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Top tips for writing your website

Posted By Cate Caruth, Founder and Director, 16 July 2024

Top tips for writing website content

There are very few cases these days where a business doesn’t need a website. Anyone thinking of working with you is going to want to check you out on your website. If you don’t have one, they may ask themselves why and wonder if you’re a legitimate business.

That said, the words you use on your website are at least as important as how well the site functions technically. So, when you come to write your website content, what are our top tips?

Know where your website fits in your business and in the visitor journey

What you include on your website depends very much on why people come to visit it. For a typical business, the website is part of the marketing and sales process, so think about where it fits in the customer journey.

Do prospects find you on Google, for example, so the site is ‘first contact’? Or do they find you elsewhere (referrals, maybe) and this is second step? Or is it even later in the journey – they visit to do due diligence before signing a contract? Or is it where you send customers to place the order once all the sales process is complete?

The content you use will be quite different in each of these cases.

And, if none of these apply, that’s okay. Just be clear on who visitors are and what they’re looking for.

Once you know this, you can tailor your website content to answer the questions in your visitor’s mind.

Don’t wait for ‘complete’

One of the most common conversations we have with people writing their own website is, “I’ve written some of it, but I’ve still got some pages to write.” My advice is always, “Don’t wait to get your website live.” A site with just a home page is going to be more effective than no site at all, so if that’s all you have written so far, publish it. As long as you have a call to action (‘Contact Us’ for example) and the home page touches on the most important things your site visitor wants to know, you can add more pages later.

Talk to your audience – the 3:1 ratio

Take a look at your home page and count up how many times you use “I” or “We.” Now see how often you say “You.” The ratio should be three “You’s” to every “We.”

In other words, talk about your audience and their concerns, not about you and what you do. Frankly, on a home page no one cares about you. They have come to see if you can solve their problem, so answer their question.

To support that, put testimonials high on the home page. Don’t make your visitor hunt to find proof that you’re good at what you do (because, usually, they won’t bother). So many sites have an engaging first section and then go immediately into talking about themselves.

If someone wants to know about you they can look elsewhere.

Take care of your About page

Which leads me to the ‘About’ page.

This is the second most visited page on most websites. That doesn’t mean it’s the second place someone will go but, in most cases, they will keep coming back to it throughout the decision making process. Make sure everything that’s needed is included here, and keep it up to date.

Talk about your company values, who you love to work with and why, the history of the business and your credentials. Tell your visitor all the things they need to know about you and your team to make a confident decision.

Maintain your website content regularly

We’ve all been there. We’ve visited a website which is still telling us about the COVID protocols they have in place: masks, 2 meter distancing and the like. In other words, no one has looked at the website for several years. Or you take a look at the blogs, and they are all dated July 2017.

The message this sends out is either “we’re no longer trading but haven’t cancelled our web hosting,” or “We don’t finish what we start.” In either case, your visitor will quickly go elsewhere.

Don’t fall into this trap. Set aside time every three months or so to give your website a once over. Add anything recent to the history; check the services or products you offer are still current; test the links to be sure they still work.

A quick check every three months makes this an easy and simple task. Leave it too long and you’ll have to rewrite large sections of the site and it becomes harder to do.

Whether you’re setting up your first website or know it’s time to give your existing site a revamp, getting the content right is key. That’s where our new online course, ‘Website Gold’ comes in – click here for all the details. 

 

*Graphic created by Cate Caruth 

 Attached Thumbnails:

Tags:  content  content creation  content writing  website content 

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Top tips for writing emails

Posted By Cate Caruth, Founder and Director, 18 January 2024

Newsletters are the cornerstone of email marketing. A regular update to clients, staff and other interested contacts makes sure you remain in mind and are adding value on a regular basis.

If this is something you are planning to do as part of your marketing strategy here are some top tips to make sure it has the desired effect.

Have a newsletter!

It sounds a bit obvious but if you have contacts you want to remember you. Whether they are past customers who you want to come back, clients to whom you want to provide additional value, potential clients who need to know more before they make a choice or a wider audience with whom you want to build a relationship, a newsletter is a great tool to use. It is more personal and targeted than social media posting and not as time consuming as telephone follow up. So add it to your marketing mix.

Know your audience

This is a top tip for any content. Make sure you know who you want reading your newsletter, what would be valuable to them and what action you want them to take from reading your newsletter. Then craft your newsletter for them. There may be other subscribers on your list and that’s fine but you don’t need to try and please everyone – just write for your target audience.

Set the frequency of your newsletters

Sending a regular newsletter means making a time commitment to create content on a regular basis. Set a frequency for the newsletter which you can sustain and which your audience will tolerate.

There is no point in announcing that you’ll send a weekly newsletter and then find you are struggling to find the time for it so it becomes inconsistent.

Similarly, weekly content might be more than your audience wants and too much content can lead to them unsubscribing from your list.

Think about when your newsletter is going to be sent too. Are your audience more likely to open it during the working week, or on a Saturday afternoon? Even the most basic emailing tools can schedule your newsletter to go out at the most advantageous time.

Invite signup via other channels

If you send a regular newsletter, make sure everyone knows and can sign up for it. Have a button on your website, a link in all your social media profiles, a link in your email footer…

You never know where subscribers will come from and who might find your content of interest so make it as easy for them as possible.

Email vs LinkedIn newsletters

LinkedIn newsletters are on the rise so can be a great tool. If you are a regular LinkedIn user with an audience already consuming content you post, then putting your newsletter there is worth doing (there are some specific settings you need to have for this). If your audience is on a mailing list, then stick with email. There’s nothing wrong with doing both if you have an active audience in both mediums.

Have a regular shape to newsletters

Give your newsletter a structure so you know what you need to include. The Creative Words newsletter always follows this pattern

  • Link to blog
  • Client news or testimonial
  • Upcoming offers or events
  • Call to action

Added value vs sales and offers

Be clear on what you want your newsletter to offer and in what proportions. Look at other regular emails to see how others do this and then you can decide what will work for you.

Many E-commerce companies, for example, focus heavily on offers (10% off your next order) and link-selling (get a free hairbrush with your next order over £50). This is effective for product sales – and most people love a bargain. Usually, they are short messages, sent frequently.

If you want to deliver a different kind of value to your customers, you may want to consider insights, fascinating facts, and news about your team. This builds a relationship with customers and is better for longer lasting customers. Look at the ‘Who Gives a Crap’ newsletter for example. They sell eco-friendly toilet paper, and their newsletter is packed with fun things to do with toilet rolls and news about the team and their antics. It is really showing their values and growing brand loyalty.

Reuse content

Don’t feel your newsletter always has to be brand new content. It could work just as well as a round up of other content you’ve published elsewhere. Our various newsletter clients include videos from YouTube channels, testimonials from the website, top tips from online courses and advice on products from care leaflets. Make your life easier by resharing content that your audience may have missed or forgotten from other times and places.

Look at your results

Whether you are using an email tool, LinkedIn newsletters or both, it should be able to get some basic information on how well your newsletter is received. How many people opened it? And followed on a link to more content? Which links do best? And how many people unsubscribed? These will all tell you something that you can then use to improve the newsletter over time.

If you’d like help with regular newsletters to add value to your contacts, contact us to arrange a conversation.

Tags:  business content  content  content creation  content writer  newsletter  newsletter tips  newsletters 

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