Marketing Tidbits for 2010
Bob Bly’s letter this morning offered up some interesting tidbits that he’d found, and since he gives permission to re-use his letters, here are a couple of them:
***The ideal length for a web page***
According to web expert Gerry McGovern, the ideal length for a page of web copy on a regular web site (not a landing page) is 300 words. He says 50% of visitors will read a 300-word page to the end, while only 5% will scan 1,000 words.
Headlines should be 4 to 8 words, sentences 15 to 20 words, and paragraphs 40 to 70 words. Hyperlinks should be in the right-hand column, not embedded within the body copy.
Reason: links in the body copy distract readers, making it difficult for them to read the paragraph.
Source: IntelBuilder
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From Marte: Part of this advice is in contrast to some I’ve read about search engine optimization.That information said links in the body copy leading to other pages on your site lead to better optimization. So perhaps this is another battle between pleasing the reader, or pleasing the search engines.
My advice: Pay attention to what you do when reading, and decide. Do links distract you, or not?
Of course you’ve seen me harp about breaking up the copy – I just got another message this morning that I couldn’t (wouldn’t) stumble through… must have been 100 lines of copy with no breaks.
And there’s just no excuse for it. Adding a line between paragraphs only takes a flick of the finger on the enter button!
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***3 ways to build credibility***
Here are 3 things you can give – or give up – to others to build credibility with them:
1-Material wealth.
For instance, giving a customer a full refund – even when you don’t legally have to.
2-Time and energy.
Giving clients guidance, assistance, or advice when you are not “on the clock” or charging them for it.
3-Opportunity.
Example: the consultant who turns down a lucrative offer from a big potential client because it represents a conflict of interest with a smaller, less lucrative existing client.
Source: Wanek, Tom, “Currencies That Buy Credibility” (WA Press, 2009).
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From Marte: I sure agree with the first two, but I’m not sure about the third, because who would know? The client you turned down, who is cross at you for it?
I’ve turned down projects that went against my moral standards, but I didn’t send out a notice about it when I did.
At any rate, these two items are brought to you courtesy of Bob Bly Direct Response Letter. To sign up for Bob’s letter, visit www.bly.com.
Posted: January 4th, 2010 under business writing, copy layout, copywriting, customer service, effective marketing, internet marketing, marketing, search engine optimization, SEO, trust in marketing, web copy, web copywriting.
Tags: customer service, effective marketing, marketing, marketing copy, search engine optimization, SEO, web copy, web marketing, web pages