How to Narrow Your Web Site's Focus
to Increase Profits
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by Doug Parr
Bob's Web site has sizzling graphics, professional
copy, a bevy of great products and affiliate programs, yet
his sales are almost nonexistent. "I don't get as many hits
as I should and most visitors never buy," Bob complains.
Bob's problem is his site is TOO big and diverse.
If his website were a big physical department store like Walmart
or Kmart, his broad line of products might bring folks from
miles around. On the Internet things work just the opposite.
It's hard to get visitors or sales without a
tightly focused site. Instead of trying to appeal to a big
diverse audience, focus your efforts on the needs of a profitable
niche. It is far easier to make good money appealing to a
smaller group of people who REALLY want and need what you
are selling.
Look for a group of buyers who are part of an
established market with a demonstrated need. It is far easier
to tap into an existing need than to create a new one. For
example, many people want to advertise with email but don't
know how to do it without spamming. You could build a site
that specializes in directing customers to reliable opt-in
email services.
Focus your site on one or two key products or
services that satisfy a niche that isn't crowded with other
providers. Your profits will be greater if you can sell your
own product or service rather than one supplied by another
company.
Create your own information products, commission
new software you can sell, or provide a service that most
customers can't do themselves.
Supplement sales with five or six reseller or
affiliate programs that closely relate to your niche. People
in your niche audience will see these as logical extensions
of your main theme Always try to have additional products
and services that let customers buy the next step in the process.
Sites that consist only of dozens of unrelated
affiliate programs generally don't attract many visitors or
make sales. Several major search engines won't list these
sites.
It is also much easier to get listed on search
engines if your site has a narrow, well-defined focus. A site
about "direct Internet marketing" will have an easier time
getting listed high on search engines than a site about the
more general topic of "marketing."