HE HAD A VOICE NO LIBRARIAN COULD LOVE – CAUSE HE ALWAYS TALKED LIKE THIS. But look past the booming voice and easily parodied stage persona of the late Billy Mays and you’ll find an extraordinarily gifted pitch-man, worthy of his own TV show.
A pitch-man whose fame and success made him the target of more pitches than he ever gave. Pitches made by desperate inventors looking for him to save them after they’d already mortgaged the house, spent the kids’ college…
...continue to read "Billy Mays: If All You Remember is the Voice, You’re Missing Out."
We at FutureNow sometimes wonder why more companies aren’t busy optimizing their websites and online marketing, or why those who are “on board” with the concept don’t always commit the right amount of resources towards the effort.
I’m not a mind-reader, but I think it’s due in part to an all-or-nothing mentality where nothing short of a full optimization ‘project’ is worth putting effort into. Most companies are more interested in redesigning their websites all at once instead of incrementally, even though incremental…
...continue to read "For Every Optimization, There’s a Pyramid, So Get Started"
Steve Krug has famously compared Web pages to billboards, meaning that Web visitors are task oriented, and therefore on-the-move. They click through websites, sizing up any individual page’s content in about as much time as a driver takes to glance up at a billboard, roughly 7 seconds or so.
The difference of course, is that material in the active window is being actively and consciously engaged and evaluated by the Web visitor, who can then slow down and read material that…
...continue to read "Visual Scandal, Story Appeal, and Banner Ads"
Probably the most famous (and successful) banner ad campaign has been the infamous dancing figures banner ads for LowerMyBills.com, with ROI reported to be in the 4:1 range. The fact that they no longer infest the web with their rational-though destroying antics might be the sole silver lining of the recent financial crises.
But as the ROI figures attest, the ads worked. And they worked because:
1) The animated movement made them almost impossible to ignore.
This is important because online visitors are…
In my last post, I made use of a brick and mortar analogy to the current online behavior of some e-commerce Websites, and even recommended the use of those analogies when analyzing online persuasion strategies.
And since at least a few readers responded positively to the idea, I thought I’d share one of Get Elastic’s videos dramatizing exactly one of those analogies, as well as sharing a link to their whole series.
So welcome to The Crazy, Messed-up World of E-commerce!
And if…
...continue to read "What Would Online Retailing Look Like in the Offline World"
In the offline world, have you ever been chased by retail staff because you opted not to buy something at their store?
Never?
You mean no one has ever blocked the exit and said something like, “Hey, I saw you put that bottle of wine in your cart, why didn’t you buy it?”
It sounds funny until you realize that most online remarketing services offer to do exactly that to your website visitors. They’ll pester them with e-mails, pop-ups, and phone calls should they…
...continue to read "Can Bad Assumptions Lead to “Gorilla Marketing”?"
Very simply, reviews increase conversion rates. And several studies point to the fact that, yes, even negative reviews help.
It all boils down to credibility. Customer reviews simply have more credibility than your sales copy, so they inspire more confidence in the buyer. And negative reviews lend credibility to the review process itself, standing as visible proof that the reviews are not edited.
Makes sense right? Sure it does, until you find yourself staring at the (perceived) ability of a blisteringly negative…
...continue to read "You Can’t Edit Your Way Out of Negative Reviews"
As weird as it sounds, it’s the norm for businesses with sales cycles that might be as long as several months to a year and that might involve multiple decision makers and influencers to utterly fail to take these factors into consideration when constructing their website or selecting an analytics package.
In fact, whenever I work with B2B and complex sales clients it’s a sure bet their website won’t:
1) Adequately address the multiple decision-makers and influencers involved in securing the lead…...continue to read "Can your Website Handle the Complexity of your Sale?"
I couldn’t help but write down a few comments and links in response to a recent Smashing Magazine post. Designed to Sell: 8 Useful Tips to Help Your Website Convert kicks major butt, and I thought you’d both enjoy the article and a few comments/additions thrown in for each of the 8 tips:
Basically, make sure your design elements – and most especially your pictures – enhance your credibility and put visitors in the right emotional frame of…
Long and short are linear terms (they refer to length, right?). So they work fine to categorize or describe copy found in a sales letters or print advertisements.
But (most) websites aren’t linear because hyperlinks break linearity (aka subvert hierarchy).
People don’t read (most) Websites one full page at a time in a numbered order; they read/scan/move from one link that interests them to the next link that interests them, often entering or starting on something other than page #1 (what bad web designers…
...continue to read "How to Think About Long vs. Short Copy"