Archive for the ‘Web Content’ Category

Why?, ¿por qué?, pourquoi?, perchè?

Saturday, March 29th, 2008

I speak American English with a rhotic accent. And with a hint of an Ohio Valley dialect. Listen to the Ohio Five recording here to get an idea. I love trying to figure out what part of the United States people are from based on their dialect or accent.

I also enjoy learning foreign languages. I studied Spanish in high school, and I lived in Spain for several months while in college. (I ran with the bulls in Ceuta, and I have gouge marks to prove it.) I’ve taken a couple of French and Italian courses, and I learned a smattering of Thai and Mien while teaching English in a Laotion refugee camp in Thailand.

Why am I talking about this?

Well, I just read an interesting article by Jerry Bader, “Web Content: It’s All About the Why.” For some odd reason (too much caffeine this morning?), my brain translated the word “why” into Spanish and French. I wanted to know how to say it in Thai, so I started googling around for an online translator.

You know how it goes. One thing leads to another, and before you know it, you land on a really cool site such as the International Dialects of English Archive referenced above.

I still haven’t answered the question. Why, oh why, am I talking about accents, dialects, foreign languages, and getting gouged in Spain?

See if you can guess.

[guessing]

[guessing]

[guessing]

Here’s why:

Simply to tell a story. Why? Read Jerry’s article.

Be good to your Web site visitors

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

A Web site is a means for communication. An effective Web site does what you want it to do. For example, you may want your site to communicate a message to your target audience, sell your products, or teach, entertain or inspire.

An effective Web site follows design, content and usability principles that focus on the site’s visitors. You want to make information easy to find and easy to understand. You want to make it easy for visitors to take action, whether that action is to contact you, engage in a conversation, buy a product online, or simply to smile.

To remain an effective means of communication, most Web sites require proper care and feeding. And not just any old tinkering around. The key is to base the TLC primarily on what your site visitors need.

It doesn’t matter if you’re bored with the colors or other visual design elements. It doesn’t matter what Technology Tom says you gotta have. It doesn’t matter what Artsy-Fartsy Fara thinks would look fabulous. If it doesn’t enhance or support your communication with your target audience, forget it.

Gerry McGovern addresses this issue in his New Thinking article, Resist Redesign:

Redesign is classic organization-centric thinking. It rarely has much to do with making things better for the customer.

Your website isn’t working. What should you do? Well, how about finding out why it isn’t working and fix that. But let me tell you this, the problem with your website has rarely anything to do with its graphical design.

Your website is working. But it’s four years old. What should you do? Leave it alone. Or focus on making it work even better. But let me tell you this, making it work better has rarely anything to do with its graphical design.

Organizations love projects. You get a budget and a launch date. You can get busy and look like you’re working really hard. Some web teams love website redesign projects. It’s fun. They get to go to lots of meetings and talk about graphics and colors, and to extol about how bored they are with the old design.

But usually it’s not the web team that wants the redesign. Rather, it’s some marketing manager. Or some senior executive in communications who has had a golf course conversation about the Web. Or some newly appointed manager desperate to reinvent the wheel.

Great websites are not redesigned. They are continuously improved. The website that gets some new budget every couple of years for a redesign is the website that is being managed like a brochure. In other words, it’s not being managed.

Keep reading…

When developing a Web site, remember that words come first

Sunday, February 24th, 2008

I like beautiful Web site designs and hot technology as much as anyone. But without words — the right words — such sites are only eye candy. Here’s a great reminder from Gerry McGovern that content is still king.

Words are the building blocks of every website. But then, words are the building blocks of modern civilization.

Presidential candidate, Barack Obama, was recently accused of being all words and no action, of being lots of rhetoric and little substance. Here’s how he replied:

“Don’t tell me words don’t matter. ‘I have a dream.’ Just words? ‘We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal.’ Just words? ‘We have nothing to fear but fear itself’ -just words? Just speeches?’ (Obama plagiarized his friend, Deval Patrick, for these lines, but that’s not the topic of this piece.)

Words matter. They always have. They always will. On the Web, words matter even more. The right words.

The problem is that there are lots and lots of words. For your website, there are a small set of words that really matter, and then there are an awful lot of words that don’t.

How do you judge if a particular word matters or not? You don’t. It’s not for you to judge. It’s for your customers to judge. Customers are highly impatient. They search and scan a page quickly, looking for their right words.

You might want to communicate about “climate change”, but if customers are searching for “global warming”, you’re out of luck. You may have “tight” jeans for sale but if customers prefer “skinny” jeans, you’re out of luck. You might have great “low fares” but if customers want “cheap flights”, you’re out of luck.

If you want to design a new website, the first thing you should decide on is the words. Not the graphical design, not the software. No. The words must come first. Once you get the words right, you are half-way there.

But the words don’t come first, do they? Most websites are driven from a technical or graphical design perspective. The words are hardly even considered. The people who wrote the words were brought in late on in the process and asked to fill in an already agreed-upon structure and design with some words.

Words are simply not respected. Does it really matter if it’s:

“Buy” or “Buy Now”
“More information” or “Request a demo”
“Find a dealer” or “Buy: shop locator”
“Login” or “Logon”
“Fleet” or “Vehicles”

It does. It really does matter. It matters hugely. It matters enormously. I have seen situations where sales have been doubled by changing a couple of words. (Nothing else on the website was changed.)

In most web teams people who work with words get very little respect. But if you work with words, you are literally sitting on a goldmine. The problem is you are selling it like a coalmine.

Most web writers think that their job is about writing articles. But it must be much broader and deeper than that. What is the navigation of the website made up of? Words. What are the links on the website made up of? Words. What are the applications on the website made up of? Words.

Nothing can work on the Web without written words. No page. No link. No classification, navigation or menu. No application or software. Nothing.

Source

Content management solutions: Gerry McGovern
http://www.gerrymcgovern.com

Subscribe to his New Thinking newsletter: subscribe@gerrymcgovern.mailer1.net