General Internet Strategy

Wed 20 Feb 2008

A Digital Media Strategist Will Carefully Study Your Landing Pages

Landing Pages
Photo Credit: Hamed Saber

This is the third article in an eight-part series which describes the role of a digital media strategist in improving the website operations of a company or organization.

A landing page is a specific page on your website designed to be the place where a website visitor “lands” after clicking on a link on an external website (a banner ad or pay-per-click advertisement, for example) or typing in a web page address they have learned of elsewhere. The goal of a landing page is to persuade a visitor to perform a certain action (make a purchase, fill out a form, request further information, etc.).

It is vitally important to develop landing pages which provide continuity between the messaging which leads the visitor to the website (the messaging contained in your promotional vehicle) and the call to action the visitor encounters when arriving at the website. For example, if one of your objectives is to sell romantic comedies from your online DVD store, you might send a promotional email blast to your mailing list which advertises a sale price on the newest date movie on DVD. But if clicking on the image of the romantic comedy DVD in the email blast brings people to the home page of your website (which features a variety of movie genres — comedies, dramas, documentaries, science fiction, etc. — and which doesn’t mention the sale), the person who clicked on the offer in your email blast will be confused. There won’t be continuity between the message contained in the promotional email blast and the message reflected on the landing page (in this case, the home page). Instead, the offer in the promotional email blast of a discounted price on the newest date movie on DVD should lead the person who clicks on the offer to a landing page which: 1) presents only the DVD which is on sale; and, 2) which has only one goal — to persuade the visitor to purchase the DVD.

In addition to evaluating the continuity between your promotional vehicle (email blast, pay-per-click advertisement, etc.) and its corresponding landing page, your internet strategist will evaluate three important aspects of your landing page:

  1. its initial appearance;
  2. its copy; and,
  3. its usability.

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Tue 12 Feb 2008

A Digital Media Strategist Will Examine The Sources Of Traffic To Your Website

Website Traffic
Photo Credit: chathika

This is the second article in an eight-part series which describes the role of a digital media strategist in improving the website operations of a company or organization.

Website traffic comes from many different sources. After documenting your goals and objectives for your online operations, your digital media strategist will turn to examining where traffic to your website comes from. There is much discussion in web circles about the path to purchase or the path to conversion (in website terms, a “conversion” is basically whatever you want the website visitor to do — it may be a product purchase, it may be filling out a form, etc., etc.). What many do not realize is that the path to conversion actually begins outside your website. A digital media strategist examines where your website traffic comes from and determines which sources lead to the highest volume and most qualified traffic.

Here is a list of possible sources of website traffic (in no particular order):

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Mon 11 Feb 2008

A Digital Media Strategist Will Review Your Goals For Your Internet Operations

An Internet Strategist Reviews Your Goals
Photo Credit: kteague

This is the first article in an eight-part series which describes the role of a digital media strategist in improving the website operations of a company or organization.

Too many organizations only have one goal for their online efforts — to have a website up and running. After all, it’s the thing to do, right? Everyone else is doing it (including our competitors), and we can’t be left behind, can we? When a company approaches their website with this attitude, no thought is given to what the website might actually accomplish. As long as the website is up and includes basic information about the company, management is satisfied.

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Sun 10 Feb 2008

What Does A Digital Media Strategist Do?

An Internet Strategist At Work
Photo Credit: davidChief

A digital media strategist evaluates the effectiveness of a company’s or organization’s efforts in the realm of the internet and digital media. To accomplish this, the digital media strategist reviews every facet of a customer’s or website visitor’s interaction with a company or organization in the digital realm and makes recommendations for improved effectiveness.

The following series of articles details examples of how a digital media strategist might fulfill the aforementioned role with regard to each “touch point” along a customer’s path:

  1. A digital media strategist will review your goals for your internet operation and suggest possible additional objectives.
  2. A digital media strategist will examine the sources of traffic to your website and formulate plans to increase that traffic.
  3. A digital media strategist will carefully study your landing pages and make recommendations for improvement.
  4. A digital media strategist will assess the overall design of your website and propose revisions where appropriate.
  5. A digital media strategist will appraise the content and copywriting of your website.
  6. A digital media strategist will scrutinize the search and navigation features of your website.
  7. A digital media strategist will analyze your call to action (purchase, lead generation, etc.) and the vehicles through which a website visitor can respond to your call to action (shopping cart, contact form, etc.).
  8. A digital media strategist will evaluate your system for monitoring website visitors’ interaction with your website and other digital media as well as your system for tracking responses to specific calls to action.

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