Web Copy Matters For Small
Business
By Mike Chen
When people think of their business website,
they generally only consider the layout.
After all, high profile sites usually just
have headlines and pictures. Go to CNN.com.
And then check out ESPN.com. While you’re
looking, swing by Yahoo, StarWars.com, and
U2.com. You’ll find an assortment of neatly
integrated pictures, headlines, and lots and
lots of links. It’s pretty eye-candy, it’s
interesting, and it’s effective.
And it’s not for you, dear small business
owner.
Large sites based on articles and constant
news updates thrive on immediate information
overload – big, brash headlines and
eye-catching pictures to grab you and get
you clicking from article to article,
headline to headline.
Unfortunately, this method – as popular as
it seems – does not work for small business.
In fact, small businesses often fall into
the trap of trying to design a flashy (no,
not Flash) site that emulates these sites.
It doesn’t work, mainly because of the vast
difference in the content that is offered.
Small businesses are pushing services or
products while these big sites are pushing
information such as articles, press
releases, and message
boards.
For small businesses, websites require two
things: the design and the content. Owners
often think that if they have a great
layout, then their business will sell
itself. But that’s not true. A picture may
be worth a thousand words, but it’s the
writing and the content that will seal the
deal for your small business. And that’s why
web copy matters – and why you should take
the time to do it right.
Many small business owners are overtaxed and
overloaded. They try to be a
jack-of-all-trades because fewer hired hands
translates to larger overall profits. Under
this mindset, they’ll often write the web
copy themselves, review it once, and upload
it to their site. However, the problem lies
in each individual owner’s ability to write
and edit. If they cannot write at the same
level as a professional copywriter, then
there’s a chance that a web surfer’s first
impression is one of unprofessionalism. If
there are significant grammatical or style
errors, the impression goes from
unprofessionalism to something even worse –
a desire to shop somewhere else.
It’s basic human nature. We gravitate
towards the nicer, cleaner presentation. If
a site looks like it has been designed and
written by someone who’s not a professional,
then it’s hard to take the business
seriously. The viewer may get the impression
that the site is a mere hobby for the owner
when it is, in actuality, their means of
putting food on the table.
Web copy matters in terms of style and
grammar for presentation, but word choices
also matter for another aspect of
e-commerce: search engine optimization (SEO).
While SEO takes many different things into
account (metatags, file names, title bars,
etc.), it also analyzes the density of
keywords. This analysis allows the search
engine to rank sites in order of density
percentage. The trick is getting a high
percentage while making your website read
well.
Inexperienced writers see this as an
opportunity to repeat certain
business-related words or phrases over and
over in order to get a higher SEO score. For
visitors who understand SEO, this comes
across as pandering to the search engine
sites. For visitors who don’t understand SEO,
this just comes across as clunky and awkward
writing. In either case, it falls into the
same trap of looking unprofessional.
It’s true that some web surfers may not read
the content too closely or even care about
the aforementioned issues. However, it’s a
fact that you’ll lose out on a certain
percentage of customers who are turned off
by this sort of thing. Can you put a price
on lost customers? Smart business people
will tell you that it’s worth your time and
money to do it right.
Sometimes, getting your web copy right just
means doing a little research on SEO
techniques and having a friend who majored
in English double check your grammar style.
Other times, it means searching for a
freelance copywriter to ensure that the job
is done right. Whatever your situation is,
make sure you don’t make the same mistake
that many of your competitors probably are
doing right now.
Get your web copy done right. You’ll look
more professional than your competitors –
and that naturally means more clients, more
sales, and more profit. And when your
competitors tell you that web copy doesn’t
matter, you’ll be laughing all the way to
the bank.
For more information on the topics covered
in this article, please visit http://www.mikechenwriting.com/resources.html
.
About the author: Mike Chen is a San
Francisco Bay Area-based freelance writer
and consultant with diverse experience in
copywriting, technical writing, and
journalism. His articles on business, music,
and sports have been regularly published for
years and he is the author of 6 Methods For
Marketing Your Small Business Online
(available at
http://www.virtualwordpublishing.com ).
His writing portfolio can be viewed at
http://www.mikechenwriting.com
. Email
info@mikechenwriting.com for questions,
comments, or copywriting estimates.