When was the last time you visited a website only to leave after
only a few seconds? If you are like me, chances are you did this several
times just this morning.
Great websites are key to attracting and
retaining visitors, and these days entrepreneurs have numerous tools at
their disposal -- Squarespace, Wix, Weebly -- for creating sharp,
impressive and
mobile-ready
websites easily and quickly. The problem is that these great resources
are also creating a big issue, namely how does one identify the most
trusted, authoritative and reputable websites?
In its second annual survey, the
2015 B2B Web Usability Report,
Huff Industrial Marketing and KoMarketing sought to determine the
website elements buyers really wanted from vendor websites, which were
critical for retention and revisits and most likely to lead to
conversions.
The key takeaway: Buyers want authenticity
in business websites, and the most effective way to create authenticity
is to demonstrate trust and
credibility.
The
report went on to find that most businesses are overlooking easy
opportunities to improve their websites and create trust and
credibility. Here are four key and surprisingly simple elements most
companies are missing.
1. Contact information
According to
the report's findings, 51 percent of respondents indicated that
"thorough contact information" was the key website element missing from
most websites. An astonishing 98 percent of respondents said that "No
Contact Information / Phone Number" would cause them to leave the
website (44 percent) or be so annoyed that they might leave the website
(54 percent).
These days, buyers want and need to know that the
site belongs to a real business with a real location. Including your
physical address with your phone number and email address is the best
way to do this.
Visitors also need to find your contact
information easily. Burying it in small print and camouflaged in
superfluous content sends a bad message. Make it clear, bold and easy to
find, with all your social media links, in the footer of each page. If
you create a separate contact page, make it easy to find and navigate
to.
2. About you
Another important factor for creating trust and credibility is providing information about
you, your team and your company.
Fifty two percent of respondents indicated that "About / Company
Information" was information visitors most wanted to see on your
homepage and best established credibility (second only to "Contact
Information").
Spend time developing your
company story and
provide your visitors with detailed bios, backgrounds, histories and
even relatable personal stories of each key team member. Include links
to each of their professional websites, such as LinkedIn and Twitter, as
well as a clear, high resolution picture (you should consider hiring a
photographer to take professional headshots).
Another
valuable element to establish credibility is to publish your client
list and testimonials. This may not be possible in many cases and for
many reasons, but nothing speaks to your value and credibility more than
a long list of happy clients.
3. Appropriate content
Many entrepreneurs believe that having an
engaging social media presence and creating regular
blog posts
are the keys to converting clients. While these are useful strategies,
the survey found that videos, social media activity and blog posts
ranked lowest on "content assets that create credibility."
Instead, focus your marketing efforts on creating
white papers,
case studies, research reports and articles that establish your
credibility as an expert in your industry. Write often and leverage
customer feedback to create fresh and relevant content they want.
For
this information to permeate organically, you should consider providing
it for free without requiring personal information, as the survey found
that more than 70 percent of respondents indicated they would not be
willing to provide their information to receive yours.
4. Keep it simple
While businesses continue to move to
mobile-first strategies, especially given
Google’s recent search engine update
that prioritizes mobile-ready sites, the survey found that for now, at
least with business-to-business companies, 61 percent of respondents
indicated that a mobile-friendly website did not impact the buying
decision.
Clearly, companies should not abandon a mobile strategy,
nor should they rush to abandon their website strategy. Instead,
entrepreneurs should embrace an approach that pursues both with the same
strategy: keep it simple. Resist the urge to load your site with
content and limit it to only what your visitor needs.
As websites
improve and as more people consume content on mobile devices, we will
all come to expect the same experience from our websites as we do from
our mobile sites. Easy navigation and simple and responsive designs will
not be enough, however, so businesses will need to rely more on
creating and establishing
authenticity to attract and convert visitors.
How does your site compare?
What
do you think? What other ways can businesses establish trust and
credibility with their websites? Please share your thoughts with others
in the comments section below
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