Posts Tagged ‘Website-Design’

How Does Your Website Look on a Mac or FireFox?

Posted on: December 4th, 2008 by Mike Tatge

Windows Market Share Below 90% for the First Time Ever 

For the first time ever, the Windows operating system has dropped below 90% market share, according to recent data released by Net Applications, Inc., a popular Web metrics company. Last month, only 89% of the users who connected to websites did so from Windows powered systems. This drop was the largest dip by Windows in the last two years. Meanwhile, Apple Inc.’s Mac OSX posted itsHow Does Your Website Look? biggest gain, growing to 8.9% market share. This was the third month in a row that Mac operating systems remained above 8%.

My grandfather used to say, “It’s hard to be all things to all people,” and he was most likely correct. This statement also holds true when it comes to online business. Your website needs to be as compatible as possible for every visitor, and this can be hard to accomplish. When it comes to PPC advertising, you’re paying for every visitor. If that visitor can’t use your website due to compatibility issues, you have just wasted your money.

Let me ask you this; What does your website look like on a Mac? How does it work?

Last month Internet Explorer’s market share dropped below 70%, while Firefox increased to 20.8%.

How does your website look and work with Firefox? How about Safari?
(Safari now has 7% market share)

I recently had a PPC management client whose website worked great with Firefox but had problems with Internet Explorer. Unfortunately, the designer only used Firefox and never bothered to check his design work on I.E. He just assumed it would work. Can you imagine? This client was missing out on 70% of his traffic until this issue was fixed.

It’s not uncommon for a shopping cart to work perfectly in Internet Explorer, yet have serious functionality problems in other browsers like Firefox, Safari, Opera, or Chrome (BETA). Different browsers react to code irregularities in different ways. Without checking, you will have no idea how your website behaves on different operating systems and browsers.

Ok, so you basically have two options for checking compatibility; check it out yourself, or use a tool.

There are tools available that will show you how your website looks through different browsers and on different operating systems. A free option is an open source tool called Browsershots.org. It can show you how your website looks on 4 different operation systems with dozens of different browser variations, with the ability to download screen shots for review. Of course, this will only show you how it looks, not how it works.

The best and most accurate solution is to actually check your website out yourself. This can be as easy as downloading the latest versions of these alternative browsers onto your own computer. Of course, you might not have a MAC system at your house, so a visit to a friend’s house might be needed. Your local library might have a token MAC available, or you could always demo one of the cool new systems at your local Apple store.

It doesn’t matter if your visitor is arriving from a Pay-Per-Click (PPC) Marketing campaign, or from a well placed organic listing, if the visitor can’t use your site you are going to miss out on the lead or sale. By checking your website’s compatibility on the different operating systems and browsers you could be opening up your business to a substantially wider audience while providing the best user experience possible to your new visitor.


Contact & Lead Forms as a Conversion Tool

Posted on: July 2nd, 2008 by Nikki Kuhlman

I come from a marketing background.  Before my years in PPC management, I was the marketing manager for a B2B software company for six years. If you’ve read any of my other blogs, you’ll notice that they tend to focus on what the client can do to make PPC advertising work better. I strongly believe websites have to do a better job at converting the traffic that comes to their site. What worked in 2001, or even 2007, no longer works the same, especially as web users become more savvy. So let’s talk about Contact and Lead Forms and how to make them work for you.

PPC AdvertisingI have clients that have forms for requesting more information, for signing up for a newsletter, for accessing whitepapers and PDFs, for viewing demos, signing up to view MLS listings and more. Most website visitors understand that they will have to give their name and email address to get information from a company on a website. But your form can pull people in or turn them off from your site.

When it comes to what fields you include in your form, the rule of thumb is: LESS IS MORE. Capture the least amount of information possible on your initial contact with the person. People are leary of passing out too much information on the Internet, so the more you request, the less likely they are to fill the form out. If all you need is a first and last name and a email address, don’t ask for a mailing address, phone number, fax number, and how likely they are to purchase. A rule of thumb that goes with less is more: people are likely to give more information when what they are receiving has a higher perceived value. Valuable whitepaper = more information (name, email, phone, address, company name, information pertinent to the whitepaper). Sign-up for a free newsletter = less information (name and email address).

I’ve actually been on a website that in order to let me request information about the company’s service (information that was free and would have helped me decide if I wanted to buy from the company) I had to supply my credit card number (and on an unsecured webpage no less). Do you think I filled that form out? Not on your life, and I left the site and didn’t go back.

And that’s another thing, if you really, really want to include a few fields on your form to capture things like buying potential, operating system, etc, and you don’t NEED that field to give the person what they want, don’t make it a required field. There’s nothing more annoying than filling out a form on a site and fields that don’t apply to me are a required field. If I’m a consumer buying a product online that has nothing to do with my business, why should I have to fill out a company name, or a fax number? If you are going to have a salesperson contact someone who filled out the lead form, don’t make that person supply information that the salesperson can just as easily ask them, unless that information helps you determine how to actual handle the lead (like the state they live in or the operating system their company works on).

And speaking of numbers, if you’re capturing something like a phone number, make sure to let the person know what format to fill it out in. Another annoying things is filling out a phone number like 877-239-9610 and having the form *yell* at you when you hit submit that it should have been 8772399610. Even more annoying? When the form yells at you AND loses the information you just inputted.

Fill out the form yourself, and better yet, have multiple people in your company or friends and family fill it out. You’d be amazed at how you think something should work, and how it actually works when real people actual use it. See where the people get hung up or question what they are supposed to enter. Get their feedback on if the information you are asking for is too much information. Those hang-up points or annoying spots are the spots where you are likely to lose that person because they decide it’s not worth the effort and they leave your site.

And one final point of lead forms, put that form on every page that it makes sense to. Put the newsletter sign-up form on every page of your site somewhere in the header or navigation. If you offer whitepaper downloads on your product pages, put the request form on every product page. If you offer information packets on a service page, put the form there. Don’t make your visitor have to click one more place to do the action that you want them to. Having the form right there in their face means they’re more likely to do it as it takes less effort and they are less likely to forget.

At JumpFly, we offer suggestions to our clients all the time at making that lead capture form as easy and hiccup-free as possible. Make filling out the forms easy and uncomplicated, and at the moment you’ve peaked their interest, and you’ll capture more leads and more potential business, making PPC advertising more successful.


PPC Advertising Buzz – Landing Page Load Time & AMP! from Yahoo!

Posted on: June 24th, 2008 by Brad Garlin

The ever-evolving PPC Advertising Industry continues to add new twists. Beginning last Wednesday, Google officially included landing page load time as a variable that helps determine Quality Score. Per Google, “Keywords with landing pages that load slowly may get lower Quality Scores (and thus higher minimum bids). Conversely, keywords with landing pages that load very quickly may get higher Quality Scores and lower minimum bids.” Google believes that users have the best experience when they don’t have to wait a long time for landing pages to load, and visitors are more likely to abandon landing pages that load slowly. So please take this variable into consideration when designing landing pages.PPC Advertising

Next topic – Yahoo! CEO Jerry Yang and the entire Yahoo! board of directors are currently fighting to keep their jobs. Carl Icahn continues to press Yahoo! shareholders to vote them out of position, and Proxy Cards have been sent out to investors. Yahoo! shares have plummeted since the Microsoft deal has been allegedly taken off the table.

Meanwhile, Jerry Yang believes that Yahoo! is well positioned to embrace the future of Internet advertising with their pending new advertising management platform called AMP! from Yahoo! (View video) . Per Yahoo!, “the AMP! platform will ultimately help marketers buy across search, display, local, mobile, and video inventory – all from a single, integrated interface.” Yahoo! is currently the leader in display advertising, and is banking on the convergence of search and display advertising going forward. So, does this mean that Yahoo! is poised for greatness?

While Yahoo! may actually be in position to better capitalize on their 500 million+ monthly users, various former top Yahoo! managers appear to disagree. Just days after Yahoo!’s announcement that talks with Microsoft ended, three executive vice presidents, two senior vice presidents and numerous other well-regarded employees announced their intention to leave. Very interesting. That is certainly not a vote of confidence from Yahoo! management. I guess we’ll learn more in coming months. AMP! from Yahoo! is scheduled to begin roll out in phases, beginning this fall.

Regardless of how this plays out, there is an ongoing need for professional PPC advertising assistance, whether it be with search advertising, display advertising or whatever future technology may emerge. Internet advertising can be incredibly powerful, but is increasingly complex. New features and capabilities arise every week; It is more or less impossible for an individual (with anything else to do) to stay on top of this on his or her own, which is why professional PPC management is frequently the appropriate choice.