5 Things Your Business Website Needs to Shine
After all of the years Iβve spent meticulously clarifying my clientsβ dream businesses, unleashing their shiny mission statements, and carefully curating their first offers, you can trust me when I say I know a good business website when I see one.
And guess what? Itβs not about having the shiniest bells or whistles, and it doesnβt have to invoke head-explosions or come after a series of sleepless nights sifting through fonts, colors, and stock photos to make it look professional and work for you.
While it is important you take setting up your website seriously β hey, itβs your business, after all β it can be done without taking you 5 years and one or two existential crises. (As I once heard someone say, βPut the paintbrush down, Picasso.β) In fact, I have a few key bullet points that should smooth out the process for you.
Specifically, these are my top 5 things every business website needs to shine online.
Anything else beyond what I have listed here is just extra gravy. (And listen, donβt shy away from gravy. People love gravy. But gravy is good enough β extra gravy is just, well, extra.)
If you already have a website, you can give this list a once-over just to make sure thereβs nothing that youβre missing. If youβre just getting started, I recommend tackling your site in this order. It will help you craft an organic flow for your usersβ experience (gag, βtechβ lingo!) and will set you up for success!
Here is what your business website needs:
1. A home page:
This can also be considered your βlanding pageβ and will be the first thing that opens up when someone clicks on your site. Your navigation bar will be at the top, and just below that you want to tell people right away what your business is and who it is for. At the very bare minimum, this means you need to include your elevator pitch. This will also act as a gatekeeping feature designed to pull the right clients in and keep the wrong ones out. If it takes more than 3 seconds to identify what your business is, your home page isnβt doing its job.
The second thing you want on your home page is a Call To Action (CTA), and by that, I mean a clear direction on what you want your reader to do. Youβll want them to head to your βWork With Youβ or βShopβ pages, for sure β there needs to be a CTA for that. Maybe you also want them to read your βAboutβ page, because thatβs usually the 2nd most popular page on every website! You could potentially add a third thing β like reading your helpful articles β but that should be it. Any more than three CTAs will be overwhelming.
As practice and for inspo, click around some of your favorite websites (ahem) and see if you can identify all of the CTAs. Theyβll usually start with a command and show up in the form of a button! β βClick here to work with me!β βSubscribe for my newsletter!β βSign up for your spot in line!β
2. βAboutβ page:
Here, site viewers get to learn about all of the things that make you special and, more importantly, why youβre the right person for the job! As a business coach, I ask the women I work with to include a personal story about what led them to their dream business and why itβs ideal for them now. This gives potential clients a chance to relate to you and get jazzed about the work youβre doing.
Also, be sure to include a photo of yourself (even if it isnβt professional!) and your full name! This last part should be obvious, but you wouldnβt believe how many new entrepreneurs forget! Showing a photo of yourself and including your full name builds trust and shows people thereβs a real person with real power behind your website and work.
Be sure to end this page with a CTA, here, too! (<β youβll notice a pattern forming, here.) Now that they know all about you, send them to your βWork With Meβ or βShopβ pages.
3. βWork With Meβ and/or βShopβ page:
If youβre selling products, this is easy. You simply need to make an image-based catalog of your amazeballs items including their prices and descriptions. Be sure to add a cart feature so people can purchase directly from you.
If your biz is service-based, your βWork With Meβ page should take the most time to write! Thatβs because this is where you will pummel your potential clients with your value.
I like to use this outline when writing βWork With Meβ pages:
First, start with the problem your potential client needs your help solving. You want them to feel like, βYES, sheβs talking about me, and UGH I need someone to help!β
Then, paint a picture of how much better your clientsβ situation will be once you solve it for them! (<β this is the value! This is the most important part!)
Next, get into the process, i.e. how youβre going to make it happen for them and what it will entail to work with you. I like to include the price on the page, too, so you donβt feel like you have to βspringβ it on anyone! Hot tip: donβt go too crazy with explaining the logistics. Turns out most clients donβt care how you work together, just that theyβll walk away with the results you promise.
Before you end, include a small bio about yourself, just in case they didnβt make it to your βAboutβ page. Bonus points if it involves a personal story about why this particular offer is personal and exciting for you! It will help your viewer learn about why youβre the perfect woman for the job without having to navigate away from your $ales page!
If possible, throw some client testimonials on this page, too β peppering them throughout is perfect. Theyβll add more credibility to your work. Extra credit for publishing them with photos and full names! That will resonate even more with your right people.
Lastly, include that Call To Action, rock star! Sure, you can have a βBuy Nowβ button that leads them right to check out, but Iβm almost exclusively telling my service-based clients to use a short 5-ish question form instead with a headline like βTell me moreβ or βLetβs get started.β Have the prospective client give you their name, email, how they found you, what their biggest challenge is, and when theyβre available to start this work. This will make your first touchpoint so much smoother, and will weed out the tire kickers!
*Rule of thumb: The more expensive your offer - or the more vulnerable your client has to be to work with you - the longer this page should be! The more they need to invest (financially or emotionally), the more information β and proof! β theyβll need.
4. βContactβ page:
A simple contact form is totally fine. At the very least, include a way for your potential clients to email you. If you feel comfortable, this page can also include a phone number, mailing address, or Google Maps location.
5. Your Header/Footer:
At the top or bottom of each page, include your social media icons and a way for folks to sign up for your newsletter or opt-in offer. This is where you can also put special deals or discounts! By splattering this info on every page of your website, you make it easy to keep people hooked on you and your businessβ content longer.
Bonus: Of course, if youβd like, feel free to include a blog/articles page, too. These are great for anyone who is interested in learning more about you and your βdeal,β plus it will ramp up your Search Engine Optimization (SEO), too. β Thatβs just a fancy way of saying anyone who is searching for stuff related to what you do will be able to find you easier on Google.
Go forth and make some gorgeous websites, business bosses!
For more on how to get your business up and running in no time (like, in 90 days for example) scope out the goods here!