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The word ripeness has been running across my mind lately. No doubt it has to do with the coming of my favorite eating season – SUMMER- full of rich, ripe, delicious home grown fruits and vegetables. Isn’t this just the best time to eat? Soon you’ll find stands popping up all over town. If you can’t find one, there’s always local farm markets open on weekends!

So, how does the word ripeness relate to business? Never has there been a more “fruitful” time to be in business for yourself than now. There are millions of contacts, literally, out there ready for you to connect with. How? Simply by letting your ideas flow and taking advantage of the tremendous amount of resources available on the internet – many of which are free or very low cost, yet equally as effective as their high price competitors. Last week I had the honor of showing Brenda Strausz just how easy it is by helping her get started with a website and tweak her blog. Check it out at BrendaStrausz.com.

Don’t get me wrong, I’m not saying it doesn’t take work. It’s taken me over 2 years to build my bliss community of contacts and connections. With daily practices, including on line connecting and sharing, The Bliss Network is being visited by over 30,000 people a month from 54 different countries. You can see it didn’t happen overnight, it takes effort.

Is your mind ripe with ideas? Do you have a talent, skill or product you’d like to share with the world – and make a little (or a lot) of money from? What are you waiting for? Even if you are employed, the time is ripe to build your own brand awareness through websites, blogs, and social networking. If you need a little help along the way, call me – I love to share my techniques and strategies! Take a leap and jump – the web is waiting for you!

See you on the web! Bliss ON!

For years now web experts have been utilizing page views as the holy grail of web content metrics. If you find yourself still glued to your page view numbers, to the detriment of other traffic indicators, then my guess is you’re stuck in a page view rut, and your traffic isn’t growing as fast as you’d like.

Years ago when the Internet was still in its infancy the only measure of web page success was a page counter, which measured the number of “hits” a web page received. Although a person was able to keep track of the growth of page hits from day to day, there was no way of determining how many of those hits were from the same computer, where they were coming from, how long the viewer stayed on the page, or even where the “hit” came from.

Luckily today’s statistic options allow for far more details about views, but if you find yourself spending too much time crunching numbers you may be missing out on many more significant indicators of web success that could help you grow your site faster. Here are a few ways in which you can get out of the page view rut and view your web pages through a more holistic lens.

1. RSS and Newsletter Subscriptions. A subscription list is a valuable online business tool that should be nurtured. If you don’t have a compelling reason for visitors to sign up for a newsletter or an RSS feed, you may be missing out on a valuable customer resource. Additionally, tracking the number of subscribes and unsubscribes over a period of time can indicate patterns that may be useful in the future.

As an example, if your site sells retail products that cater to seasonal products, you may see a dip in new subscribers, or even a drop in current subscribers during non-peak months. You may be able to creatively help maintain these numbers, however, by providing relevant information that encourages ideas instead of sales! Maybe instead of sending a newsletter in January about a sale on new surfboards, you instead send out a checklist of items that customers will want to consider to plan their next surfboarding vacation.

Your customers may not need to buy a surf board today, but by providing them with relevant information they do need today (a planning checklist for their summer vacation) your assistance will be rewarded with a growing subscription list, better retention of current subscribers, and future purchases when the sun is up, and the waves are big!

2. Throw your Page Rank Data out the Window SEO experts have been making thousands pushing search engine optimizations as an end-all be-all tool for higher Page Ranks and search results. Although I agree that SEO is an important element in overall web site success, I don’t believe that Page Rank alone determines the success of a web site. This is especially true for small business sites.Page Rank is utilized to determine the order in which your pages are displayed in search results for given key words, but make no mistake – money speaks volumes as well. Now I’m not saying that a page cannot get a high rank for key words and phrases without paying for advertising. But for competitive key words, the chances are slim that any amount of white hat SEO work will get you to the top of the list very quickly.

The point is, don’t let Page Rank determine the success of your web page. There are many other metrics and benchmarks you should be utilizing to determine how successful your site is – page rank is only one, very small, part of that success.

3. User Content Contributions. Never under estimate the power of social media and interactive web content. Comments and other interactions by users on your site are a positive indicator that users are not only reading, but are interested enough to respond to your content. Not only that, information from discussions and comments on your site can help with future developments.If you currently have a blog site, look through and find the top five articles with the most comments. Are there any common elements in these articles? Similar theme? Same topic? Discussing the same product? It is these ideas, concepts, products, services, that are generating the most interest, so how can you expand upon them? Maybe more of your content should include these concepts and ideas? Maybe you need to expand your services to incorporate ideas generated through these comments?

If you spend the time to create a complex discussion board covering products and services, make sure to also take the time to listen to what those users have to say. You may not be able to monitor everything, but you can certainly get a feel for where their interests are, and use that information to create even more successful content, or tools, or information.

4. Use your Statistics Wisely. I once worked for a large organization that was trying to incorporate their web business in an environment that had tried to avoid the Internet world for years. Every week I’d sit through meeting after meeting listening to corporate executives complaining that page views had gone down on such-and-such a page, and then cheering about another page on the site that had extraordinarily high page views. No one ever bothered to try to track where the views were coming from, or how many pages were viewed before a user left the site, or any other significant indicators of site success.As far as these executives were concerned, web success was determined by unique visitors and page views – if they went up, everyone was happy, but if they went down, it was the end of the world. What they didn’t realize was the complex nature with which these numbers are generated. New web browsers, software that blocked cookies and created anonymous usage statistics all meant that these numbers needed to be looked upon as one indicator of success, not “the” indicator.

Patterns over time can be useful to show trends in viewership from period to period, but for truly useful information web pages should be analyzed by more than just numbers. As indicated above, comments need to be reviewed, how long users remain on the site should be analyzed, as well as where traffic is coming from and even, which links on the site lead the user somewhere else.

In addition, these efforts should be based on several benchmarks, or goals for the site. Benchmarks help determine a direction for the site, and develop goals that indicate success or failure of individual elements of overall site failure or success. It is not enough to have one goal of “Improve traffic to our website” and expect to be able to measure real success accurately.

Once individuals success goals and benchmarks are determined, then you will need to determine which metrics best reflect success or failure of those goals. For example, if one of your goals is to try to improve the length of time that visitors stay on your website, from the moment they click into your site until the moment they leave the site, measurement metrics might include Length of Stay, and Traffic Path. The length of stay metric will help determine whether visitors are staying longer on your site over a period of time, while the traffic path metric allows you to find problem pages where visitors may be dropping off at higher rates than on other pages.

Ultimately it will be a set of metrics that relate to specific goals, or benchmarks, that will in combination, determine the success or failure of your site. And let’s not forget one of the most significant indicators – sales! Sales or conversions are also a good indicator, however remember that all other goals and benchmarks for your site can help you troubleshoot low sales numbers, and help you make changes that will improve your bottom line.

When people think about the Internet, they think about technology. When people hear that I am a Website strategy expert, they see me as a “techy type”.

But for me, the most intriguing aspect of your online business isn’t about the technology. It’s about human connections, and how you can create these in a virtual environment.

It’s commonly understood that “people buy emotionally, not intellectually.” Even when people think they’re making a rational decision, powerful subconscious factors come into play. To sell effectively, we’re told to anticipate our customers’ needs, to demonstrate that we “feel their pain”, and to respond to clues in their body language and tone of voice.

In the “real world” we do this very well. And we know that if we can have a direct, in-person conversation, there’s a pretty good chance that we’ll close the sale or keep a happy customer.

For the online visitor, your Website is the next best thing to that in-person conversation with you, your colleagues or employees. And since so many people are researching products and services on the Web, it’s critical that your site has maximum impact in persuading them to take the next step with you.

So how does your Website connect emotionally with your visitors? Do they feel listened to, understood and appreciated by your Internet presence? Are you instinctively meeting their real needs? Do your existing customers feel supported and valued when interacting with you online?

Or are you failing to evoke the crucial emotional responses which can significantly enhance your response rates, sales and ongoing return on your Web investment?
The Critical Emotions for Website Success

I’ve been working with client Web strategies in a wide range of industries since 1995. Based on this experience, I’ve identified some key emotions that you need to evoke in your online visitors to create and sustain a profitable relationship.

How well your Website does this can have a major effect on the visceral, instinctive reactions of your visitors, and their propensity to buy from or connect with you.

In total, I have twenty criteria for emotional connectedness that I suggest for any Website. That’s too many to discuss in this article, but let’s look at a few highlights:
Do I Feel Recognized?

When we first meet in a business setting, we’re introduced, or we introduce ourselves with some statement about what we do, and why we should connect with each other.

When we talk with customers or prospects, it’s important to show very quickly that we understand their issues and needs, and that we have ideas and solutions to address these.

The most important task for your home page is to accomplish this initial introduction. You’ve heard the “ten-second” rule about how long a visitor will stay on a site that doesn’t engage them.

So, does your home page really tell me what you do? Does it speak to me in specific terms that make very clear what services you provide, and what type of customers or clients you work with? Does it use language that I’ll understand even if I don’t know the jargon of your industry or specialization?

Sounds simple?

There are astounding numbers of Websites that fail to provide basic information on the home page.

If your goal is to get the customer to visit your store, does your home page clearly show your location, and how to get there? Every time you force the visitor to make a decision, such as “Do I click on the Contact Us page to find their address?”, you open up the possibility that they’ll make the wrong choice (from your viewpoint), or worse still, they’ll just leave.

And is it clear to me whether you can – or would want to – help me? Are you geared towards corporate bulk buyers, or small businesses, or both? Do you operate nationally or only in your immediate location? Will your visitors know what you mean by generic terms such as “business systems” or “total business solutions” or should you be more specific as to what you offer?
Do I Feel Engaged?

As we continue our “real-world” conversation, we start to find common points of interest, whether personal or professional. We begin to feel that we can relate with each other, and this helps to build our business relationship.

So your Website has to make the visitor feel drawn in – that they want to know more about your business, your products and your services – but again, from the viewpoint of their needs and interests. And you have to give the visitor a clear sense that you want to find those points of connection, and to learn more about them.

If the visitor doesn’t feel invited in, if they feel left to themselves to find their way around – if they’re overwhelmed, confused, or simply not interested in your site, they’ll leave.

Does your site present a bewildering array of manufacturers, products, or options without any guidance as to selecting from these? Think about the conversation that you’d have with a customer in your store. You’d find out what they were looking for, and then you’d ask a number of questions to help them find the right solution for their needs.

So how can you mirror this process online? You could offer a “Help Me” page that guides visitors through some Frequently Asked Questions or other choices and provides links to recommended products based on their answers. You could incorporate an interactive chat facility with a customer service agent during office hours, or access to a searchable knowledge base.
Do I Feel Convinced?

If the visitor is seeing your business for the first time, they need to be comfortable that you are who you say you are, and that you can deliver what you promise.

One of the most important elements in establishing this part of the connection is to show the “faces” of your business. Have you noticed how many Websites don’t name any of their owners, or the people that customers will interact with? It’s much easier to have a conversation when I know who I’m talking to!

Customer testimonials and other third-party endorsements are critical elements in establishing trust – they say far more about you than your own marketing statements. How many sites have we all seen that trumpet “nationally recognized” or “premier provider . . .”? Prove it!

Include client quotes and success stories right across your site where they’re front and center as visitors are engaged in your content. If you win an award, tell the visitor what that means for them in terms of how you were evaluated.
Do I Feel Motivated?

Towards the end of our “real-world” conversation, we’ll hopefully close a sale, or we’ll talk about some next steps, or we might say “Let’s stay in touch”. To do that with our online visitor, we need to persuade them to buy something, or to tell us who they are, and give us permission to reconnect with them.

Too many Web pages tail off with no call to action or directions about where to go next. If you don’t issue a clear invitation, you again leave it to the visitor to work out what to do – and you run a big risk of losing them.

So at every point on every page where the visitor might be thinking “Tell me more”, or “How do I get this?”, provide a clickable link to the next step, to your shopping cart, to your newsletter subscription page, or to whatever you want them to do. Don’t wait until the end of the page – they may never get there! Look for the emotional “tipping points” on every page where they’re ready to talk more with you and grab them in the moment!
Diluting the Connection

Of course, it’s all too easy to undo all the good feeling that we create by frustrating or annoying the visitor, or simply by giving them a dead end.

One of my favorite bugbears is the site search engine that allows me to enter my query, and then tells me “No results found. Please try again with different search terms”.

How is that supposed to make me feel? What was wrong with my keywords or my parameters if the search page allowed me to select them? Am I being stupid? Or do you really not want to help me?

Your visitor is clearly looking for something, and has taken a step towards connecting with you. So how about a results page that lets them know that you can’t immediately answer their question, but offers a link to your contact form so that they can send a question, or some tips or suggestions on how to find more information.

The ultimate customer service feature is an opportunity to interact with a live assistant – if your site offers this utility, the search results page is a perfect place to maximize its visibility.
So how “Emotionally Connected” is your Website?

I hope that I’ve sparked your curiosity enough to take a fresh look at your Website.

Think about specifically why visitors are coming to your site, what might be on their minds, and review your copy and navigation accordingly. Think about new customers and existing ones, employees, media – everyone who might have a reason to visit. Are you doing everything that you can to create an “emotionally connected” experience for everyone?

The right mix will gain you significantly higher time spent on your site, more calls from pre-qualified leads, more signed contracts, happier repeat customers, attention from new markets, offers of strategic alliances and collaborations, and insights into creating successful new products and services.

Philippa Gamse, CyberSpeaker, is a Web strategy consultant and professional speaker. How does your site rate against Philippa’s twenty “emotionally connected” criteria? Visit http://www.CyberSpeaker.com/ to find out. Philippa can be reached at (831) 465-0317 or mailto:pgamse@CyberSpeaker.com

Titans of Industry Series 1, Episode 4
Guest Interview with Philippa Gamse, Web Strategist with Websites that Win International

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

NOTE: Click link above to begin streaming this podcast recording. The recording can also be downloaded by right-clicking link and choosing “Save As”. Depending on Internet connection speeds, download takes approximately 1 minute per Chapter.

About Philippa Gamse
Philippa Gamse is a Website strategy expert. She advises business owners, executives and managers on maximizing their return on their Web investment. She is a Certified Management Consultant, a designation earned by less than one percent of professionals.

Her clients come from a wide range of industries, and include Harley-Davidson Motor Company, Hilton Hotels Corporation, Goodwill Industries International, Inc., Hanley Wood, and the American Bus Association. She is a speaker for Vistage International.

Since 1995, Philippa has critiqued over 5,000 Websites in the US and Europe. Her clients report that within 30 days of implementing her recommendations they experience significant improvements in the levels of quality traffic, visitor engagement, customer loyalty and qualified sales leads.

Originally from the UK, Philippa holds a Masters degree from the University of London. She has 10 years of corporate experience in Europe, including several years as a consultant for Deloitte. She founded her own US-based business, Websites That Win International in 1995.  The focus of her company is maximizing website return on investment through strategy, interaction and goals.

Phillippa writes a fantastic and informational blog called, Leaky Boat Blog that can be found at http://www.websitesthatwin.com/blog/.  She was recently featured on the cover of the UPS (United Parcel Service) Compass magazine.  Her article entitled “Simple Steps For Your Sites Success” about engaging and keeping customers happy.

Titans of Industry Series 1, Episode 3

NOTE: Click link above to begin streaming this podcast recording. The recording can also be downloaded by right-clicking link and choosing “Save As”. Depending on Internet connection speeds, download takes approximately 3 minutes.

Jo Condrill, founder of GoalMinds, Inc, is a seminar leader, consultant, and coach. She worked in government agencies, nonprofit organizations, and corporations for over 25 years. She was the featured Wise Woman in Real Simple magazine in 2003. In 1992 she led Toastmasters International District 27 to a number one ranking the only time this distinction has been achieved by a district in Washington, DC. Condrill was elected to a two-year term on the Toastmasters Board of Directors in 1994.

Born and raised in Texas, Condrill began work for the federal government as a stenographer in San Antonio, TX. She rose through the ranks and became Deputy Division Chief of Logistics Plans and Operations at Army Headquarters in the Pentagon. In that capacity she supervised division activities that included the Logistics Emergency Operations Center. Logistics supplies “beans, beds, and bullets”—everything they need—to the war fighters. Condrill graduated from the Army’s senior service college, the U.S. Army War College, in 1993. The course of study is strategic leadership. Students include US Army officers and civilians and international military officers. While there Condrill completed a study of civilians on the battlefield. Her report received Honors in the Army-wide Nick Hoge essay competition. In 1997 the Secretary of the Army presented Condrill a medal, The Decoration for Exceptional Civilian Service, the Army’s highest civilian award.

In 2007 The Ford Motor Company and The Greater San Antonio Chamber of Commerce presented Condrill a “Women in Business” award, recognizing her achievements.

Condrill is coauthor with Bennie Bough, Ph.D. of 101 Ways to Improve Your Communication Skills Instantly. The book is translated and sold by publishers in 12 countries, including Mexico, Saudi Arabia, and South Korea. Publishers in Mexico, Indonesia, and India have translated and sell Take Charge of Your Life: Dare to Pursue Your Dreams, by Condrill. From Book Signing to Best Seller: An Insider’s Guide to Conducting a Successful Low-Cost Book Signing Tour, by Condrill and John B. Slack (now deceased) was named The Best Writer’s Reference Guide by the Bay Area Independent Publishers Association in 2002. These books are available at Amazon.com, online and other bookstores, and libraries. Take Charge of Your Life is under revision and will be available in paperback in June. It is now available in eBook and audio. Condrill conducts seminars and workshops based on these books.

Condrill is a Rotary Paul Harris Fellow. She served as Vice President of the Crystal City-Pentagon Club and Membership Chair of the Palmdale (California) Club.

Condrill earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration from Our Lady of the Lake University of San Antonio and a Master of Science in Administration from Central Michigan University.

Condrill is the mother of three sons and a daughter.