websites

website

How do I know if I need a website makeover?

Truth be told, no one wants to hear that their website sucks. It can be a very awkward conversation especially if a business owner is in love with their current site and is in denial. What may have been cutting edge 5, 10, or even 15 years ago is just no longer going to cut it today. #TruthBomb

We get it, having your website created probably took a lot of time, decision making, and money, but if your website just isn’t converting anymore or it’s very clunky for your viewers to use – then it’s time for an overhaul.

The goal of any website is to convert visitors into customers and if your site design and/or structure is a barrier in that, it needs to be fixed. Identifying the problems that hinder your site from being conducive to conversion and visitor engagement is an important step in the right direction.

Below are a few reasons why a redesign should become a priority for your company\’s web presence and some negative effects you could face by not taking action now.

  1. Your bounce rate is too high. Every website should have Google Analytics installed so that you can review your bounce rate – this the percentage of visitors that only visit a single page on your website during their session. The average bounce rate is about 40% to 55%. Anything higher suggests that your visitors are having a poor user experience.
  2. Long load times. Is there anything more frustrating than when a website takes FOR-EV-ER to load! There are several tools, like pingdom.com, that can help you figure out your load time. If it takes longer than 3 seconds, you should make some updates to speed it up.
  3. No on-page SEO. In order for your website to rank on search engines like Google and Bing, your website needs to have on-page Search Engine Optimization or SEO. Each page should have its own unique keywords and title tag or H1 tag. Search engines use these tags and keywords to create listings and how your customize these can affect how and how often your website is displayed when someone searches your keywords. There are other ways to increase your SEO as well including adding links, meta descriptions, alt tags, etc.
  4. Stale content. Yes, adding fresh content to your website matters – without it you will struggle to attract and retain new visitors. Fresh content increases your site’s exposure in search results – one of the easiest ways to add content is a blog!
  5. It’s still an HTTP. You need to have a secure site and upgrade to an HTTPS site – this lets visitors know that your site is secured by an encrypted network communication protocol. An HTTPS scrambles the data transmitted to and from your site to prevent unauthorized users from reading it.
  6. It’s not mobile responsive. This is a big one! 3 in 5 users will visit your site on a tablet or mobile device. If your site isn’t mobile-friendly, visitors may abandon your website. A mobile responsive website means that not only does your website look good and function great on a desktop, but it’s compatible on a mobile device – the design uses proportional units of measure rather than fixed so it can adapt to the device it’s viewed on.
  7. It’s clunky aka hard to navigate. Visitors should be able to easily find the content they are looking for on your site. Whether you put the information on your homepage or in your menu, visitors shouldn’t have to look hard to find what they came for. Navigation can affect every aspect of your website performance!
  8. It doesn’t match your brand. You already know how important branding is to us here at Red Barn. Your website is a direct reflection of your brand, your colors, logo, styling, pictures, and even font should all match your brand.
  9. You aren’t using CTAs. A Call to Action tells your visitor what to do next. It can be something simple like read this article, download this whitepaper, click here to email or call, etc. it gives them direction on what they need to do next to get information or to work with you.
  10. You have bad links or 404 errors. Having broken links or links to pages that are no longer available can really affect a user’s experience on your website. It can also slow down your site’s speed and performance. If you don’t want to check every link page by page, a great resource is com.

In addition to the list above, you should also make it very easy for people to find your contact information and social media profiles – make it easy for them to contact you and follow you. It’s also important to note that if you are in an industry like banking, you may be required to have an ADA compliant website – that’s a whole different animal, but you can read a previous blog about it here.

Don’t look at upgrading and updating your website as an expense – it’s all part of your marketing strategy which should be seen as an investment. After all, marketing is designed to bring in leads that convert to sales. If your website is crappy and outdated, odds are you aren’t making the best first impression to your prospects and could be losing sales and not even know it. Need an honest assessment of your website or thinking of giving it an overhaul, give us a call!

How do I know if I need a website makeover? Read More »

website-mistakes

The great website debate

We\’ve been doing a ton of websites lately and talking to even more people about the types of websites they need, how to access the back end of them, and basically the process of building a website. I’ve seen so many companies bamboozled by people who take advantage of the unknowing and the website naïve. It pisses me off and makes me sad.  So I’m going to offer a Website Nightmare  – Please don’t do this EVER checklist.

Here goes:

  1. Be very, very, very leery of someone who says you need a custom built CMS site – you don’t. What will happen is that person who designed the site will eventually disappear and you will be left with something that can’t be updated, fixed, and it’s just God AWFUL to maintain. There is NO need with all the WordPress prebuilt CMS templates out there.  No need. Don’t do it unless you are a HUGE corporation with in-house coders that can collaborate and work with the developer. Small businesses – use WordPress.
  2. Don’t get sucked into industry driven “templated” sites – that are often prefab CMS systems. You pay a monthly fee – but they own everything. Stop paying them and you have no site. Try to move it to another vendor – you can’t.  Once again you are at their mercy.
  3. Don’t use CANNED content – typically from industry driven companies who promise the Best Sites for REALTORS, Insurance, Financial Advisors, Manufacturers – the list goes on.  Canned content is useless – don’t do it.  You need to tell YOUR story, not someone elses.
  4. You should ALWAYS OWN your site – always.  Once the designer is done doing their magic – you have all the logins, passwords et al. The intellectual property is YOURS not theirs. From photos to copy to design. ALWAYS.
  5. If it sounds too good to be true – it probably is.  There are many overseas designers who do an amazing job and they will be far more cost effective than using a local person – the problem is they usually come in “pools” – and if you have a problem – good luck getting someone on the phone.  Who you worked with today will be different than who you work with tomorrow.  Now if your site is for a one day event – go for inexpensive. If it’s for your company – go local.
  6. Cost – it varies depending on what you need.  Some websites DO cost $20K, some should only cost $3K, some will cost $100K. Do your homework.  If someone is half the price of everyone else – RED FLAG. Danger Will Robinson – you probably aren’t comparing apples to apples.

Don’t get bamboozled. We’ve seen too many people stuck with something they can’t update, can’t move, can’t…well just can’t do anything with and they end up spending money completely redoing it.

Questions – call us. No BS from Jenn and I – we’ll be up front and honest with what you need versus what you have (or what you’ve been offered!)

The great website debate Read More »