13 Ingredients to Create the Perfect Website Homepage

13 Ingredients to Create the Perfect Website Homepage

By on Apr 6, 2018 in Blog, content, Copywriting, Website Content and Optimization, Website Design

Your homepage is your website’s doorway the world to see your website, it’s the page that leads them to other pages; its also the page most people “land on.” It is the first impression visitor will  have about your company or organization. Because this page is most often the page people first see when looking for your information (and is more often the most visited), for most website owners it is the most important page on your site. It is therefore important to have a well-planned, optimized site that will deliver value and quality to every visitor. Following a few key guidelines will improve your homepage usability/visitor interaction and for business, the bottom line.

Here are the 13 essential ingredients to a website’s homepage:

1. Navigation

Navigation is the most important part of your homepage. It doesn’t matter what else is on your site, if the visitors can’t get there. On your homepage your visitors must be able to reach every part of your site. The links on your navigation bars should be the same on every page. Your visitor will then know how to get back to whatever page really interested him. When users cannot find what they want they go elsewhere. The  navigation bar words and links should also be simple (one or two words) but descriptive. Use text for navigation not buttons. Buttons look great but they take time to download. Make the site navigation about the user experience. The highest priority tasks should be the pages with the benefits; the reason visitors come to your site in the first place.  Instead of putting the ABOUT US second on the navigation, include your services/ or benefits. You will notice on most of the fortune 500 websites, the about us is at the bottom of the site, not in the main navigation. Also only emphasize the highest priority tasks so visitors know where they should visit first. If you emphasize EVERYTHING, then nothing will stand out and visitors are confused about which way to turn or what buttons to click next. Understanding your visitors’ needs is key in determining WHAT to emphasize.

2. Branding

Branding is another essential element to a homepage. The branding can include your logo, tagline, special marks and features, offers, etc. Use your brand strategically on your home page either in your header or in your visitor message. Well, it should be posted in a predominate place on your website too. Displaying your logo, etc. on your homepage reminds users exactly where they are.  The company tagline should explain what the website is about. A concise, one-sentence tagline should peak the interest of the visitor to want to know more.  Tag lines should be brief, simple, and to the point. Emphasize what your site does that’s valuable from the user’s point of view, as well as how you differ from your competitors in the marketplace.

3. Content

It is important to write your content as though you are speaking to your visitor. This will create the necessary bond or connection between your website and the visitor. To make visitors want to go deeper into your site, your homepage content must be fresh and interesting. You can do this by create links leading to other relevant content in the text of your homepage.  Be sure to write the text in terms your visitor will understand. Don’t use jargon or company speak as this will confuse some. Tell your visitor what your website will do for them.  This goes back to the brand. A brand tagline is a promise you make to your customers. Allstate says “you’re in good hands; Electrolux (vacuums) says “nothing sucks like an Electrolux, BMW is “the ultimate driving machine” and so on…

4. Formatting and Design

When you over-use formatting such as graphics it dilutes the rest of your homepage message. Visitors might think your graphics are ads and dismiss them. Use of colors, graphics, boxes and icons should only enhance the content, not distract from it.  Use Visual Design to Enhance, not detract from your message.

5. Use Meaningful Graphics

Don’t just decorate the page with stock art. Images are powerful communicators when they show items of interest to users, but will backfire if they seem frivolous or irrelevant. For example, it’s almost always best to show photos of real people actually connected to the topic, rather than pictures of models.

These things should get you started on building your homepage. There is one rule that I have learned. It is the KISS rule (Keep it Simple Student). Your homepage does not need to be flashy with all types of images, and flash design, or blinking. Most people like sites when they are simple and easy to understand. You must remember who your audience is. Therefore you need to speak in their language.

6. Welcoming Visitors

Website owners often make the mistake of welcoming visitors to their site by using the words “welcome to xyz company.” In the early days of the Internet a welcome message was considered acceptable, but today, a welcome is more about a feeling. If someone doesn’t feel welcome at your site you cannot make them feel that way with a welcome message. On the other hand, if you wanted to include a video welcoming visitors that would be acceptable as long as the video provided other value such as “guidelines or instructions to use this site” a tip or something of benefit to the viewer such as a knowledge sharing. Save the “welcome” for when someone takes time to register at your site and gives you their contact information.

7. A search box

Search boxes are considered standard for most websites today. If you have a site rich in content a search feature is absolutely necessary. If it takes more than 4 clicks to find content a visitor might be searching for, the best way to keep visitors engaged is to offer a search box. Make your search box 27 characters wide to accommodate multiple words.

8. Begin Link Names with the Most Important Keyword

Visitors scan a homepage looking for content that serves their goals. Links on homepages give visitors the option to click on relevant keywords that lead them content they are trying to find.  Starting each link with a relevant word, makes it easier for scanning eyes to differentiate it from other links on the page and making it easier to quickly find what they need.

9. Privacy

If your site gathers any customer information, include a “Privacy Policy” and “Terms of Use” link on the homepage. This is not only standard practice, it is required by the FCC (Federal Communications Commission). People have the right to know what their information will be used for. These links can go on the footer of your homepage and can be combined into one page or can be two separate pages on your website.

10. Shopping Carts

If you have a shopping cart feature on your site, include a link to it on the homepage.

11. Security

If you sell products and accept payments on your website, you also need a Security notice and icon that further confirms to the visitor that your site is “safe” to buy from. These policies should be part of your template and the links should show up (generally on the footer) of your website. Today, it is essential to have a secure website. Google demands it.  And so do clients.  Adding the right SSL certificate will help increase your rankings in the search engines as well as confidence in the eyes of the visitor.

12. Avoid Popup Windows and FLASH

Popup windows delay the visitor gratification of viewing your website’s content and many find them annoying. Even if they contain valuable information, most people will simply click off the box to close it or worse, leave your site. And flash, well lets just say it is considered worthless for most websites. And outdated. Unless you are an artist and are selling “flash” or someone where flash would enhance the user-experience, DON’T USE IT. Instead, important information strategically placed on the homepage will get noticed and even clicked on. This is where a well-designed graphic comes in handy.

13. Archives and Accessing Past Content

If you are a frequent visitor to certain sites, you understnd the importance of accessing information you found the last time you visited. And if the home page has been changed in any way, website owners or designers sometimes make the mistake of not acknowledging that content in the way archives. When you make it easy to access content that was recently viewed on the homepage and then removed, you keep frequent visitors returning. You do this by adding an archive link or “recent content or features” link on your homepage navigation. This is especially important if content on your homepage rotates (such as featured products or featured stories or featured news. When the content moves to the archives it then becomes a permanent link in your website and people will then be able to bookmark that link for future reference.

There are additional things you could do to enhance your website’s homepage but these are the top 13 things that will create a more functional, visitor focused website. When properly executed these 13 homepage tips will increase your search engine rankings AND your visitor experience.

Looking for  a new website? Check out the Redhead Marketing Web Design Options here: https://redheadmarketinginc.com/our-services/website-design/

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