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> Get Articles > Web Site Design > Your Web Site's Objective

Your Web Site's Objective


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Bobette Kyle
bobetteWebSiteMarketingPlan.com

Web Site Marketing Plan
http://www.websitemarketingplan.com


In the first article of this series, "Developing a Web Site

Marketing Plan", http://www.WebSiteMarketingPlan.com/sr7.htm

I discussed the elements of a marketing plan - objective,

strategies, and tactics. In this and the remaining two

articles in the series, I will take a closer look at

specific objectives, strategies, and tactics you can

consider for your Web site.



In this article, I discuss the Web site objective, or the

"big picture". In general terms, the objective answers the

question "How can I use the site to overcome my business's

main Internet related challenge?" or "What is the purpose of

my site?".



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Customer Stages: Awareness, Interest, Trial, Repeat

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



When setting your objective, it may help to think in terms

of awareness, interest, trial, and repeat. These concepts

are often used in marketing to explain the stages a new

customer (or site visitor, in this case) goes through on the

path to becoming loyal to your business. The potential

visitor must first become *aware* of your site. Once aware,

you must spark an *interest* with the potential visitor,

motivating her/him to *trial* - responding to a call to

action on your site. After (s)he visits your site, that

person becomes *loyal* by revisiting in the future.



You may be able to most effectively build your business by

focusing on one or two of awareness, interest, trial, or

repeat visits, then changing your focus over time. If your

site is brand new or known to very few people, for example,

your plan is likely to concentrate on ways to increase

awareness and interest. A focus on interest and trial may be

in order, however, if you get an above-average number of

"window shoppers" - visitors who never purchase (or do not

respond to some other call to action). Alternately, for

example, if you sell multiple products or a product that

needs replenishing, focus on repeat purchases

may be more effective.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Business Building Models

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



Direct Revenue/e-Commerce



Some of the most known Web site objectives relate to e-

commerce or other types of direct revenue from the site.

That is, the objective is to establish a direct source of

revenue from either orders or advertising space. There are

different e-commerce options, or models, to consider if your

site objective is direct revenue. To learn about your

options, go to http://www.bpubs.com/Internet_and_E-Commerce/

and explore articles in the "Strategies and Models" section.



There are other valuable ways, beyond direct revenue, a Web

site can enhance your business:



Build Brand Image



A long-term objective for your site could be to improve

sales by building an image for your product, brand, and/or

company. Increasingly, this is an explicit goal for large

companies with ample budgets. Small-budget companies can

follow suit on a more affordable scale by building an image

during the natural course of marketing. You can do this by

consistently presenting similar design elements and

"personality" at each point of contact with the world -

whether that contact be virtual or physical.



Enhance Customer Service



Your site can increase revenue indirectly by improving

customer service. When customers are more satisfied, they

tend to spread the word about your products as well as buy

more often themselves. Another way your site can indirectly

increase sales through enhanced customer service is by

supporting sales through other channels. Customers often do

product research on a Web site then later place orders via

catalogue, telephone, sales representatives, a physical

retail store, mail, and/or fax. In all of these cases, a Web

site indirectly contributes to building the business.



Lower Operating Costs



A Web site can help your business by lowering costs.

Automated customer service functions - Web-based FAQ, order

status reports, product specifications, etc. - can lower the

number of customer service calls, reducing customer service

labor costs.



A Web presence can also lower operating costs by

streamlining communication with your business partners.

Business-to-business companies can create secure Web space

to communicate and collaborate with customers. It is even

possible to have individual, private sites for major

clients. A central "meeting place" that archives

communications and other customer-specific information can

cut down on administrative costs related to "phone tag",

inquiries, and/or the need to consciously keep all players

"in the loop". On the supply side, you could reduce costly

business disruptions by giving key vendors Web-based access

to your inventory or other real-time information.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Setting Your Objective

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



While there are different approaches to setting objectives,

my preference is to develop a single objective for a site,

which may encompass more than one approach to business

building. In the plan, I include separate strategies and

tactics to address each approach. I also like to include, in

the objective, both the customer stage(s) and business

building model(s) I will focus on in the plan. This way, it

is more apparent which strategies are appropriate.



Another approach is to address the customer stages

separately from your objective in a summary or write-up.

With either approach, you should view your plan as evolving

over time. As the business environment and situation change,

your focus should change as well. Once you get past the

launch stage of a new site, for example, you are in a better

position to evaluate site traffic, so your plan may shift

from focusing on awareness and interest to building trial

and loyalty. Similarly, a better understanding of site

visitors may lead you to adjust your business model to more

closely address your company's and Web customers' needs.



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Bobette Kyle has over 10 years experience in Corporate

Marketing; Brand and Product Marketing; Field Marketing and

Sales; and Management. Through her newsletter, site, and

marketing services she helps businesses integrate

traditional and Internet marketing strategies.

http://www.WebSiteMarketingPlan.com

mailto:bobetteWebSiteMarketingPlan.com



For a step-by-step approach to developing a Web site

marketing plan, read Bobette's book "How Much For Just the

Spider? Strategic Web Site Marketing for Small-Budget

Businesses", http://www.websitemarketingplan.com/sr.htm .



~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Copyright 2002 Bobette Kyle. All rights reserved.



Use of this article must include the author resource box.

Also available via autoresponder mailto:ObjectiveArticleWebSiteMarketingPlan.com

Email questions to: mailto:bobetteWebSiteMarketingPlan.com.





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