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Building a Successful Web Site: What NOT To do:
These days, there's no shortage of "how to" guides and articles out there that purport to explain what one must do in order to become a successful Web site owner. If you want to build a successful site, however, it's equally important that you also...

Get Your Web Site Noticed!
Get Your Web Site Noticed! 6/9/2005 by: Michael Rock The three responses: #1: If I put a web site out there it will be one of millions! So it's useless for me to have a website! Usually when I get this response I reply that...

How To Choose A Website Designer
Now that you have decided that it is time to create a website for your business there are many questions you must answer. One of the most important questions is "Who should create my website?" I like to use the analogy of playing music; in as...

Web Accessibility: The Basics
What is web accessibility & why is it important? Web accessibility is about making your website accessible to all Internet users (both disabled and non-disabled), regardless of what browsing technology they're using. In addition to complying with...

Web Hosting: To Switch or to Stay?
That’s a question that can only be answered by you. Depending on your current status and relationship you have with your provider, along with your evolving business objectives and needs, can determine what course of action to pursue. What are...

 
Google
"Get It All" with Good Web Content


No matr how goud th infomation... why wood you tak content like this seriusly? No mater how good the infomation, if is riddiled with typos its asta lavista baby. You lose.

Typos, misspellings, hideous grammar, exclamation overkill and run-on sentences all undermine a Web site's message. Your reader will have to work too hard, and you won't have that reader long.

Grabbing a reader's attention is a key point in getting your message out, but there is such a thing as too much grabbing--and the wrong kind of attention. Negative attention can lose a great many visitors and potential clients.

Clean content and neat appearance are not merely a matter of aesthetics. It goes to the core of establishing trust and reliability between a Web site and visitor. Relate it to a deli. A potential customer heard about you through an ad. Cool ad, got his/her attention, so he/she stops by on the way home. On the outside everything looks nice, meets expectations, so the visitor walks in, looking for tonight's sandwich goodies. Once inside it only takes a few seconds to notice the dust on the shelves, the dirty footprints, the unidentifiable smudges on the glass counter-fronts. No matter how good the food smells, if the counterperson has dirty hands or there are papers littering the floor, how many people are going to feel comfortable reaching over a crumb-covered counter to pay for their dinner?

That may sound like a silly comparison to Web content, but really, it's not so far off. The principle stands: clean, neat, appealing content builds comfort and trust. Sloppy, haphazard or distracting content repels, and


breaks down credibility. And the principle is very easy to apply to all Web content. Just remember the acronym, "Get It All"

G- et another set of eyes to take an objective look

E- xtra attention to spelling lends credibility

T- ell your message with exciting words; don't rely on graphics

 

I- talics, bold and all caps are rough on the eyes, use sparingly

T- ake the time to read the entire content... backwards (you'll be amazed at what you'll notice this way)

 

A- lways do one last look-see after it's finished

L- et all content sit for at least a full day before a final edit

L- ose the guesswork--keep a dictionary and grammar/editing reference at your fingertips, and use them often.

Whether your content is a one-line ad or five-page report, taking that little extra time and effort will improve your site, build customer confidence and add respectability. Saving time now and risking poor content quality can end up costing you more later. After all, the object is to get and keep customers at your site; to keep them reading. How long would you have kept reading this article if it had all been written like that first paragraph?

Cherie’ Davidson owns Suitable Words (http://www.suitablewords.com), where she provides site content development, on-line writing services and promotion services such as press releases and articles. You can contact her at cherie@suitablewords.com