You Had Me At the Search Engines
By Kim Krause Berg
You’ve likely heard of the movie, Jerry Maguire, with its famous
line, “You had me at hello.” Jerry Maguire was luckier than
web sites we find in search engines. Many web sites don’t attract
user devotion at the first word, let alone after scanning the home page.
How many times has this scenario happened to you? You’ve performed
a search in a search engine or directory, reviewed the results and found
a page description that fits what you were looking for. When you click
on the page that looks the most promising, usually you arrive at the web
site’s home page, where one or more things might happen:
1. The page loads slowly due to too many graphics, dynamic applications
or scripts
2. There are terms used on the page that you don’t understand.
3. It promotes products or services that were not mentioned in the page
description from the search engine.
4. The products or services are unrelated to what you searched for.
5. The page is “amateurish” in appearance and you’re
not feeling confident about things like customer service, user privacy
and security, experience with the product, or other credibility issues.
6. The page is so busy you don’t know where to go to next, or distractions
caused you to forget your original mission.
7. Something has turned you off, such as swimsuit models that don’t
look like you do, corporate images of businessmen, not women, or multiple
animated things.
8. An invasive advertisement appeared that you had to click away so you
could read the content underneath it.
9. The page loads but your scum ware radar starts beeping like crazy or
popup and security alerts appear.
10. You need a magnifying glass to read the content.
If a keyword search brings back an inside page, more common frustrations
occur to drive people away from the web site. They include:
1. There is no navigation to the rest of the web site.
2. There is navigation, but no visible, easy to locate link to the main
home page or main web site.
3. A link “home” is offered, but sub-navigation is missing,
so that the user must start at the beginning to figure out where they
landed inside the web site.
4. Link labels do not help explain what the web site is about, so the
visitor may not be inspired to click around.
5. There is no suggested click path to follow. For example, if the page
happens to be an article, it might be useful to say “Did you find
this article helpful? Here are more articles that may interest you.”
We often forget that search engines index more than our home page. People
often stumble into our web sites while searching for other things, linking
from another web site, or receiving an email link from a friend. The starting
place isn’t always home base.
So, how do you make a web site page approachable in a crowded room of
search engine results? First, make sure your title tag is accurate. Every
page requires a title tag unique to the content it represents. The home
page is an overview page, so focus on the lead goal, which is often also
your main keyword(s).
Next, write a genuine, honest description that isn’t all hype
and glorified self-worship about how great the web site is. If the site
is going to sell something, what does it sell? Does it specialize? Avoid
words like “unique”, “amazing”, and “special”
because, frankly, everybody makes these claims.
It’s important to not put too many keywords in your title and
description tags because these are displayed in search engines as your
site or page description. When read by humans, they don’t make sense.
People are getting wiser. They know that what you’re doing is trying
to get higher rank but it doesn’t mean your web site is any better
in quality that those lower in search results.
Whether a home page or inside pages, there are lots of ways to attract
attention or generate curiosity so that your visitor becomes a potential
customer, or simply finds the content interesting enough to keep browsing
around. My favorite part of discount stores are the displays they toss
clearance items into, or those “Oh yes, I forgot I needed that”
type items. You can do the same thing with your web site. Simply place
the toenail clippers, scotch tape and calling cards out front where they’re
easily seen. In other words, remind your visitors of what they didn’t
know they came for.
Here are some other ideas to try:
1. Provide a good reason to enter your site. Don’t expect anyone
to take your word for anything. Offer incentives.
2. Put a visible text link to your sitemap on every page. Even your local
shopping mall has a map with a “You Are Here” pointer.
3. Be forthcoming and descriptive with pictures. If you sell shoes, show
the tread. If you design and make your own crafts, show close-ups of the
detail and workmanship. Furniture looks great alone, but can a woman site
comfortably with her legs crossed? The sunglasses line you offer is likely
filled with brand name shades, but what types of faces will they look
right on? I have a difficult time buying artwork online because I can’t
visualize the dimensions in my head. A picture of a framed version, hanging
in a room with furniture, will help me understand what I’m trying
to purchase. In a virtual world, you must go to great lengths to sell
things people can’t touch or see in use.
4. Place words like “sale”, “getting started”,
“first-time user”, “learn more”, “try now”,
“buy now”, “free”, “download”, “we
deliver” and “free shipping” on your pages, above the
page “fold”. This is what users are looking for.
5. On your home page, provide an introduction and suggestions for where
your visitors might like to go next, based on their needs.
Search engines can only bring a visitor to your doorstep. It’s
your job to grab them by the hand, invite them inside and show it off.
More Articles
Bio and Copyright
Usability Consultant, Kimberly Krause Berg, is the owner of UsabilityEffect.com
(www.usabilityeffect.com), Cre8pc.com
(www.cre8pc.com), and Cre8asiteForums
(www.cre8asiteforums.com/). Her background in organic search engine
optimization, combined with web site usability consulting, offers
unique insight into web site development.
Copyright 2005 Cre8pc.com. All Rights Reserved. Reprint rights by Permission
of the Author
