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Short-Visit Syndrome: Does Your Company Suffer From It?
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Further ReadingBy Todd Miechiels Imagine if half the people that called your sales team hung up within 10 seconds. Not people they were cold-calling but interested people calling them. Heads would roll. At the very least, you’d want to know why so many people were disengaging. Chances are it’s happening to you right now, every day. Your sales team isn’t the problem; it’s your most visible and active company representative—the website. There’s an easy to measure, but often overlooked number that can tell you a great deal about the effectiveness of your website. The ‘short visit rate’ is the percentage of visitors that leave your website within 10 seconds. The percentage itself is not really important. Every website, every audience and every industry is different. Even the most sophisticated websites can easily have 50 percent of visitors bailing early. What is important is what you’re doing to reduce this number. Why? Because there is no cheaper way to repair the spout that feeds your pipeline. While it may take months to test and correct your sales process, telemarketing or direct mail efforts, the Web allows for rapid and cost-effective testing. You can positively change your short visit rate in a few days, even a few hours. The Impact The Cause What To Do About It Once you get these numbers, don’t flip out. It’s just a baseline, a starting point from which to improve. Ask yourself, ‘what might be causing these people to leave?’. Visit your site in your prospect’s shoes. Might it be the non-differentiating or overly technical message? Maybe the site just doesn’t look very professional. Perhaps the majority of your prospects simply don’t like the color red. Most likely, it’s the lack of any compelling reason to stay. If you don’t have something to grab visitors’ attention and get them clicking for more, you can continue to expect poor retention rates. Sometimes I find it helpful with my clients to look at this problem from a traditional point of view. What if this was a tradeshow booth? How could we get people to stay at the booth longer? The key here is to work together with your sales and marketing folks (notice we left the IT department out) to brainstorm and come to a consensus as to what you suspect the single biggest problem might be. Once you decide, have your webmaster make the necessary changes and measure the difference. If you don’t get a whole lot of visits, it may take a long time to come to a conclusion. This is where doing a quick pay-per-click advertising campaign can come in real handy if for nothing else than to get some inexpensive market research. You’ve Got Nothing to Lose Except Business Short-visit syndrome is something most executives don’t like to mention, let alone talk about. Fortunately, confronting the issue head on and doing things to remedy it is far less painful than you think and the results are well worth the effort. About the Author © Copyright 1999-2002 MarketingFind. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in any form without written permission. Please click here for legal restrictions and terms of use [http://www.marketingfind.com/pages/legal/terms_of_use.html] applicable to this site. Use of this site signifies your agreement to the terms of use. If you would like to reprint content from MarketingFind, click here [content@marketingfind.com] for pricing information. Privacy Policy. [http://www.marketingfind.com/pages/legal/privacy_policy.html] |