5 Common Web Site Development Mistakes of Small
Business
5 Common Web Site Development Mistakes of Small
Business - Here's some mistakes to avoid when selecting or building
your Web site. You know on those days when you have to wear your
tech hat.
1) No Value - Too Simple
This is probably the most common mistake made by small business
owners online. The site has little value for the service or
product their offering. Often it starts out as a "brochure" site.
Meaning their current offline marketing material is put online.
Unfortunately many sites never progress past this point.
Now don't get me wrong at leasts it's a start, but it may
not be enough. Sharp Performance. Smart Features!
You need to take a hard look an ask if there is anything of
real value for the customer once they get there. Does it go
beyond your contact information and service offering? Does
it need to?
You can build a brochure site, but you might quickly find
it's not getting the results you expected.
2) Overkill
This mistake goes in the opposite direction. These sites fall
in two categories:
They either are so loaded with content that the customer says "oh
no, I don't want to work this hard" or the site has been
so "over-teched" the lights dim in your house when
you access it.
The first site suffers from a lack of proper categorization
and navigation. Probably the designer read one too many books
on effective Web sites - 50 articles per topic minimum of 10
topics, blah, blah, blah. It misses the critical difference
between mass marketing and local community marketing. The fact
is of the 100 articles on your web site 5 of them are being
read if you're lucky!
Now the second site, the bandwidth hog, suffers from mis-guided
flash intros, excessive movie downloads, cute images sliding
in and off the page, and all of this is happening at the same
time. You can almost hear the customer crying out "I just
want to schedule an appointment online".
3) The "All In the Family" Site
Also known as the relative site. Be it your talented son of
16 or your brother-in-law who knows all about this technical
stuff, the site was designed, developed, and released by someone
in the family who is "very technical". The chance
of success of these sites is very low because it's not the
technical side of a site that makes or breaks it for small
business, it's the business side. How much does your 16 year
old son know about your business? Or more importantly how much
does he care to learn?
4) Free Web Site with Purchase of Candy Bar
Yeah, it's almost got to that point. Web sites for free! Anyone
can have one like giving away a promotional magnet for my refrigerator
(actually promotional magnets are much more effective). Costs
nothing, design it in minutes. However, most are worth nothing
and are a waste of time and effort.
5) Over Priced and Difficult to Change
The business
owner looking for something really "special".
Cost is not the issue. This mistake can have significant ramifications
because you can spend a lot of money and then realize you need
something different. Make sure you get a site that you can
change easily. Not a site that the company you hired can change
easily, but that you can change. Make sure YOU see how easy
it is to change before you agree.
Web sites offer you the opportunity to try different ideas,
promotions and services quickly. The Web site you launch today
will not be the Web site you need in six months. Small business
owners are reluctant to re-design or change Web sites because
of cost and experience.
Make sure that the Web site you buy at a minimum is database
driven, supports templates, and can be changed by anyone, not
just the "original manufacturer".
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