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Thread: Sticky Websites

  1. #1
    Member DrayScherm is on a distinguished road
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    Sticky Websites

    A woman has come to me with the complaint that her website is not "sticky" - 70% of the visits last 30 seconds or less, with few repeat visits.

    From everything I've read "stickiness" is a result of the content, not the design per se.

    My question: Are there characteristics of the design itself that help make a website more sticky? What design guidelines should be followed or specific design elements should be used?

    I'm looking for something beyond the basics of easy-to-navigate, nix the garish animations, etc. For example, "Use an attractive smiling man/woman in the banner".

    Any thoughts on this subject?

    Thanks....Duane

  2. #2
    Senior Member Tech Manager will become famous soon enough Tech Manager will become famous soon enough
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    Re: Sticky Websites

    Work on a combination of easy access (speed of the site loading), intuitive navigation...and relevant/dynamic content with the appropriate embedded links to lead deeper into the site. People need a reason to stay longer. WIthout seeing the site in question it is hard to provide more than a few generalizations.

    As for design, make sure your design does not impede traffic in any way. Design the site with highly visible hooks (content to draw them in) and themes to draw them back. People often view a website in the same way they scan a newspaper. It's quick...unless something catches their eye quickly and prominently.

    One of the things I would check is how your client knows the average stay is 30 seconds or less. While her stats program may be providing that information it is not always accurate or relevant. Does it include search engines?
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    Re: Sticky Websites

    Visitors won't stay long if the site is not what they're looking for. Check out what search phrases were used to find it and if they're not particularly relevant, change the content.
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    Re: Sticky Websites

    I think basically. the site needs to say to the user. . yes this is the site I was looking for. If you can place something that give the user that impression, then you have best part solved the problem.

    A user might have looked at a few sites before they arrive, shopping on the net is not as quick and easy as people hope for. it can be time consuming clicking through pages.

    A sticky page will stop them in their tracks. Creating the right page for your market may not be as easy as listening to advise. It might involve thumbing through a hundred hundred newspaper ads, and then writing down the ones you can recall. or the steady adverts that work, and noting what ads do not appear again - ever. If an advertiser finds an ad that works. It can often be found popping up in lots of publications. . Little tricks like this you will need to work out for yourself . experiment.

    I experiment all the time. currently I am working with this page.
    classic car parts - I do not expect it will impress you. . But for a web user looking for car parts. . It seems to work. . The underlying message is yes we have parts coming out of our ears.
    The page presents them with the option of simply listing what they need. . and letting the site do the work.
    From here user click to a navigation page. . to find the right category.

    But, your customer will not be impressed with the design of a page like this. You will need to compromise on just about everything. to keep the aesthetic acceptable - and sticky. and sell the product. then try to work out how to get Google to like it. It is also a catch them page, for the visitor that has spent two hours looking for a part -

    But you may need several doorways to get an effective 'Stickiness'

    I do not think there is any easy answer, or a standard across the board answer. I think the right design for your user probably will involve the content they are looking for. Your customer should understand what their buyers want. . If not you might be looking at a lot of research. . You could still end up with a very nice site. . that your peers like, and your customer is left selling nothing.
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  5. #5
    Member DrayScherm is on a distinguished road
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    Re: Sticky Websites

    Thanks for your comments. Much appreciated. More info...

    The website provides supplies for jewelry designers - beads, wire, etc. The stats package is AWStats and the < 30 seconds/visit stats are included there. I believe it includes search engine hits.

    The search terms leading people to the website appear to be the ones she is targeting. One problem is that not enough people are finding the website. It has been up for over 4 years but has very few inbound links, and almost no non-product content that would draw people there and make them stay.

    From my perspective, content and building community are the issues, and design per se can help but only a bit and not without a lot of work on the content.

    I had a look at the car parts site. Maybe this succeeds because car guys are used to scanning classifieds, and this makes them feel right at home. In that sense this website's design achieves a couple of sticky factors - making the visitor feel comfortable and matching their mental template for the info. It wouldn't work for jewelry materials, but your point is well taken.

    Thanks again for the insights....Duane

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    Re: Sticky Websites

    drayscherm said
    "matching their mental template"

    That is a nice term, I will use that somewhere.

    Duane, You seem to have a good grasp of the problem, this is always the precursor to a solution.

    Have you looked into trade magazines. small Jewellery manufacturers, makers designers will almost certainly have a trade mag, an association newsletter, something.

    It might be worth looking into getting some article written on jewelry manufacturing - even getting some feedback from somewhere like getafreelancer.com on 10 of fifteen articles - adding a few photos and creating your own inbound links. There are a few freelance writer here, and there is a section to post a request for articles. I have had a few written by WPW members. (these do attract visitors, and point links to my pages)

    I have never had anything to do with jewelry. except during my married period. (All I learnt about jewelry was to simply say 'yes'.)
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  7. #7
    Senior Member G[dot]com is on a distinguished road G[dot]com's Avatar
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    Re: Sticky Websites

    to me is quite difficult really to say something being blind about the design we are talking about, Duane. I am trying to interpret your interpretations about the site and about her interpretations, so this is a bit like a broken telephone... I´d love to see the real thing, if possible.

    People don´t have anything else but a visual impact in less than 30 seconds, and the chance to grasp if the site suit their needs. Perhaps the site is reaching people lookign for jewellery... (b2c business -to end comsumers) not jewellery supplies (a b2b business)...

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    Re: Sticky Websites

    While AWStats is free, it does not offer clear, easy-to-read statistics that can be usable to enhance the web pages to bring more traffic. Yes, it is valuable for several stats but cannot substitute a good web analytics program with live support. I've been using free counters in a past like AWStats and Counter.com but lately I am offering to my clients to use a very affordable and quite useful subscription for $49.95/month. It's called WebStatsAdvisor, the new product from RTEK2000.com. I love its simplicity and plain-English statistics. I don't want to sound like I am advertising it but I just want to share my experience with the product that I was pleased with. So far, none of my customers stopped the subscription.

    Another beauty of the WebStatsAdvisor is that you can also track your off-the-web marketing statistics (like newspapers, boards, direct mail, etc). 10 days trial is offered, so it's not painful to try and compare. Especially useful are automatic e-mails with full reports (weekly/monthly/daily (optional)). I usually compare weekly reports to see the improvements or degradation and can make some adjustments to my strategies.

    On another note, the content is always a king. I remember time when we wanted to divide each page on several to make it loading faster. But the time is flying, and now you need the opposite: put everything you need at one page if it’s possible and include many important keywords into your content. The content must be useful to potential buyers even if they are not intended to buy your product right away. Offer them to bookmark the page for an updated and useful content. Offer some freebies and in return ask for their contact info. Add them to your contact list and periodically send newsletters with useful content and other freebies, so they would want to read it. At the same time, add your “buy now” links. I know that statistically you have to “bother” your potential buyer at least 7-8 times until they decide to spend money on your product or service. Keep this in mind.

    I feel that you might know all of it, and it takes a lot of time to follow the plan. However, with today’s huge flow of the information the potential buyers would spend time ONLY at valuable pages with useful info or the pages that offer the biggest discount on the Internet. Your customer may have thinner profit but much more buyers. At least this strategy worked for me.

    The problem is that those who browse your page don't read EVERYTHING you have written but rather scan the page like a newspaper (as one of the folks mentioned above). Unusual or "sticky" graphic/flash captures attention. It also must lead to action:
    1) attract attention; b) generate interest; c) stimulate desire; d) ask for ACTION!
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  9. #9

    Re: Sticky Websites

    I'd have to ask what type of designers are the target - professionals or crafters who are doing it for fun and not necessarily for selling. Images of finished products and links to directions on how to make the products might be useful. List 10 products/projects and then write 10 pages for each project and link all back to each other for example. It might be a small but good start. Feature projects/products of the month, maybe have some contests and give away a few supplies. I've just started with contests on my site and I have found the traffic increased as well as the time people are spending at the site. One thing I did was to have people vote for the best - this has brought in alot of visitors that have come to vote for their friend's item and then they end up staying and bookmarking/subscribing to my site. Just some quick thoughts.

  10. #10
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    Re: Sticky Websites

    I think you're partially right in that content helps create stickyness.. on your end site features can also create stickiness...

    If the website found is on the correct topic they're looking for give them something to do... forums create stickiness, as do blogs, chats, and other items. realestate sites use tools like calculators and listing searches, all sites can incorporate a search bot (google or yahoo site searches will let visitors search the web from your site too). There are many many tools and the like that can entice people to use your website and come back again and again. Trick is to find the right mix for each site/industry/business.

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