Title: Select the right audiences
1Select the right audience(s)
2People feel they are part of your web site. They
feel a sense of ownership.They will tell you
what you are doing if it is wrong or not, in
their opinion. The web is plastic. If you make
a mistake, you can fix it and a week later, it
wont matter at all.
- David Talbot, Editor-In-Chief, Salon online
magazine interview with Terry Gross of NPRs
Fresh Air
3Target your web site for the best audience(s)
- audience noun
- 1 a reading, viewing, or listening public
- 2 a group of listeners or spectators
- 3 those of the general public who give attention
to something said, done, or written - Merriam Webster Online
4Then develop the site to
- Maximize your goals
- Meet the needs of those visiting
- Generate repeat visits
- Earn personal recommendations to others
- And increase bookmarking
5Selecting your target audience is not something
to fear,
- whether you are starting a new web site or
revising your existing site
6It is something you owe to your audience, and
is necessary if
- You want to hold their attention
- You want them to learn from and leave with the
resources youve placed on your web site - You want to use your web site as a communication
tool
7Remember, a web site is not a technological
demon under the bed
- Its an open brochure, delivered electronically,
- to let your audience know what you do
- or what you have to sell
8So, how DO you target for your audience(s)
- and how do you determine
- what needs they have at your web site?
9Tally, for instance, has to support
- Corporate politics (Tallys parent corporation
likes to dictate look-and-feel from Germany) - Sales and marketing, including e-commerce
- Resellers and value-added resellers
- End-user customers seeking specific printers for
specific tasks or buying in specific geographic
locations (east coast, Ivory Coast, Brazilian
coast, etc.)
10 - Educated shoppers (who buy spares and supplies)
- General public (via search engines)
- Marketing communications (what's new/press
releases/new products) - Human resources (job openings)
11 - Technical support personnel (who use the web site
to deliver the latest driver updates) - Service (so customers may order service calls and
purchase contracts) - Perhaps a night sysop whose printer dies at 1
a.m. the night he's doing 100,000 dunning letters
12 - Differences between IE and Netscape, and between
version 2, 3, 4, and 5 browsers (and now, version
6) - Screen resolutions (640x480, 800x600, 1024x768).
Tallys web site dynamically fits the screen at
each resolution - Mac? Or PC? Or even Alpha?
13- ADA (Americans with Disabilities Act)
- Use ALT and TITLE tag attributes for every
graphic and hyperlink. Include text-based
hyperlinks. Make sure navigation structure is
same on every page
14Lots of divergent needs You get the picture
15How do you determine who to please?
16 and who to ignore?
- What product/service are you selling yes, even
non-profits need to know this - What specifics of your product/service make
you/it/them unique? - How is the product/service used?
- Is your audience internal? Or external?
17 - What are the needs of people/companies to whom
you sell? - What are the needs of people/companies to whom
you DONT sell? - What are the sales and technical requirements of
the product/service? - Who might be seeking your product/service?
18 - What emergency might they be resolving?
(equipment breakdown, technical support, etc.) - What emergency might YOU be resolving? (crisis
communications, message clearinghouse, etc.)
19 - Will their visit result in a request for
information? - Will their visit result in a sales lead?
- Will their visit result in a sale?
- Will their visit result in a recommendation to
someone else to visit your site?
20 - What potential equipment might they be using to
view your web site? (What kind of beat-up dogs of
workstations have their companies assigned to
their desk?)
21This is all standard marketing research
22R O P I M
- Research your audience (and your goals)
- Set your Objective(s)
- Plan your site
- Implement (and test, test, test)
- Measure your results
- and revise what needs to be changed
23Assuming that you want to sell to all of these
audiencesKeep them coming back!
24How?
25Audience are impatient.And choosy.And not very
loyalAnd sometimes, downright ahem stupid
26If your web site doesnt immediately meet
audience expectations, they will
- Jump to your competitors
- Jump to the next item in the search listing
- Search again
- Move to a different topic for their search
- Close their browser if your technology freezes
them up (major JavaScript problem) - Complain (rarely but vehemently)
27TipThe seven-second rule saysSomething new
displays or moves on your page every seven
seconds or less
- The main menu (the butterfly) is chopped into a 4
by 6 grid - Each item appears one at a time
- The grid uses ALT tags for experience (repeat)
visitors - The entire grid loads in 10-20 seconds but
- each item loads in less than two seconds
28Other questions to ask
- Organization of site
- Never more than three clicks deep. Never more
than one click away from Home page or any other
section - Big files?
- Warn people if graphics/downloads are large
- Security?
- Is it needed for your audience? Tally has a
password-secured zone for each VAR
29 - Other resources required?
- Warn people if plug-ins, applets, extra programs
are required. Tally requires Adobe Acrobat
Reader, so we include a link to the Adobe
download site on every page - Contact information?
- When do you give addresses and telephone
numbers? And when notprivacy/security issues?
And where on the site do you put them?
30 - On-screen instructions?
- Can audience follow directions.
Testing/usability is big issue - Off-site links?
- Do you want them to come back to your site? If
so, always have the hyperlink open the new site
in a separate browser window (use
target_blank). When they finish and close that
windowthey are right back at your site.
31Consider this boo-boo
- Lack of site-wide continuity
- A popular Florida resort citys web site
contains a well-anecdoted list of sights to visit
but nowhere on the site is there a map of the city
32Another important question
- Do you ever throw away parts of your audience?
33Yes!Absolutely
You may need to consider excluding parts of the
potential audience, based on your research, your
goals, and the needs of your audience
especially the technologies youll use to deliver
your content.
34These are potentially exclusionary
- Frames eliminate version 1 and 2 browsers
- Java and JavaScript eliminate version 1 and 2
browsers - DHTML eliminates version 1, 2, AND 3 browsers
- HTML 4.0 and XML eliminate browsers lower than
version 4.01 - 1024x768 pages sizes eliminate smaller monitors
- AOLs browser chokes on most of these
35Consider some web site horror stories
- Ive seen all of these
- Formatting that DEMANDS you use Netscape (or
Internet Explorer) - Remember, most people have a preference!
- Screen resolutions so low the type chunks up
and is unreadable - Always assume 640x480 unless you know
differently its the Windows default
36- Graphics that take 90-145 seconds (or longer) to
become visible remember the seven-second rule - Horizontal scroll bars 8, 9, 10 screens wide
- Never, never design more than the initial
screens width avoid horizontal scroll bars at
all cost - Dynamic HTML (only 30 percent of all browsers
will actually allow you to view it)
37 - Links make sure you research/test that second-
and even third-level links dont take your
visitors to pornographic sites - (If you dont find those links, someone else
will can you afford the negative
connotations?) - Content that stays static for months/years
- Content that is out of date
- Spelling and grammar mistakes
38 - Culture starting Hebrew pages with text going
the wrong direction - Technical look at web sites operated by Japanese
hobbyists in Japanese - If youre using a Western operating system, you
wont read their pride-and-joy - then consider what happens when they tweak their
hyperlinks to, say, black not-underlined
39- Lack of testing in all browsers and at all screen
resolutions looks fine in Internet Explorer,
doesnt display at all in Netscape or vice
versa - Content that require plug-ins, applets, or
downloads (especially those that dont warn you
they are installing themselves) - Yes, this even includes Flash/Shockwave
40 - JavaScript so intensive it crashes the visitors
browser - If they open more than two browsers with pages
using JavaScript, they risk destablizing their
operating system - Pages that require JavaScript to display even the
first line of content
Even done some of those things myself
41Yes, this seriously affects content
developmentYou may need to make your content
simpler
42This also impacts what technologies you use to
deliver your content
43Problem technologies for some users
- Java and JavaScript
- Perl and Java beans
- HTML version 4.0 and XML.
- Cascading Style Sheets
- Active Server Pages (ASP)
- Cold Fusion or Net Objects
- DHTML, Flash, Dream Weaver, and Shockwave
- And worst of all large graphic images
44In fact, some people toggle these things off in
their browser options
So beware of anything that is innovative,
refreshing, flashy, or advanced
45In some extreme cases, you may be limited to
- Plain-vanilla HTML no higher than W3C version
3.2 (or even 3.0) - Text-based content only (no style sheets)
- No animated or transparent graphics
- Or no graphics at all
- No downloads or plug-ins (Juno.com)
46Never assume your audience will be as technically
literate as you areOr as financially well-off
47Do your research Understand your audienceThey
WILL recognize and reward the consideration
48Which meansTheyll return to your web
siteThey will be likely to book mark it
- Research indicates that 1998 was the high-water
year for search engines - In 1999, a new trend appeared in hit-log
analysis - Hit logs showed visitors who didnt come from any
other web site, hyperlink, search engine
nothing trackable - They could only be coming from their own
bookmarks - which they themselves saved
- And the trend is accelerating
49About my background
- Full-time web developer/web manager for five
years - 25 years marketing communications and print
production experience - 16 years as managing editor of international
corporation's weekly full-color worldwide
magazine - Developed new communication tools/vehicles and
killed ones that reached their lifespan ( and
web sites need this, too) - Degree in journalism and communications
- Introduced accessibility to Microsoft Exchange
Server and MCIS/Site Server groups - Set up web pages and online content for
limited-sight persons and those with other
handicaps
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