Recent Articles


Make Contact With Cforms
If you've ever wanted to add a contact form on your blog, but didn't know how or thought it was to much work, then cforms is exactly what you need. cforms is a Wordpress plugin that allows you to easily create contact forms...

Ways Webmasters Create Duplicate Content
At the recent SMX Advanced Conference in Seattle one of the big sessions was on duplicate content. There is great blow by blow coverage in posts by Vanessa Fox...

Q&A: Single Keywords Vs Variations And Phrases In PPC
Dear Kalena... I am in the process of setting up a PPC campaign on Google AdWords and I have found a keyword that looks promising. So what I have done...

I’ve Come To Your Web Site To Do Nothing
When does a web site just sit on the shelf hoping someone will come along and pick it up, and when does a web site beg to be noticed and better yet...

Anchor Text Of Inbound Links
Anchor text for inbound links is one of the most important factors in search engine optimization. According to SEOmoz' search engine ranking factors...

Usability Web Design To Make Site Visitors Adore You
No matter how hard you try, there is always something wrong with your website. There is always a critic. I have a friend outside the USA who thankfully alerts me of...

Hot Articles On Design...
There's an unusually high number of extraordinary writing this week that deserve mention. Each piece has something in it that may hit home for you and all are educational. First up is a debut article written for a print...


07.09.07


The Web Is Messy

By Gerry McGovern

The nature of the Web is not neat and tidy. A website is not a project but rather a process of continuous improvement.

Traditional content always has an end in mind. The objective is a brochure, a report, a book, a video. Steps are put in place to get the brochure designed, printed and distributed. There is always an end point; a point at which you can move on to another project.

Before the Web, the life of the marketing executive was so much easier. They could plan an advertising campaign with the ad agency, pay the money, and the ads went up. Like clockwork. Neat and tidy.

Now, there is the curse of Google AdWords. It's all about testing multiple variants of the ad to see which is most effective. Instead of one big neat and tidy campaign, web advertising has become a process of continuous improvement.

Organizations like projects. They are neat and tidy. You can allocate financing and people to projects and expect something delivered; for example, an intranet application to allow staff to claim expenses. The application is launched, the project delivered. Time to move on. Neat and tidy.

You're probably not going to believe this. When a claim expenses application is launched on an intranet, there are rarely any checks to see if it has achieved the efficiency that was predicted. That's because there is no reason to. The application plan got the budget for a project, not a process of continuous improvement. Once an application was launched, it's onto the next project. Neat and tidy.

Do you remember airline flight booking websites seven years ago? They were very clunky, weren't they? They have now improved an awful lot because airlines have realized that if you make it hard for customers to book a flight, you lose them.

Learn How We Increased Conversion By 816% and Become A Certified Online Testing Professional™ Click Here

You're not going to believe this: Most organizations don't believe that making an application or website easier to use is strategically important. They believe it's a 'nice-to-have'. Wrong. On the website easier to find and easier to use are must-haves.

Google, Amazon, eBay-all top websites-strive to make things easier to find and easier to use. They are constantly testing, constantly observing, constantly refining. They test words, graphics and features. If something works, they do more of it. If it doesn't, they stop.

After many years, JK Rowling wrote the last page in Harry Potter, but there is no last page on your website. The Web is just not a neat and tidy world. Stop thinking about success in terms of tasks and projects you complete. (We've launched a new website/brochure.) Start thinking about the Web in terms of tasks your customers can quickly complete.

The Web is messy. Your website is a constant beta. You can't just publish a webpage or launch an application and think that's it. That's only the very beginning. Every page and application you launch is the beginning of a journey of continuous improvement.

If you don't have the time to ensure that this continuous improvement occurs, then you are asking your customers to spend more of their time on your website. Are you sure that your customers will be willing to spend that time?


About the Author:
For your web content management solution, contact Gerry McGovern http://www.gerrymcgovern.com

Subscribe to his New Thinking Newsletter: subscribe@gerrymcgovern.mailer1.net

About NetDummy
A collection of news and articles covering the latest developments for webmasters and site owners seeking to enhance their online properties. Building better websites for business

NetDummy is brought to you by:

WebProNews.com Jayde.com
MarketingNewz.com SalesNewz.com
CareerNewz.com ManagerNewz.com
eCommNewz.com WebsiteNotes.com
AdvertisingDay.com ManagerNewz.com
SoHoDay.com CRMNewz.com

-- NetDummy is an iEntry, Inc. publication --
iEntry, Inc. 2549 Richmond Rd. Lexington KY, 40509
2007 iEntry, Inc.  All Rights Reserved  Privacy Policy  Legal

archives | advertising info | news headlines | free newsletters | comments/feedback | submit article



">Unsubscribe from NetDummy.
To unsubscribe from NetDummy or any other iEntry publication, simply send an email request to: support@ientry.com
NetDummy Home Page About Article Archive News Downloads WebProWorld Forums iEntry Advertise Contact Jayde NetDummy News Archives About Us Feedback Building better websites for business WebProWorld Forum