Ever banged your head tirelessly on a wall in a darkened corner until you saw tiny rainbow coloured elves after you experienced a sharp decline in traffic on one of your online properties? Well maybe you’re not as bad as me, but it’s natural for a webmaster to experience displeasure and even a feeling of failure after a fall in visitors – heck it’s exactly what drives a lot of people to abandon shop. However for the record, every single website on the internet that receives genuine visitors, will at one point or another experience this kind of slump, whether it be in response to online or offline factors.
A true entrepreneur can turn a disadvantage into an advantage, and while I’m no Donald Trump – I can definitely say to you without an ounce of doubt in my mind, that a lack of traffic can be transformed into a positive thing. For starters you’re handed a golden opportunity to re-evaluate your entire operation, and effectively locate and correct the root of the problem. Depending on your personality traits, experiencing a backlash from your visitors may be enough to ignite a savage fire of ambition and motivation, which when handled correctly can be absolutely paramount in getting you over the line and beyond.
Evaluating your website correctly is extremely essential in ensuring its continued survival, and while sometimes blunt honesty can hurt, it’s often just what the doctor ordered. There’s an entire series of checks you can perform in order to rectify the issue that’s sucking the traffic away from you.
1. Re-evaluate your colour scheme, layout and overall website accessibility.
When going over your design, it’s best to keep an open mind. Ask yourself if your visitors are getting lost in your layout, or whether the colour scheme may be driving them into the open arms of your competitors. Ask a friend or two to give their opinions.
2. Ensure your website is compatible with the major browsers.
Make sure you check to see whether your website is compatible with the major browsers - Internet Explorer, Firefox and Opera.
3. Ensure all links and forms are correctly functioning
A lot of the time, broken links are enough to scare visitors away. They undermine your credibility as an expert in your field, and portray your website as amateurish. Make sure you click on every link and submit every form to ensure they’re working correctly.
4. Test your loading time.
With a ton of web hosts springing up over night, it’s sometimes difficult to determine which one is suitable for you. Employ a third party website uptime monitor and pay attention to the speed of your website.
5. Re-evaluate the relevance and quality of your content.
As much of a cliche as it might be, it goes without saying these days - Content is king, and a lack of quality or relevance is without doubt enough to completely destroy your website.
6. Determine your sources of traffic.
A lot of the time you can pinpoint where you’re lacking by locating the source of your traffic. Compare your statistics to statistics captured when your website was receiving an optimal amount of visitors, and visit the websites brining in a reduced number of traffic in a bid to understand and further solve the situation.
7. Check if all images are loading correctly.
Browse your website in the hunt for broken images. A lot of the time, like broken links, broken images also reduce your credibility with your target audience, and can therefore be very damaging.
8. Re-evaluate your niche.
Is your niche dying out? Sometimes you need to be honest with yourself, and bail out before your target audience is diminished. Alternatively, one can attempt to revive the market but introducing an innovative and highly desired service, product or feature into their website.
9. Wonder over to the competition.
Have they introduced something into their site that may be thwarting your attempts are increasing your traffic flow. If so, it’s time to apply some camouflage paint and get down to good old business.
Remember to seek the advice of some friends, and even visitors as gathering a series of opinions is unquestionably paramount in ensuring you hit back twice as hard. Consistency is key is the online world, and those who continue to get up after every fall, and capitalize on every success will emerge as the winners.
|
December 29th, 2007 at 9:28 pm
While all points you included are very important, points 5, 8 and 9 would be at the top of my list.
No matter where your traffic comes from, how ugly your site is or if your site loads slow as dog snot, your site visitors are there for one thing and that is the content. So keeping your content fresh, on point and interesting makes all of the difference in the world. Also, it doesn’t hurt to see what your competitors are writing about and it even doesn’t matter if you write about the same things as long as you make it unique and give people what they want and that is something different from every other blog they read.
December 29th, 2007 at 11:26 pm
I must read about 200 money making blogs, nearly as many as there are in the entrecard category. I have yet to see any that get as sneaky as saying, look at your competition. THAT IS THE BEST THING TO DO. You learn from others, don’t emulate them but if something works for the group as a whole, it probably works for you too!
December 30th, 2007 at 1:43 am
Checking out your competition is the ONLY way you’ll be able to hone your “unique selling proposition”. That is a basic law in creating your business plan, and is something that should be done on a regular basis.
If you’re gonna get blind-sided, it’s most likely gonna be from a competitor.