Friday, March 8, 2013

Your website as a fulcrum


For much of business, professional or personal purpose, your website is the main platform for relationships with your clients or audience.  No doubt, it's the online address on your calling card and stationery, because it's the homebase for everywhere else you may be on the internet.

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Lisa Buyer quoted from Rebecca Murtagh's Million Dollar Websites:
"Too many, for too long, have been conditioned to think of the website as a project. This is one of the most common reasons websites fail to fulfill their potential,” Murtagh said. “If a brand’s success relies upon the performance of a website – in any way – it is imperative to embrace the website as a business asset, vital to the sustainability of the brand" [emphasis, added].
Buyer offered six very useful, practical tips on building a better website:    
1. KPIs matter
2. Every page is a home page
3. Money on mobile visibility
4. Content vs copy
5. Location, location, location
6. Company online newsroom
Additional things to consider

Before identifying your Key Performance Indicators (KPIs), clarify what you want to accomplish with your website.  Murtagh rightfully situates mission and strategy topmost in her model:  What is the elemental purpose for your business, profession or activity, and what are the critical ways for fulfilling this purpose?  KPIs follow more specifically from this.

If you haven't yet, then you should create a  presence on social media.  Which ones you choose to participate in depend on your purpose.  To what extent and how much time you participate depend on your schedule and preferences.  The Big 5 are:  Google+, YouTube, Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.  Pinterest, Instagram and Tumblr are also in the mix.  Whether you call them connections or relationships, clientele or market, social media is the royal road to successful business and meaningful activity.

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Together your website and your presence on media make up your online platform, and how you position these to each other and what connections you forge among them make up your online structure.  I believe that a website is the fulcrum on which your business, profession or activity pivots.  But social media expands your options so widely, that a website may no longer have the degree of criticality it had before.

Imagine a museum, where the entrance leads to a spacious hall for people to gather first.  You see small to larger previews of exhibits and programs.  Your pamphlet offers more specifics, such as maps to help you plan your navigation.  Two of my websites serve this function:  Ron Villejo Consulting and Dr. Ron Art.  They account for everything I do, and point visitors to where they want to go, in simple-step fashion.  Otherwise my content, activity and connections are on social media.  This way, I keep websites uncluttered, to-the-point, and cost-effective.

Finally, Blogger is one of Google's platforms, and serves as a hybrid website-blog for me.  Just as this one does, and for a nominal yearly cost, I set up its own domain name www.Ahrvey.com.  Because it's part of Google's immense online ecosystem, it's positioned for search engine optimization (SEO) and social media connection (Google+ and YouTube).

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