much more in homepage design than these few pointers or guidelines, but it is too long to say it on this post. Please give me your comments and opinions!
Google Search Box Links
Jul
Google introduced links in its search box. I think it's a very smart move, and here is why :
1) Many (millions) of people type the address of a website in the search box of google instead of typing it directly in their browser's address bar (internet explorer, firefox, chrome, opera or safari). So, if google puts a link, then they don't have to click the search and then chose the first response. They can directly click the link without search. Less clicks = Better service.
2) Google will lose money, still they do it to improve their service and their clients satisfaction. This is at the heart of their philosophy (remember there is no ad on google home page ;o). why will they lose money? because when you make a search, on the right side you have the ads (and thus money for google). so if you click on the link in the search box without doing the search... then you never see the ads, you never have the chance to click on the ads, so they don't earn money! But since they care more about the user experience... they do it anyways.
3) There is no doubt that in the long run, this strategy is better. you are one click away from another search engine, the more they improve their service, the more likely you will stick to them... and they know it... and more important, they act according to what they know. I think these kinds of decisions are hard (because you lose money), but they are better in the long run. and google wants to compete for the long run, no one doubts that...
Google and javascript, new honeymoon
Jun
Yes, google can understand some of the javascript links, and will soon be able to understand more. They just said so at the googe I/O gathering.
What does it mean?
It means that for years, we seo experts, were telling you “NO, DON’T, Please take out that ugly javascript link that google doesn’t understand”
Now we will tell you “no, don’t, please take out that ugly javascript link that still many search engines don’t understand, even if google understand it now”.
Baidu doesn’t, yahoo doesn’t, and we don’t know yet about bing (the new Microsoft search engine), but there are big chances that it doesn’t. So, yes, continue not to use javascript links whenever you can, and always prefer the old html link tag <a href=”” title=””> </a>
What are the javascript links google can understand?
google can understand these javascript links :
- <div onclick="document.location.href='http://gotothispage.com/'">
- <div onclick="myfunctionname('gotothispage.html')"><a href="#" onclick="myfunctionname()">that's a cool page dude</a>
- <a href="javascript:void(0)" onclick="window.open ('youcometothispage.html')">please open this page</a>
so yes you can use them, but please, avoid them when not necessary...



