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Web Design: Use it to
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Web Design: Use it to Showcase
the Message
by Nick Usborne
If you are designing a web site for which the
achievement of high conversion rates is a priority, focus your design
efforts on showcasing and highlighting the content and copy.
For sites where conversion rates are a priority, the primary purpose of
design should be to present the message in such a way that it delivers
the maximum impact.
>> So "good" design doesn't matter?
That's not what I'm saying. I'm saying that design serves a function.
For an entertainment or arts site that primary function may be to
present images in an attractive way. That's fine.
But for a site that is created to generate sales, the text must come
first. Everything...from the architecture of the site to its design must
work towards supporting your message and delivering people to the final
checkout page.
>> Sounds obvious. Why make the point?
I make the point because the presentation of the message is often the
last thing on the minds of web groups.
Web designers are higher on the food chain in these groups. All too
often the writing of the message becomes a secondary consideration.
"The site will look like this. We'll arrange the pages like this.
And by the way, we need someone to write the words."
This attitude of "text comes last" is nonsense and it has been
from the day the internet first went commercial.
Hundreds of millions of visitors have always known that their primary
need on arriving at a site is to find the key messages. "Am I in
the right place? Will I find what I want on this site?"
Our visitors know that the words are the most important element on a web
site.
Google knows that the words are the most important element on a web
site. (Unlikely aside from the Googlebot: "Cool design. Better rank
this page higher.)
The only people who haven't understood this so far are web group
managers and web designers.
Even marketing people insist on just dropping in for-print-approved text
on their sites, without any thought as to the special needs of the
medium. (Would they create a radio ad simply by using the sound track
from their TV commercial? I don't think so. Every medium has its own
demands when it comes to the words, the web included.)
>> How to design to showcase the message
The first step is to bring the writer in at the beginning. The designer
will find that the writer has a number of priorities and needs in mind.
He or she might say:
"This is the page's primary message. We need people to really get
this on the first screen."
"We have three separate audience needs to address here. I need
these three headings to have equal emphasis, preferably on the first
screen."
"This message is just the first step in converting a visitor to a
buyer. We need a strong pathway of three levels before he or she is
ready to buy."
"This sales message is complex, it will take some space and longer
copy. We need to format the text so that people will keep reading. We
need strong subheads, some indented passages and emphasis at the
following points."
Once the writer has outlined the needs of the copy, the designer can
then focus on showcasing the key points in the message, giving the
correct emphasis to the various headings, subheads, body text and links.
The designer's job here isn't to make the page "pretty", it is
to deliver the message with the right emphasis, and with each point in
the correct sequence.
>> How does a designer know what to do?
In some senses, this is new ground for designers online. Until now, too
much emphasis has been places on design for its own sake, instead of
using it to support the copy on a site's pages.
If a designer wants to know how this works, he or she should go sit next
to a direct marketing designer/copywriter team while they work.
See how the team communicates. See how the designer listens to the
writer and places a great deal of emphasis on the type. Watch how the
designer spends a lot of time selecting the right font, the right type
size and color. See how a conversion-focused designer pays massive
attention to the placement and appearance of every element of text.
Why? Because in direct marketing the response rates are intimately
connected with the presentation of the copy. It matters where on the
page each text element is placed. The font and its size and emphasis
matters. The final formatting of the text matters.
Online? When you are building pages with a view to maximizing conversion
rates, you become a direct marketer. That means thinking like a direct
marketer, writing like a direct marketer and designing like a direct
marketer.
>> Concluding points...
As it stands on the web right now, we have a couple of groups of
designers.
There are the general web designers who create beautiful sites, without
regard to how the copy should and can work harder.
And there are the online direct marketing designers who design single
page sales sites that are created to maximize sales.
At some time in the future it would be good to see these two groups
learn more from each other.
It would be good to see the general web designers learn more about
increasing conversion rates by learning some of the skills of the online
direct marketing designers.
It would be good to see the online direct marketing designers expand
their skills beyond the scope of single, scrolling sales page.
And it is essential that every online designer pays a great deal more
attention to the writers and the showcasing of every page's message.
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About The Author
Nick Usborne is a freelance
copywriter, author and speaker. For more articles and resources
on writing for the web, visit his site, http://www.excessvoice.com.
To find out more about designing for high conversion rates, read
his review of AWAI's course, Graphic
Design Success.
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