Saturday, April 20, 2013

10 Web Landing Page Tips to Drive Action

 Article  By David Meerman Scott


I love marketing with web landing pages. It’s one of the easiest and most cost-effective ways to get a message read by a target market and a terrific tool to move prospects through the sales cycle. Landing pages, done well, can generate high response rates and marketing programs using landing pages with effective calls to action will generate results: e-commerce sales and valuable sales leads.

A landing page is simply a place for a targeted message to a particular demographic and can either be linked from a homepage or as part of a marketing campaign. Landing pages work well to tell an organization’s story to a particular target market, to promote a new product offering, as a way to capture leads from an e-mail marketing program, or as part of an advertising campaign, PR program or tradeshow initiative. In the classic sales cycle definition, marketing programs such as advertising, PR, tradeshows and search engine optimization are designed to attract the prospect’s attention (get them to your landing page). The landing page is where you generate interest and develop conviction. In an e-commerce sale you drive people to the “buy” button and in a B2B company the sales team gets a warm suspect ready to be worked to a closed sale.

Effective landing page copy is written from the buyer’s perspective, not the company’s. Too often, companies invest time and money creating web pages that describe their wonderful products, but don’t provide information from the prospective customer’s point of view. Buyers don’t care about your products, they care about themselves and their problems. Write for them, not for you. On your homepage, create a series of “personas” or “self-select paths” that people new to your company can click. Examples might be: “Learn about products for mid-sized companies” or “Services for Competitive Intelligence Professionals.”

As your buyers self-select based on the path that is best for them, the landing page they reach is written with appropriate copy to generate the interest of that target market. Landing pages typically make use of multiple links to appropriate offers, additional information, and in the B2B world materials like white papers, Webinars, and the like, each with a short form to fill out so the buyer becomes a lead or a sale.

A mistake many companies make is investing tons of money in online advertising (say a search engine advertising program) and then sending all the traffic to the company homepage. Because the homepage needs to serve many audiences, there’s never enough information for each demographic. And research shows that people give a homepage only a few seconds before the leave. Landing pages tied to campaigns are highly effective to solve these problems. A specific landing page should be set up for each and every campaign. If prospects find your company by clicking an e-mail campaign or searching on a specific term in a Google AdWords program, your marketing should include landing pages to expand on the prospects interest with appropriate copy and links.

It’s simple really: A campaign with a great landing page can generate double digit response rates while a generic campaign throws money away.


Here are 10 tips on creating effective landing pages:

Tip 1: Keep the landing page copy short and the graphics simple.
The landing page is a place to deliver a simple message and drive your buyer to respond to your offer. Don’t try to do too much.

Tip 2: Create the page in your company’s look, feel and tone.
A landing page is an extension of your company’s image. While different from the web site, it still must adopt the same voice, tone and style as your main site.

Tip 3: Write from the buyer’s point of view.
Think carefully of who will be visiting the landing page and write copy for that demographic. You want visitors to feel the page speaks to their problems and concerns and that you have a solution just for them.

Tip 4: A landing page is communications, not advertising.
Landing pages are where you communicate valuable information about your product and make sales or generate the names of interested potential customers. Advertising is great to get people to click to your landing page. But once a prospect is there, the landing page should focus on communicating the value of your offering to the potential customer, not more advertising.

Tip 5: Provide a quote from a happy customer.
A simple testimonial on a landing page works brilliantly to show people that others are happy with your product. A sentence or two with the customer’s name (and affiliation) is all you need.

Tip 6: Make the landing page a self-contained unit.
The goal of a landing page is to get a prospect to respond to your offer so you can sell to them. If you lose traffic from your landing page, you may never get a person to respond to the offer so it is often better not to provide links to your main web site.

Tip 7: Make the call to action clear and easy to respond to.
Make certain you provide a clear response mechanism for those people who want to go further. Make it easy to sign up or express interest.

Tip 8: Use multiple calls to action.
You never know what offer will appeal to a specific person, so consider using more than one. In the B2B world, you might offer a white paper, a free trial, and a price quote all on the same landing page. An e-commerce company might offer options such as color or size.

Tip 9: Only ask for necessary information.
Don’t use a signup form requiring lots of data to be entered. People will abandon the form and you won’t get a lead or a sale. Ask for the basics—name, e-mail address, company, and phone number.

Any additional information you ask for will reduce response rates. Never ask for people’s income level, budget or if they are planning on purchasing the product you offer.

Tip 10: Don’t forget to follow up!
Okay, you’ve got a great landing page with an effective call to action and the sales or leads are coming in. Great! Don’t drop the ball now. Make certain to follow up with each buyer as quickly as possible. Follow up the same day—or better yet, the same hour.

Sunday, April 7, 2013

Small Suggestion if Someone Else Builds Your Website


One very minor, small suggestion for your website is it would be nice for you, in the long term, to be able to make minor changes yourself on a as needed basis without the programmer/developer being needed.  Most website programs are what are called WYSIWYG, what you see is what you get, meaning you are not having to write HTML code for most changes in content for the website. 

Basically, what I am saying is that over the next few years if you want to change a price, wording or add products/services content, but not necessarily change the skeletal structure, it would be convenient if you could do those minor changes yourself.  The correct term is that you would want to be able to FTP minor changes to your website hosting server yourself without assistance.




The Five Most Important Words on Your Web Site





The Five Most Important Words on Your Web Site





10 Internet Marketing Rules to Live By





10 Internet Marketing Rules to Live By





How much room is needed?




Here is an office/shop from someone we trained in the past.  A small room is all that is needed, or even a corner of a room.




What are Some Things I can do Before Training




I can make several suggestions on things you can do now ahead of the seminars or training courses.  Here are my suggestions;

  • Purchase QuickBooks Pro-complete the new company interview
  • Decide on a company name & logo
  • Reserve a domain name at www.godaddy.com
  • Open a new business bank account
  • Apply for state sales tax license
  • Apply for any needed county or city business licenses
  • Purchase Vyco board, to cover work shop desk--http://www.dataprint.com/store/p-17508-alvin-vyco-board-cover-pearl-graywhite-37-12-x-72-vbc77-10.aspx
  • Think about, improve & bring multiple sources of light to your work desk area—bathe yourself in light
  • Sign up for Merchant Processing with Costco or Sam's, purchase a used or new credit card machine(we use a Hypercom T7P)
  • Purchase PrintShop Pro Publisher Deluxe Version 23.1
  • Enter names of dentists in your local area into Ultimate Mail Manager which is found in PrintShop program above, under Tools > Edit Address Book or import list
  • Shop Shelves

These are some of the beginning items we would suggest that you could do ahead of time. 
 
 
 

Tuesday, March 26, 2013

3.26.13

Welcome to Our Blog

We want to welcome all to our blog.  This is the beginning for us of what we hope to be a very good source for interesting information about how to open your own business with low start up costs in the dental industry.

I look forward to talking about many related subjects to opening a dental sales and repair center including entrepreneurship, marketing, accounting, customer service and other business related topics.

We look forward to providing our readers with valuable and relevant information, or at least be enjoyable to read.


On our upcoming agenda;

May 3-5 How To Repair Dental Drills and Open Your Dental Sales & Repair Center
               Location:  Tropicana, Las Vegas


July 12-15 How To Repair Dental Drills and Open Your Dental Sales & Repair Center
                  Location:  Walt Disney World, Yacht & Beach Club Resort, Orlando


Private Training dates available in Florida in May, June and July.

See you in Las Vegas or Orlando to open your dental handpiece sales and repair center.  We train you how to repair dental drills, learn from the best who is copied by the rest.

Warm regards,
Paul Laird
Orion Dental Sales, Training & Repair
...the world’s largest provider of handpiece training.
Telephone: 888.674.6657 or 360.871.6208

We train you how to repair dental drills.