Ayos Website Design

Why Use Ayos Website Design? - An Illustrated Story

-- Click on the Cartoons to See A Larger Version --

Slide 1. Site owners need to improve website performance. Websites can become a money pit.
Slide 2. The problem with many websites is that they've been designed by one of two personality types.
Slide 3. Two categories of website designer. The creative type that focuses on visual elegance at the expense of search optimization and usability. The technical type that focuses on technical sophistication over usability and visual elegance.
Slide 4. A good website designer provides a balance of graphical appeal, site usability, and technical excellence.
Slide 5. A good website designer also provides business analysis to ensure the site is usable and generates income.
Slide 6. Ayo (that's me) looks at your website from three angles. Search traffic. Aesthetics and usability. Competitiveness.
Slide 7. I also use a number of online tools like Google Analytics, Google Website Optimizer, ClickTale analytics, and Visitor persona analysis to analyze your website and improve it.
Slide 8. These website design techniques and skills combine to provide you with a well rounded website that gets traffic and sales.
Slide 9. The result is that the website I design for you will be good to customers, to Google, and to your bank account!
Slide 10. So please give me a call at 425-770-5533!

This story was illustrated with the assistance of Richard Duszczak.

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What is Web Strategy? 10 Questions to Help Explain

I'll start with a rather pithy definition: Web strategy is about looking at root causes of online success or failure and coming up with solutions to address those root causes instead of superficial solutions.

What does the above mean?

Put simply, web strategy is like a business plan, but it is the plan for your website. In it you outline a road map for your website. You outline obstacles and challenges you expect to face, your plan to overcome those obstacles, and goals that will determine whether you've been successful.

You may ask, 'Why is planning important?' An ancient proverb states, "The plans of the diligent one surely make for advantage, but everyone that is hasty surely heads for want." Good planning ultimately leads to business advantages. Similarly, good website planning ultimately leads to advantages for your website versus competing websites.

But what types of questions are answered as a part of a web strategy?

Let me provide some examples of web strategy questions and see if this helps you to understand what web strategy is about:
  1. What are the categories of customers who use your website? Thinking of all your customers in one big group is an example of having no website strategy because customers are not all the same. For example, a website selling books might group their customers into categories like the following:

    Example customer categories as part of a web site strategy.

  2. Does your website address the needs of each category of customer in a satisfactory way? Many website owners think primarily about their own needs, for instance getting a sale, and thus the website reflects this. Just as we hate salesman that are only out for their commission people hate websites that only sell and otherwise aren't helpful at sincerely answering questions or concerns the potential buyer might have.
  3. What are the top 10 questions customers ask when they reach your website? How do you answer each of those top 10 questions? Websites that fail to answer the most important customer questions won't get sales because it is guaranteed you have a competitor on the internet that does answer his questions. Since this is the case, why would he buy from your website?
  4. On each page of your website, what is the desired action you want the user to take on that page? If you don't know this, how can you tell your customer what to do? If you can't tell your customer what to do, how will he know what to do next? If he doesn't know what to do next, he will just leave your website.
  5. What is considered a successful visit on your website? What are you doing to ensure that each visit to your website is successful? Are you trying to get a phone call, a newsletter subscription, a purchase? The answer to this question should greatly affect your entire website's layout and design.
  6. What is the average conversion rate for your industry and what is the target conversion rate for your website? If you don't know your industry conversion rate, then how can you set a target for your own conversion rate? You can't just pull these numbers out of the air. If this data is not available, you need some other logical way of determining a reasonable conversion rate.
  7. Besides relying on search engines, directories, and advertising, what is your six month plan for increasing the number of visitors to your website? Millions of websites are competing to get on Google Search, Yahoo Directory, etc. If you do the same thing everyone else is doing, you're going to get the same results. The average website fails. So what will you do differently than those failing websites did?
  8. What are the goals for your website in the next 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, and 1 year? Your goals should guide your activity every day. Without goals you are like a runner running without a destination. How will he know which direction to take his next step?
  9. What lessons have you learned from your competitors in the last 6 months and how do you plan to apply those lessons in the next 6 months? Your competitors are trying thousands of different things to find success. The smart entrepreneur learns from his competitors. Sam Walton, the founder of Walmart and Sam's Club, started Sam's Club after he visited Sol Price's Price Club (now named Costco). He way always learning. You should be doing the same by using your competitor's websites regularly.
  10. What reason does a visitor have to tell others about your website? The best marketing is word-of-mouth. Is there anything about your website that a customer would have reason to tell his friends and colleagues about? To get an honest answer, you may need to ask someone else for their opinion. This is probably the most important question you can ask.
I could continue to list questions, but hopefully you get the point. Web strategy is about formulating answers to questions like the above. To put it another way, a successful web strategy can be a formal document, just like a business plan, that outlines your plan for the growth and development of your website and sets clear goals that will allow you to determine whether you were successful or not.

So when I say, I am a web strategy consultant, what I mean is that I help you to formulate a plan for your website that will help you to stay focused and to build a website that customers want to use and want to tell their friends about. Then I help you execute that plan.

If you don't have a web strategy, then you're like a traveler on a road trip without a map and without a route. You might stumble upon your destination, but your journey is going to be long and difficult full of wrong turns and dead ends. However, by developing a web strategy you're going to be like the traveler that has both a map, and a well planned route. You will reach your destination, and you will reach it quickly and you will enjoy the scenery along the way.

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How Can You Benefit From My Services?

Summary: A lot of times all you need to solve your business problems is an educated ear to listen to your problems and to give you a fresh perspective on what you can do to address those problems. This is exactly what I do. I bring another set of ears, and my personal experiences, to the conversation to help you see alternatives you may never have thought of to grow your business using the internet.

There are two very frustrating situations a website owner or executive can experience. Probably the most painful is when your site is getting traffic, but not getting sales. This scenario is distressing because the visitors are there they just aren't purchasing. But equally maddening is a website that offers a quality, valuable product or service but doesn't get the traffic needed to generate sales. When facing such frustration, two heads are better than one. Imagine having an adviser to work through these problems with you.

In short, I act as an adviser who can help you discover ideas you may not have thought of to address your business problem. Further, if you like the idea, I can also implement it.

Think about my services this way. If you had the resources to hire a full time employee to plan changes to your website and oversee its development would you look for the following requirements?
  • Someone that has a business mindset and is technically proficient.
  • Someone with technology experience at an industry leader like Microsoft.
  • Someone that is good at planning and hitting clearly defined goals.
  • Someone that has built a business from $0 in revenues to a quarter million after two years.
  • Someone who can work rapidly and successfully once given a business problem to solve.
For many, the above traits would be desirable. Now, why wouldn't those same traits be desirable in someone who would give you advice, someone who would talk with you to think through frustrating problems and identify potential solutions? I can help you by talking with you and giving you ideas you may not have thought of.

If now is good for you, give me a call. When I answer, tell me what your name is and what your business does. Tell me what problem you're experiencing that you want help with and, if you have one, give me your website address. I will ask you to let me think about your problem and offer to call you back the next day if I need more time. When I call you back, I will tell you how serious I think your problem is and I will suggest what you should do next to start addressing your problem.

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How Do I Make money?

Website Reviews, Website Design, Website Improvement, and Educational Classes on Web Strategy
Paid services I offer to generate income.

Summary: In order of importance, I generate income off of three types of paid services: website reviews, educational classes, and implementing design improvements to existing client websites.

All of the resources on this website are free with no advertisements. Consequently, I have been asked on multiple occasions, 'How exactly do I make money?'

In the table below, I provide a brief explanation of the free and paid services offered on this website and through my consulting company.

Free ServicesPaid Services
Educational Articles on this website discussing frustrations website owners and executives commonly face as they try to grow sales.Website Reviews in which I analyze your website to identify changes that will accomplish the goals you tell me you're hoping to reach.
Statistics and Research I share to help website owners and executives measure their website's performance.Classes in Web Strategy to teach attendees common causes for website failure.
Video Reviews of selected websites to teach lessons in website strategy.Design Improvements to existing websites to help you build features on your website to address problems your website is facing.
The free resources on this website are offered as a way for website owners and executives to self-improve their websites without paying outside consultants.

For most websites, the free resources should be enough to help you identify why your website isn't performing well and to discover your own solutions.

However, sometimes business owners and executives need direct interaction and discussion. When this is necessary, then my paid services are used.

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