Thursday 19 February 2015


Web Design Produces 353% Traffic Increase in Two Months


Many of my website design prospects frequently ask me “what they can expect” when we discuss converting their static website into a dynamic WordPress website.  I answer them honestly by saying it depends on a lot of variables because no two projects are exactly alike.  While this answer is not a concrete one, it is the best one I can give because I don’t yet know the variables.  What I can tell them is that there are great examples of success when the process goes right.
?Does SEO Really Matter in Website Design
Yes, yes it does.  My project plan doesn’t allow for website design to begin until we’ve gone through keyword discovery, created a keyword rich sitemap, and defined our call to actions.  Only after we know the full scope of the project does the graphic artist and coders begin work.  It is that patience and due diligence that makes the project a success.
The below graph shows a large increase in website traffic two months after go live.  The website went live September 30th and by the end of November the website traffic had increased 353%.  That’s a pretty big shift in traffic in just sixty days.
Website Traffic Growth from Website Design Project
The below graph separates out the traffic increase into traffic that is solely based on keywords (or organic search traffic).  In this example, it is showing just Google search traffic.  This illustrates that huge traffic gains can be obtained by good old fashion content creation and focused web design and blogging.
Traffic Growth from Organic Keywords

What Else Was Included in the Project

SEO Design Chart
My client is someone who originally approached me a year before we actually started the web design project.  He had known of my work through his competitors and others within his industry.  At our first conversation, he told me I was too expensive.  I’m okay when people tell me this and it does happen a lot.  I know I am more expensive then many other web designers – especially WordPress designers.  This is because my team makes sure we design and build websites with personas, organic SEO, and conversions in mind.  We don’t just customize an existing WordPress template, we create one from scratch and we make sure it is 100% designed to the client’s needs.  We also make sure the entire project is based on search engine optimization, a competitive analysis, and hours of keyword discovery.

A year after turning down my pricing this client resurfaced.  I believe he had tried some lower cost SEO options and some website tweaks that didn’t quite work.  His traffic was still low and his visitors were not converting.  This time around he was willing to invest both time and money into the project.  This time around he obtained results that included a 350% increase in traffic.
Our website design project included:
  • New logo
  • Complete keyword discovery
  • Website pages were created based on keywords
  • New custom design for the website and blog
  • Design built out in WordPress via the Genesis framework from Studio Press
  • Each website page and post were given optimized meta titles and descriptions
  • Performed an inbound linking campaign
  • Integrated social media to help build branding and inbound links
  • Professionally designed newsletter

 ?And the Winner Is

Both the client and I are winners in my mind.  The client may have paid more than he originally anticipated, but the initial outcome if most likely better than he expected as well.  I win because I was able to stay true to my methodology and keep SEO Closely tied into the web design process.
If you’d like to learn more about how Web Savvy Marketing can help with your website, visit our website design  for more information.






?Do You Have a Mobile Friendly Website


How much time have you spent online today? Of that time, how much of it was via a mobile device like a smartphone or tablet? If you’re like many of us, it’s a lot. While mobile usage has skyrocketed in the last few years, many small businesses have been slow to build a mobile friendly website. I’m hoping that is about to change.

Why Do We Love Mobile So Much

WSM Website on Mobile Device
I own an iPhone 5 and a Retina iPad. Since I purchased those devices my own mobile usage has increased drastically. I use both devices to read and response to email, check on projects, invoice clients, order presents, check social media websites, and play silly games like Words With Friends.
While I spend much of my day on my desktop, I use my mobile devices at night or on the weekends when I’m with my family.  It keeps me connected to my digital world and my commitments to our customers and our staff. It keeps me mobile and it allows me to zip out on a Friday afternoon to have ice cream with my kids, because I know I’m still able to manage my responsibilities.
This increased usage isn’t just a trend brought on by nerds like me. Everyone is using their mobile devices and using them a lot. My seven year old drags his iPad everywhere and my thirteen year old panics if her smartphone is out of site. And it isn’t just the young or tech savvy crowd. My mother-in-law and her boyfriend both have tablets and smartphones. They also have a hotspot device so they can connect to the internet via these devices when up north and away from home. They may call me the geek, but they have their own sense of nerdiness and it didn’t come from me. It is part of our society and culture.

Interesting Mobile Trends

  • One-third of cell owners (33%) say that their phone is a smartphone (Source: Pew Research Center)
  • In a 2013 retailer survey 29% of retailers said more than 20% of their traffic was coming from the mobile web or mobile apps (Source: Marketing Land)
  • U.S. mobile Web use has doubled since 2009 (Source: CNN)
  • Smartphones and tablets have nearly doubled the time we’re online in the past 3 years (Source: comScore)
  • 25% of all smartphone owners do most of their online browsing on their mobile phone (Source: Pew Research Center)

?Are You Considering Creating a Mobile Friendly Website

Up until this year mobile friendly websites were a luxury of large brands or companies with big IT budgets. Then a little thing called responsive design arrived and it changed the mobile landscape for the average business.
Responsive web design allows website developers to best utilize the available screen real estate on desktop and mobile devices.  The website adapts in layout without removing massive amounts of web content.
What was once considered a costly expenditure is now part of the standard website design project. Businesses no longer have to create two independent websites or pay to support two websites. They can develop one website that simply adapts to accommodate the smaller footprint of mobile devices.

Benefits of Using Responsive Design

  • Captures more mobile traffic
  • Captures higher ranking and more search traffic for local terms and phrases
  • Improves overall bounce rates because it cuts down on mobile user frustration
  • Avoids duplicate content that can result from managing two websites
  • Increases online sales (yes people really do buy products off of mobile devices)
  • Cheaper than developing separate websites for desktop and mobile usage
  • Saves development time because you create only one website
  • Provides a consistent user experience across devices (as opposed two multiple websites that look and act differently)

Responsive Design According to Google

Still not drinking my mobile kool-aid? Let’s take a look at some quotes directly from Google on the subject.
  • “Google recommends webmasters follow the industry best practice of using responsive web design, namely serving the same HTML for all devices and using only CSS media queries to decide the rendering on each device.”
  • Responsive web design “keeps your desktop and mobile content on a single URL, which is easier for your users to interact with, share, and link to and for Google’s algorithms to assign the indexing properties to your content.”
  • “Google can discover your content more efficiently as we wouldn’t need to crawl a page with the 
  • different Googlebot user agents to retrieve and index all the content.”

?Ready to Go Mobile

If you’re ready to give your business a mobile friendly website you have a few options. You can hire a website developer to create a custom mobile responsive website that is designed around your business and needs. Or if budget is a major concern, you could purchase a stock WordPress theme that is already mobile responsive.
We’re here to help with either route you’d like to take. Visit our theme store to see some of the great designs we have available for mobile responsive websites or contact us and we’ll create a custom design just for you.


Creating the Ideal Home Page


This is Going to be Amazing Right
You’ve got the perfect idea. I mean a good one. One you’ve been waiting your whole life to come up with. It’s good and you are going to be a superstar.

You know this ever so perfect idea needs a killer website to make it come to life. Not just any website, but a good one that will quickly and beautifully illustrate your concept and why the world must embrace it.
You pop on over to ThemeForest.net or Template Monster or any other website that offers thousands of WordPress themes. Somehow you’ve lost hours of your day combing through the themes and noting your favorite options. But it’s all worth it.
You’ve found the most amazing multipurpose WordPress theme to bring your new idea to life.
This theme is AWESOME! It comes with:
  • Unlimited colors and fonts
  • Built-in page builders
  • Shortcodes aplenty
  • Seven different sliders
  • Megamenus
  • Portfolios
  • Shopping carts
  • Forums
  • Landing pages
  • Pop up boxes
You are off to a great start. You are your new theme are going to do fabulous things together. How could you not? After all it comes with a bazillion options and the demo looks just perfect.
Sadly, it’s not going to be at all successful like you think. Why? Because you’re going backwards. You’re jumping way ahead in the process.
Jumping ahead, what? I know you think I’m wrong. You have to have a theme to start working with right? NO!
A WordPress theme is not the starting point. A theme is simply a means by which you can reach your final destination.
Your Home Page Creates the First Impression

First Impressions are Critical

In many website visits, your home page creates the first impression. It immediately begins to tell your story and allows you to connect with visitors. You need to make sure your home page is welcoming, professional looking, builds trust, answers questions, and provides clear direction.
Ok so what’s the problem? You haven’t defined anything yet. You can’t just jump to design without first thinking through your story, the answers you need to provide, your ability to build trust, and the manner in which you need to provide direction.
Defining and designing your home page is the most important thing you can do in website development.
Don’t jump in and rush ahead in a hurry to execute. Executing without properly planning will produce negative results. It will fail to produce what you want and it will create a negative first impression that you cannot eliminate.

Start With a Plan and Answer Some Key Questions

Start with a clean slate, a formal process, and a solid plan. Don’t just jump into picking a pretty theme with 100+ options. Proper marketing needs strategy and execution.
Let’s first start with defining what success looks like for you and your future website. What are your goals and objectives? What do you need your website to produce? Common examples of a successful visit include:
  • Brand exposure
  • Subscribers
  • Leads
  • Warm prospects
  • Actual sales
To help formulate your plan, you have to know the answers to some critical questions that help define your target market, how you can help, and how they can convert. Ask yourself these questions and document your answers. I mean write them down so you can revisit them and validate your actions to them.
  • ?Who is your target market
  • ?What problems or issues do they need to solve
  • ?How can you help them solve these issues
  • ?What service, product, or content can provide a solution
  • ?Why should they reach out to you versus someone else
  • ?Can you provide social proof
  • ?What content can you offer as additional information?
  • ?How can visitors convert into a subscriber, lead or sale
Once you answer the above questions, you’ll be able to provide some strategy to your process. You’ll be able to plan ahead and make sure your process is inline with your objectives and goals.
We have some more direction, but we’re not done.
Create User Personas

Define Your Website Personas and Create a Roadmap for Each

We now need to work further and dig deeper. Our next step is to clearly identify and document who comes to your website. If we can group these visitors into segments, we’ll be able to better market to them. We call these groupings website personas.
Here are two examples of personas:
  • University – Future students, parents of students, existing students, or future faculty members
  • Shoe Store – Men, women, boys, girls
Dig out a piece of paper and create website personas by segmenting your target market into individual groups. For each group, identify the following key elements:
  • Persona name
  • Demographics
  • Pain points and/or needs
  • The offering that meets their unique needs
  • Path to persona-based content
  • Call to action for converting into lead, sale, etc.
Defining personas helps you stay focused on the visitor. The process helps make sure that you are working for your visitor, which will help lead them to convert into your desired action.
Now that we have our visitors defined into segments, we need to create a roadmap for each. You might be thinking this is common sense, but it isn’t. I talk to a lot of people who have groups defined, but forget to actually create content for each group.
You can use whatever method works best for you. Paper and pen with arrows, Excel, Word, or an online software package. I don’t care what method you use as long as you take a moment to document the route you would like each visitor persona to take within the website.
This step helps define what you need to provide within your website to properly service the various visitors and their unique needs. When website visitors are serviced properly, they are happy. Happy visitors convert and return.

Make Navigation Easy

Have you ever walked into a new grocery store or a department store and felt completely lost? That is what website visitors feel like when they visit a website with poor navigation.
My local Meijer store is huge and the store sells everything from milk and paper products to bathing suits and auto supplies. I am positive I felt utterly overwhelmed by the variety of products and the size of the store on my first trip. Meijer has obviously considered this because their ceiling provides an easy to use map of the store layout and it quickly navigates you to core locations (or departments) within the store. Need baby products or kitchen supplies? There is a sign for both and they even offer an image for those of us frantically looking for diapers in a late night store run. Think about how convenient and customer friendly this is for visitors.
Now transfer that same ease of use to your website. Your website visitors need the same guidance and direction. If you’re content is persona-based, they want navigation options by persona as well.
Before digging into home page design, you should have a navigation menu defined for at least the top-level items. Make sure this navigation clearly points visitors to core pages such as About, Products, Services, and Contact. Use common language and avoid cute (aka confusing) verbiage.
If you have an excessive amount of navigation items, then consider a secondary menu. We have one at the top right of our header and it provides key hyperlinks for our store theme buyers. Adding those few links has saved me hours in email answering questions about account access and sign in.
Define Call to Actions

Define Focused Call to Actions

Call to actions is one of the first things I like to discuss with any new prospect or customer. In doing so I simply ask the person what constitutes a success website visit. I ask what actions do they want visitors to take before they leave the website.
These call to actions could include:
  • Signing up for a newsletter
  • Calling into the brick and mortar store or company
  • Posting a comment on a blog post
  • Liking a Facebook page
  • Downloading a white paper
  • Viewing a product demo
  • Requesting more information via a contact form
  • Making a purchase
They can be anything really. The important point to remember is to define these early on in your planning process and then having these front and center when you enter into design. You want your design to include these items and be cohesive with the rest of the elements so they feel natural and look professional.
As you document your desired call to actions, you should revisit your original goals and objectives and validate that they are in sync. I know I keep coming back to this, but you would be surprised at how many people get caught up in design and completely forget about their original goals and objectives.

Write a Brief Overview of Who You Are and What You Do

A home page should have text. Not a ton of text, but enough text to give visitors a quick overview of who you are and what you do. Make this information brief and succinct, while still being informative.
The goal in this step is to write text that is easily digestible by visitors and help them confirm that they are in the right place. This will allow them to pause, look around the home page, and navigate to other areas of the website.
Fight the urge to write a book here. I talk to a lot of people who want to fill this area with keywords in hopes of attracting Google. That doesn’t work for SEO and it should be avoided because it hurts the overall user experience.
Users don’t want to read paragraphs and paragraphs of text on the home page. They want confirmation that they have located a possible match to their needs and they want direction on how to learn more about things that matter to them.
Wireframe Your Ideal Home Page

Create a Wireframe

We’ve reviewed a lot of information so far and I’m betting you’re wondering if we are ever going to get to design. Well we are almost there. Our next step is to create a wireframe, which is a simple outline of your home page.
It could be a hand drawn on paper or you could use PowerPoint or a online software package designed specifically for wireframes. It doesn’t matter as long as you take the time to drawn out what you need to have on your home page and where you’d like to position it.
Why is this so important? It keeps you on task and focused on your content and your visitor. Instead of hitting ThemeForest and getting sidetracked by glitz and glamour, you are focused on finding a theme that matches your needs and the needs of your visitor.
Focusing on your visitor and their needs is how you find true success within website design and development.

Match Your Wireframe to a WordPress Theme

We finally get to look at themes and make a purchase. Woo hoo! We’re shopping and we get to finally buy something.
It is important to purchase a stock theme that matches your wireframe and your project objectives. Remember to look past design and check key features like HTML5, schema support, browser compliance, and ongoing support options. You’d be surprised how many stock WordPress themes fail a coding audit or lack a developer who can provide ongoing support.
If funds allow, consider hiring a professional designer to create a custom theme that is unique to you, your website, and your brand. This won’t be cheap, but if you have the budget, it will produce great results. If you go this route remember to allocate time for graphic design and coding creation. Our custom WordPress themes take about six weeks.
Before you hit the buy button or sign off on your custom design, remember to select a theme that matches you, your content, and your objectives. Don’t pick a blogging theme if you’re an online store. This happens a lot and the purchase always results in buyer remorse.
A good WordPress theme will be designed specifically for a type of website or blog. What type are you?
  • Company with basic brochure information and images
  • Blog with only posts
  • Complex online store with multiple products
  • Simple single product store
  • Service-focused website
  • News site
  • Review site
  • Community site
Remember that all themes are not created equal. The best themes will be designed with a specific target market in mind. Make sure the theme you purchase has a target market that matches you and your project.

Populate Your Content

This is the magical part I love so much. It’s when real content goes into the website and the idea becomes reality.
As you populate your content, remember to keep the KISS theory of simplicity in place. People scan a home page, so make the content easy to read and easy to scan.
When you are done populating your content, take a step back and ask yourself how you did. Here are a few questions you can use to validate your work:
  • Does the home page adequately address your target market and personas?
  • Does it answer the key questions you previously answered?
  • Does it provide clear direction and navigation?
  • Does it help achieve the goals and objectives originally defined?
If you answered yes to the above questions, then kudos to you. Well done! Celebrate and launch this masterpiece. If you’re answers are no, then go back through and focus on the items you missed. The extra time you put in now, will be paid back ten fold by happy website visitors.