Picture this: A business sees that its website isn't bringing in leads. Business leaders go to an agency and say they need a new website to turn things around.
The agency builds a sleek new website — to the tune of $60,000 — which boosts traffic for a few months, but it doesn’t seem to bring in better leads. Soon, traffic starts to level off.
The business wonders what went wrong.
Does this sound familiar?
All too often, businesses see a new website as the solution to their marketing problems. While a beautiful, clean site is certainly an asset, it is not a business strategy, in and of itself. Without a full-fledged marketing and sales strategy, a website can easily be just another shiny object that is trendy but not helpful.
A website is one of your business’s most cherished assets: a 24-hour marketer and salesperson that helps bring in customers. But just like with any other asset, the strategy behind it determines its value.
If you’re entering into a website redesign, don’t expect a flashy new website to be the panacea you’re looking for. Instead, plan on making your website redesign part of a larger strategy overhaul that ensures it will work in tandem with other marketing and sales initiatives to bring in revenue.
Below, we'll explain why your website redesign strategy needs to be about more than just site navigation and design elements.
A website is not a marketing strategy
Businesses go into website redesigns with the preconception that a new website that’s fancy, fast, and beautiful is going to solve their marketing problems.
Often, businesses entering into this process are coming from a place of pain. Traffic is down; they’re not getting leads and sales. When businesses face those situations, they think, well, what can we do? A website redesign is something they can do.
Here’s the thing: You can polish up a website, but if your website content doesn’t answer buyer questions, they’re not going to stick around. If you don’t publish content regularly, you’re less likely to rank highly in search.
If you’re not addressing these bigger marketing issues, a new website isn’t going to do you much good.
Instead, we've got to break the mold of how marketers and salespeople look at an asset like a website. A website isn't something you just refresh. It's a living, breathing thing. Yes, there are times when we need to redesign it and we need to make it prettier, but what's at the heart of it? What is it doing and what is its function?
And if we look at it from that perspective, we don't always need to focus on a redesign. We might just need to add content. We might just need to revamp some things.
The true purpose of a website
It can depend on your specific business needs, but think of a website as an answer repository for buyers. Someone should be able to come to your website and fully understand what problems you solve, and how you solve them.
Your website should do all of the things that a salesperson would normally do if a potential customer just walked in and started asking questions.
If you look at how people want to use the internet to buy, they don’t want to talk to a sales person until they are ready. That’s what our websites need to be. They need to provide answers to people who are not ready to talk to salespeople. If our websites can't give users all of this information, then we have the potential to lose people.
People want to come in and learn. People want their questions to be answered because their time is valuable. They don't want to spend hours on a sales call. They want to know how your company can help them. They want to know what working with you will be like. They want to know how much something will cost them.
And if you can't answer those questions for them in some form or fashion on your website, they’re gone.
Your website doesn't replace salespeople, it just gets potential customers more bought in and ready to talk.
Your website must be a part of your business strategy
Any website project manager will talk about strategy, but they're talking about website strategy — how the pages look and how they’re laid out and conversion paths. The most successful websites focus on a larger digital sales and marketing strategy.
This isn’t just about your website, or about your content, or about your video. This is about how you inform and educate your buyers so that you gain their trust so they will do business with you.
Most businesses should not be doing a website redesign without first doing the foundational work that needs to inform that website.
Too often, we see companies that are doing all sorts of different marketing and sales tactics, but those tactics are not grounded in principles.
This means they're working on a number of initiatives at once, but there's no unifying strategy.
Imagine this business:
- They’ve got a brand new website that somebody built that doesn't do any of the things they need it to.
- They've been sending out boxes of printed materials and swag in an account-based marketing-type pitch that cost them over $50 a pop, but returns are minimal.
- They’re spending money on Google Search ads too, but these result in garbage leads.
They're doing all these things because their revenue's down.
They’re spending all this money, but they have no strategy.
These are marketing decisions made out of fear. They're chasing the newest shiny object, hoping it will turn things around.
A website, too, can be that next shiny thing. But without a strategy, it's just another way to spend money with questionable ROI.
The website redesign process MUST focus on strategy
Companies need to think more broadly when they’re getting ready to approach a website redesign. They need to think differently.
They don’t know exactly what they need — and agencies are standing by, ready to sell them a new website that won’t solve their bigger issues.
Any conversation about a new website should start with outcomes.
What are you looking to get out of your new site? Most clients are going to say they need more traffic or they need more leads. What they really mean is that they need more sales. 95% of the time, that’s it. They have a sales problem. They’re not hitting their numbers. They’re not getting the revenue that they need to get.
It's not that their salespeople are not good, it’s that they have no strategy to help drive sales. We have to show them the real problem and then show them how they actually solve it.
A new website is not the only thing they need.
They need a complete sales and marketing strategy, they need to make sure their website (new or old) is regularly updated with content that builds trust and answers buyers’ questions.
Then, if they determine that a new site is necessary, once it’s built it needs to be monitored and adjusted to best serve site visitors.
There are hundreds of agencies out there who will sell you a brand new shiny website — but unless they’re going to talk to you about the strategy behind the website, about how that website is going to help you bring in revenue — that new website is not going to help your business in the long term.
Author: jbecker@impactbnd.com (John Becker)
* This article was originally published here
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