What are websites?

Your answer to this question may determine the success of your website. So think carefully.
How we define what a website is all depends on which side of the fence we're on. I suspect that most " if not all " vendors and service providers would say their website is a sales tool. But this is a fundamentally flawed perspective. Adopt this position, and sooner or later you'll pay for it.
To really understand what a website is for, we need to think about who the Internet serves.
It's tempting to think cynically and argue that it serves commercial interests, but that's getting the cart before the horse. The Internet serves buyers and information seekers. That's what most people use it for.What your visitors are really looking for is a website that helps them.
A website that helps them buy when they want to buy. Helps them understand when they want to understand. And most importantly - a website that helps them decide when they want to decide.
So if you really want to build trust, credibility, authority, and site loyalty, helping visitors is the way to go. Of course, that's not to say you have to do it for free. We're all in business to make money after all. In fact, the main aim of many of your visitors will be to buy something. But it's important that you focus on them, not on you. For example, your visitors don't want to know what you have to sell. They want to know what they can choose to buy. If your primary focus is sales, your visitors will pick up on it.
To generate revenue from our websites , either directly or indirectly, we need to build them to help our readers. Don't start by asking "How can I sell?" Instead, start by asking "How can I help? (Even "How can I help them buy?" is a step in the right direction.)
We need to build our websites from the ground up to be a form of online help. Think of your website as a cousin of the online help provided with Microsoft Office. (If you think of Microsoft's help as the slow-witted cousin, you're on the right track.)

Sure, when you're writing for a website, the subject material is different, but the question is still the same. What does your reader want to know?
Comments
Post a Comment