A Tale Of Two Sites
by James D. Brausch
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There are only two kinds of sites on the Internet:
1. Informational
2. Sales
Of course, that is a gross exaggeration and over
generalizes the landscape of the Internet, but it
will be useful for this article. We want to talk
about how you can take any site you have and create
a sister site of the other type in order to improve
your traffic, sales and mission. First, let's
define these types of sites a little more and
give some examples.
- Informational
This is the classic content or free information site. It
includes hobby sites, huge communities like Yahoo, search
engines, discussion forums, news sites, how-to sites and a
vast majority of the Internet in general.
- Sales
This can be a classic e-commerce site sells something
directly. It can describe a product/service and provide a
way to provide payment directly on the site. The famous
sites in this category include Amazon, Orbitz, and Ebay.
The less famous sites sell a vast variety of the kind
of merchandise that used to be sold via direct postal
mail campaigns, catalogs, etc.
It can also include a more subtle type of sales site.
Everyone was warned in the last decade that you had
better be "on the net" or you would be out of business.
Most organizations have taken that advice. Almost every
corporation, non-profit organization, government agency,
church and school now have a website. When many of these
organizations created their website, they realized they had
nothing to sell directly, nor did their true mission include
providing a lot of free information content about their
topic.
Most of these sites provide information about their
organization, press releases, methods to contact various
departments, information about upcoming events, and
product/service information (albeit, not for the purpose of
direct sales). The end result is that these sites are there
to promote the organization's mission. They are really
sales sites in that way.
Now that we've over generalized these two categories of
websites, let's admit that almost every website has some
element of each. I've owned sites that have completely
morphed from one type to another with lots of hybrid during
the morphing process. I've come to discover though that it
is often not a good idea to mix these up. Let's talk
about why.
Let's say you have a pure information site. You are really
into widgets as a hobby and you create a massive site with a
popular discussion forum, lots of articles, pictures,
how-to information, a massive resource directory of other
widget sites, product reviews, etc. Your site is the #1
place people go to find out about anything to do with
widgets. In fact, your site is so popular that your
hosting bill is now way over your hobby budget, but this
is a labor of love; right? Many of us have been here.
The obvious answer is to mix in a bit of e-commerce to
offset the bills. Maybe you add some widget banners or
text links. Maybe you put an affiliate link to Amazon
after your review of a book about Widgets. Maybe you
even install a shopping cart and start buying
widgets wholesale and selling them directly on your
site. You even dream of someday making a living
doing what you love: maintaining your site about
widgets.
What happens? First of all, your traffic starts to
decrease. Inevitably you turn some people off by your
new emphasis on e-commerce. Second, your focus on
what made your site great starts to suffer. You now
have two competing forces pulling you in separate
directions. One side of you wants to create great
free content; the other wants to maximize profits.
Some people find a good balance and press forward.
Many others start a downward spiral. How many
great search engines have we seen come and go
because they lost their focus in exactly this way?
Let's start from another direction. Let's say you sell
widgets offline and followed the advice last decade and
registered www.widgets.com. If a widget can be described
easily on a web-site and costs less than $1,000, you
probably sell them directly on your web-site. If not,
you probably have press releases, contact information
for your various departments, descriptions of your
various widget products/services, etc. You sell your
widgets off-line, but your site supports that process.
Every site in this category would like more traffic. More
traffic means more sales means more profits. Isn't that
odd? The guy with the information site had the opposite
problem. He had too much traffic. Let's say you realize
that and try to increase your traffic by adding some
free content. You start writing articles about widgets,
start a discussion forum, etc. What happens? Your
traffic increases dramatically, but your sales barely
increase at all. In fact, you might notice that
your sales go down. The new distraction of free content
on your site is pulling away the attention of those who
might otherwise be buying. You find yourself with the
same problems as the above guy who runs a content site.
Your focus has been split and the core mission of your
site (selling widgets) suffers.
There must be a way. Of course, if you sell widgets, you
can purchase advertising on widget information sites.
And if you have a widget information site, you can sell
advertising space. Many find a balance that works well
here.
Here's another option. Create a sister site of the other
type. One site will be 100% informational (almost). The
other site will be 100% sales. On the informational site,
devote most of the home page to an advertisement for the
sales site. We find that about 40% of our traffic ends up
at the home page no matter how they entered the site
(many search engines deliver them to a page other than
the home page). If you place a large advertisement on
the home page with a large "Enter Site" link under the
advertisement, we find that you can receive a 30-50%
click-thru rate if your sales and information
sitse are well matched in topic. That means that you
can deliver a significant portion of the most likely
buyers from your information site to your sales site.
Now that your ad is done, don't ever think about
commercializing your information site in any other way.
Don't put any banners, affiliate links or anything else
to drive away information seekers. Just focus on being
the very best widget information site possible.
Do the same for your sales site. Don't ever place anything
to distract folks from buying. If you are tempted to put up
some kind of content, do it on your information site. If
you are starting with an information site and looking for
a way to monetize it, forget about all the affiliate
programs and banners. Either find one good sponsor and
put them on your home page, or start your own sales site
and become your own sponsor. After a bit of lost focus
(setting up the sales site) you can hopefully turn all
of your attention back to your information site and leave our sales site alone.
With this arrangement, you can drive traffic from an
informational site to a sales site and never lose sales
because they are distracted by some free content on your
sales site.
The author, James D. Brausch, is the Vice President of
Marketing for Target Blaster, Inc., an Internet Marketing
firm specializing in targeted traffic.
http://www.TargetBlaster.com
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