Maintaining Your Business Website by Tim Knox
QUESTION: Should I build and maintain my business Web site myself or pay
someone else to do the work for me? -- Wesley L.
ANSWER: When you say, pay someone else to do the work for you, Wesley, I am
going to assume that you are talking about hiring a professional Web site
designer to do the work and not your next-door neighbor's teenage son. If my
assumption is correct, then read on. If not, go ahead and flip over to the
comics section. You will get no good out of the advice I'm about to give, so
you might as well consult Dilbert for your hot business tips.
Should you build and maintain your business Web site yourself or pay someone to
do it for you? Let me answer your question with a couple of my own. Number one:
is building and maintaining Web sites the key focus of your business? Number
two: could your time be better spent doing more important things like, oh I
don't know, say running your business? If your answers were no and yes,
respectively, then you have no business building and maintain a Web site.
Remember this: every minute you spend on tasks that are not related to the key
focus of your business is time spent to the detriment of your business. In
other words, every minute you spend focusing on tasks that do not contribute to
the growth of your business and thereby increase your bottom line is time
wasted.
If you want to be a web designer, be a web designer. However, if the key focus
of your business is building widgets, it doesn't take a rocket scientist to
figure out that your time would be better spent building widgets, not Web
sites.
Case in point: I once had a very wealthy dentist ask if I could teach him how
to maintain his Web site so he wouldn't have to pay me to do it. Now my teeth
had helped put this guy's kids through college, but that didn't seem to matter.
At that moment he was more concerned about having to pay for changes to his Web
site than my personal oral hygiene. Sure, I said, I'll be glad to teach you how
to update your Web site, just as soon as you teach me how to clean my own teeth
so I don't have to pay you to do it. He got the point. And he charged me enough
for the cleaning to keep his site updated for months. Smart man.
Many business owners think they can't afford a professionally designed Web site
and that simply is not true. While the old adage, "you get what you pay for" is
never more true than when applied to Web site design, having a professional web
designer do the work for you is money well spent. A well-designed Web site can
bring you a many-fold return on your investment. You can't say that about too
many other collaterals.
While it is best to leave Web site design and maintenance to the experts, it is
up to you (or someone considered a subject matter expert within your company)
to provide the designer with the content (text and photographs) that best
conveys your company's message to your customers. A Web site, no matter how
well designed, is meaningless if it lacks the content required to interest
customers in the products you sell or services you provide.
Here's are a few questions that, once answered, will help ensure that your Web
site's message is as appealing as its design. Go over these points with the
designer before the design process begins as the answers will help determine
the direction your Web site's design should take.
What Is The Purpose Of Your Web Site?
Most business Web sites have two purposes: (1) to educate the consumer and, (2)
to sell them products or services. If you sell shoes, for example, the purpose
of your Web site is to educate potential customers on the quality and
durability of your shoes and as a result, to sell them shoes. If you paint
houses the purpose of your Web site is to educate home owners on why your
services are superior to other painters and sell them on hiring you to paint
their house. By defining the purpose of your Web site you will give the
designer the information required to create a Web site that best conveys that
purpose to your target audience.
Who Is My Target Audience?
Your target audience consists of those folks you want to attract to your Web
site: potential and current customers, future and current employees, possible
investors, etc. Anyone who might be interested in your company and its products
or services is a member of your target audience. Correctly identifying your
target audience is vital since your Web site should be designed specifically to
appeal to your target audience.
Put yourself in their shoes (or in front of their computers). Imagine your Web
site through their eyes. If you were visiting a Web site such as yours what
would you expect to find and what would you be disappointed not to find?
Identify your target audience, then have your Web site designed to fulfill
their needs and surpass their expectations.
What Content Should My Web Site Feature?
Your Web site content should be driven by the nature of your business. If
you're a real estate agent, your site should feature photographs of homes you
have for sale and information on buying and selling a home. If you own an auto
body shop, your site might feature before and after photographs of cars that
you have repaired. Remember to determine the purpose of your site, then develop
the content to serve that purpose.
What's My Competition Doing?
The last question you should ask is one of the most important: What is your
competition doing on the Web? Do a Google search for similar businesses and
click around their Web sites. How are their Web sites designed? What message
are they trying to convey? Are they doing a good job of conveying that message
and as a result, selling products? What do you like about their Web sites? What
don't you like? Make note of the things you like and the things you hate, then
share your findings with your site designer.
Remember, you're not stealing trade secrets here.
You're just borrowing ideas.
About the Author
Tim is written by veteran entrepreneur and syndicated columnist, Tim Knox. Tim
Knox is the founder of DropshipWholesale.net, an online
organization dedicated to the success of online and eBay
entrepreneurs. Related Links: http://www.prosperityandprofits.com
http://www.smallbusinessqa.com
http://www.dropshipwholesale.net
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