Robert Warren Freelance Copywriter
With The Help Of A
Professional Copywriter!
"It weaves through your business like a thief: ruining your hard work, wasting your clients' time, and encouraging your prospects to go somewhere else.. it's the biggest expense you don't know you have."

Articles for freelance technical and industrial marketing
Build A Website Your Clients Will Love
Technical industrial business marketing library and tutorials
by Robert Warren

Read more articles by Robert Warren
You've just spent good money on your first business website. You have invested in search engine optimization, researched your keywords, bought paid inclusions. You have read every article promising unlimited success carried to your front door on the back of mouse clicks. You are confident that you've used every website traffic technique there is.

And you're getting traffic, but it's not boosting business. So what's wrong?

Especially as a professional service provider, it is not enough to simply direct traffic - web surfers are extremely unlikely to purchase your services based on a single visit to your website. They will research, they will compare. They will only approach you once they have reason to trust you, and trust themselves for choosing you.

Your true website prospects are the return visitors; for marketing purposes, everything else is background noise. Use these techniques to cut through that noise, by providing an online resource worthy of repeat traffic - a website that your clients will love:

Don't sell. Provide. It is important to understand that on the Internet, the user is in complete control of the transaction: hard selling will not work, and will probably antagonize your prospects. Skip the pitch, and instead build a website that serves as a true information resource.

Write and post articles that directly relate to your expertise - if you are a CPA, consider writing articles about financial planning or the importance of tax records; a dentist might write articles about the myths of gum care or the differences between common filling types. Provide a public place where you answer the questions of website users. Keep your website content rich and timely.

Write short and lean. Website users don't casually ease themselves into online reading: they want the facts now and they don't want to spend a lot of time finding them. This means that your content must be written in a lean and compact style that can be quickly scanned by the eye.

Keep your text pieces under 500 words, and preferably in the 250-350 word range. Use simple and direct sentences, in the clearest language possible. Don't make your readers wade through a sea of worthless prose, just to arrive at a small island of information: get right to the point and deliver the goods.

Think navigation. The best content on Earth means nothing if it can't be found quickly. Carefully organize your website in hierarchical format, with plenty of internal links - make all of your important pages only a mouse click or two from the top page. Deliver your content with as much convenience as possible to your visitors.

Appreciate context. Strong navigation design helps the left-brain surfers who know what they want, but many of your visitors will browse your site more creatively: they surf by context rather than placement.

Provide links within the content itself, pointing to other related information on your website. Develop clusters of associations in your content that allow readers to find information intuitively as well as logically.

Build community. Savvy Internet marketers are now learning what technologists have known for years: that the Internet is primarily a social medium. The most popular and profitable websites are those that foster community among their visitors. Provide facilities - forums, newsletters, mailing lists - for your clients to communicate with each other.

Be creative - help your clients turn your website into a favorite meeting place, a place to return to, time and again. Develop a website that your clients will love.

Professional marketing and copywriting
Copywriting client ID
Copywriting user password.

What is this?
Copywriting
Services

Website Content
Newsletters
Email Marketing
Brochures
White Papers
Case Studies
Articles
User Guides
Press Releases
Blog Content
Sales Letters
PowerPoint
PDF Documents
Fact Sheets
Advertising
Strategy
Website Analysis

Looking For An Experienced
Travel and Hospitality Copywriter?

I recommend Kristi Jepson over at Destination Copy - but only if you're looking for talent, professionalism and a passion for bringing travel to life with the English language.

www.destinationcopy.com
Internet Marketing -
Free Report!

"Ten Copywriting Blunders That Are Poisoning Your Website"

CLICK To Download

(c)2009 Robert Warren, Writer and Editor - Freelance Technical Copywriter, California and Florida Freelance technical copywriting home page.  Freelance industrial marketing top of page.
Orlando - San Francisco - Miami - Sacramento - Jacksonville - San Jose - Palo Alto - Sunnyvale - Tampa - Los Angeles - San Diego
Atlanta - Silicon Valley - Cupertino - Mountain View - Berkeley