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Computers & Internet >  Web Development  
Relevant HowTos:

HowTo promote Your Online or Offline business by contributing a HowTo article to HowTo Universe. 


HowTo add a hidden hit counter to a page using FrontPage 2000.  HTU article.


HowTo Get and Customize Free instant Tarot and Rune Readings for Your Website.


 HowTo select the perfect background color.  Boogie Jack's Color Machine allows you to find that perfect color and see how it looks online. Quick and easy.


HowTo Avoid The Top 10 Internet Marketing Blunders. We've talked to and observed literally thousands of online marketers, and the majority of them are making the same common mistakes. Are you committing one of the top 10 internet marketing blunders yourself?


HowTo learn the truth about Search Engines.  Most Internet marketers spend way too much time fiddling with search engine rankings - at the expense of other more effective site promotion strategies. Want to know the honest truth about search engines? 


HowTo Select a Web Host.  Most Internet marketers go through numerous web hosts before settling on one that's right for them. This article will help you to make the right choice the first time around - saving you time, money, and lost profits.


HowTo make a redirect page.  This is a handy how to from Boogie Jack that is useful when you move a page, create a virtual tour or story, or redirect the user to a thank you page after they fill out a form or place an order etc.


HowTo  Design Your Online Success 

Design Your Online Success 

    Web site design has always been a fascinating area for me -- not entirely in the realm of graphic design but also of flow, navigation, appearance, and content. I love to surf the web almost exclusively to learn about different feels and flavors. In the process of doing so, it amazes me to see how some sites appear smooth and refined, while others smack of being put together horrendously quick -- even when the company, product, or service is reputably of high quality. 

    But web site design is, in and of itself, a powerful marketing process. Many people tend to forget that people make UPAs -- unconscious paralleled assumptions -- in all areas of business (and life, for that matter). In other words, when they visit a site, they unconsciously assume that a parallel exists between the web site's design and the business behind it -- not to mention the products and/or services it promotes. If the design is poor, unprofessional or unclear people will assume that the product or company is just the same. 

   Regard for the human inclination to "judge books by their covers" is of utmost importance on the web, for the design is the only thing that separates you from your customer and thus is representative of the whole. Your site can either emphasize, support, or contradict your marketing message -- and do so almost effortlessly, even inconspicuously, and sometimes dramatically. 

    A large airline company recently conducted a survey among passengers in order to perform some marketing research. The following question was asked: "If your food trays were dirty, would you assume that the airline also does poor maintenance on its engines?" And the answer was, as illogical as it sounds, "yes" for an overwhelming majority of participants. 

    In "The 22 Immutable Laws of Marketing," Ries and Trout made what I believe to be the most powerful notion ever conceived in the world of business, in that marketing is not a battle of products but a battle of perceptions. My mentor used to say "perceived truth is more powerful than truth itself," and I agree. Marketing is all about perception. 

    The same goes for perceived value. If you place your web site side-by-side with a competitor, and both of you offer the same product in the same way at the same price, the company that will win the customer over will be the one that, through its design, communicates to the customer that there is an implied added value in their choice. 

    In my seminars, I teach something I call the "Ketchup Principle." Let's say you've just met a salesperson and, after introducing himself, gives you a sales presentation. He is dressed absolutely impeccably, gave a perfect spiel, was thoroughly interested in serving your needs, and conducted a more than perfect meeting with you. But all throughout the encounter, you couldn't stop but notice that he had a little spot on his tie -- a little ketchup stain, if you will. Two weeks later, however, if I would ask you, "What do you remember most about your meeting," more than likely the first thing that would pop into mind is the ketchup stain! 

    As the old saying goes, "You never get a second chance to make a good first impression!" This applies to everything you do or present, even to the simplest of things such as your web site's design. Therefore, pay attention to your web site's overall appearance, its appeal, its ease-of-navigation, and -- most importantly -- its content. 

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Originally published in IMC's Internet Marketing Chronicles. Subscribe
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