"Your Website Hurts My Eyes: 7 Reasons to Tone Down Your Advertising"
So you're on the computer, as usual. Your eyes are smarting. Your back hurts.
You want to jump in the car and sail down the highway with all the windows down
and your hair flapping in the wind. But before you call it quits for the day,
you have to look up just one more thing. Maybe it's web marketing, maybe you want
to buy some artwork to hang in your office. Off to Google you go.
You type in the magic words, whatever they are, and watch as a list of websites
flows down the page. You click on the first one, and it's an instant assault
on your eyeballs. Ten glaring banners, flashing like Vegas at midnight. One
of those annoying hover ads that follows you as you scroll and won't let you
read anything until you click the corner. Some sparkly things "snowing"
down the page. Frantic messages screaming things like BUY NOW! LAST CHANCE!
INSTANT SUCCESS CAN BE YOURS. A picture of a grinning guy who reminds you of
your creepy Uncle Lester.
You click away. Not today, not any day. You don't care what that guy is selling
or even if he's giving something away, because his presentation is god-awful.
Just when you thought you'd escaped the mayhem, a sneaky little window pops
up: "WHY DID YOU LEAVE THIS SITE? Please fill out this quick survey!"
Are they kidding? You consider typing something offensive in the "Leave
Your Comment" box, but figure it will only encourage someone to spam you
with unwanted offers.
We're all familiar with this web-surfing experience. It's downright unpleasant.
What's your opinion of someone who pitches their company in such a loud and
desperate manner? Do you believe all of their pie-in-the-sky promises? Do they
strike you as company run by people who are intelligent, honest and reliable?
Are you going to whip out your credit card because they tell you to?
Of course you're not. Being the loudest, the brightest, the busiest and the
boldest may attract attention, but it does not bring sales. That's something
to remember when you're creating your own company website. What DOES attract
and keep new customers coming back? A simple, tasteful web design. An easily
navigable site. Copy that's crisp, clean, and interesting.
Here are 7 reasons to tone down your advertising:
1. Flash is just too flashy. A flash presentation can be creative and unique,
but is it really needed for what you offer? Will that kooky winking clown-head
in the corner really make the sale for you? Even if you find a really excellent
designer who can put together an incredible high-tech Flash feature, consider
the harried web surfer. She's been clicking all day; do you really think she
has the patience to stand for one more mini-movie?
2. Too many messages cancel each other out. Ever try to read one of those pharmacy
circulars when you're tired? All of those big red words emblazoned across the
page. Headlines crammed in beside blown-out price points and cheap photography.
It isn't easy! If you try to cram a whole bunch of words on your website, guess
what? Not one of those messages is going to be read, let alone remembered. The
eye doesn't know where to look! Try a visual whisper instead of a scream. Make
your point as best you can, but take care to leave whitespace so the eyes have
a resting place where they can digest what you've said.
3. Movement is distracting. Think about the last time you visited a website
with "magical stars" sprinkling down over the words. Were you able
to read and understand it? Mind the weary web surfer; be kind to his eyes! You
stand a much better chance of holding a customer's interest with words that
aren't flying off the page, but rather standing still in one spot, waiting quietly
for someone to read them!
4. The mighty click is all-powerful. You know what it is to be that web hunter.
The mouse is in your hand; you're in total control! Now think of that other
person palming the mouse, surfing YOUR site. If your website is a frenzy of
color and confusion, all it takes is one CLICK and you're forgotten! Don't want
them to click away? Here's how to make them stay. Keep it clean and simple!
5. Your empty promises are lost on the skeptical consumer. Think about your
own web-surfing experiences. Did you believe that guy who told you he'd make
you a millionaire if you just SIGN UP TODAY? You're better off being honest
and optimistic, than crazed and fanatical about what you can offer your customer.
6. Pop-ups are really annoying. Have you ever been so intrigued by a pop-up
ad that you bought whatever they were raving about? My guess is no. Do you appreciate
it when you're trying to get some work done on the computer and fifteen pop-up
ads crowd your screen and overload your hard drive? I certainly don't! If you
don't like such rude interruptions, then don't impose them on somebody else.
I don't care how many times that marketing guru tells you it will improve your
search engine ranking. Search engine stats might give you exposure, but click
rates mean nothing if the customer's not buying.
7. No one reads really long sales letters. Ah, how brilliant of those copywriting
experts to convince you that a six-page letter is going to bring in big bucks
for your company. Especially if you're paying them by the hour or word! A two-page
letter will do the same thing as a six-pager, and more. The 'more' being that
it will hold your reader's interest the whole way through. Brevity is the key
to great writing. If you can make a great argument in five words or less, you've
got it all over the next guy. Keep that in mind before you put the Magna Carta
on your web portal.
Want to design and write website content that attracts and captivates? Want
to bring your visitors back for seconds, thirds, fourths, and the ultimate purchase?
Then keep the above "distractors" to a minimum. Really try to put
yourself in the other person's shoes... the one who is searching the internet
for what you have. Think about all of those things that prevent you from enjoying
your web surfing experience, and then take care to remove them from your own
company website! Offer tasteful, subtle design, eloquent headlines, and clear,
informative copy. Be honest about what you sell and how it can make a difference
for your potential customer. Speak softly, and watch the sales roll in.
About the Author:
Dina Giolitto is a New-Jersey based Copywriting Consultant with nine years'
industry experience. Her current focus is web content and web marketing for
a multitude of products and services although the bulk of her experience lies
in retail for big-name companies like Toys"R"Us. Visit http://www.wordfeeder.com
for rates and samples. |