Friday 3 January 2014

[Build Great Backlinks] TITLE

Build Great Backlinks has posted a new item, 'What Should I Put on the Homepage?
- Whiteboard Friday'

Posted by randfish
Homepages were once the ultra-authoritative one-stop shops of online brands.
As people and search engines have become better at understanding what users are
looking for, though, the purpose of homepages has become more targeted. In
today's Whiteboard Friday, Rand details several of the changes we've seen, and
offers his advice for what to include on a truly effective homepage on the web
today.






What Should I Put on the Homepage? - Whiteboard Friday





For reference, here's a still of this week's whiteboard!



Video transcription


Howdy Moz fans, and welcome to a new edition of Whiteboard Friday, the very
first one of 2014. Hope you all had a wonderful happy New Year and a great
holiday season, whatever you might celebrate.


This week, I think since January's the time when a lot of us revisit our core
web marketing and a lot of the times what we're doing on our websites, we should
talk about the starting pointâthe homepage. The homepage is a critically
important page for a lot of reasons. Oftentimes it's one of, if not the most,
trafficked web page that we have on our websites. It's also the starting point
for where people try and understand our brand and our company and what we do.


Substantively, its role has changed over the last few years with big shifts
like search engines being a little less focused around who gets links and how
that influences the keywords that you rank for, a little less about the homepage
being the only page that people land on, and whether they're coming just to the
homepage, or whether they go into separate sections of the site. What people
want and expect from homepages has changed over the years, what they expect to
find there, and, thus, what we as marketers need to do to deliver on those
expectations.


So I thought I'd start by talking about some of the old ways of doing things
with homepages and the new ways of doing them.


In the old way, we'd promote all of the major sections of the site on the
homepage. So you might have a homepage that's like, "Oh, check out our blog, and
here's our product, and here's this other thing that we're doing. Oh and this
new launch point." Each of these get featured, or they kind of scroll through
them. It's really the homepage very much competing for attention. You can think
of that Yahoo! homepage model being the discovery point for everything on the
site. If you don't get homepage real estate, well, you're not important.


This is totally wrong in 2014, because really we can make all of those major
sections easy to navigate to and find. We can focus very uniquely on just one
section, on just the most important things that the most important customers and
visitors are trying to get answers to and what they expect when they get to that
homepage.


We don't need to say like, "Hey, I have this great feature and this other
thing. Oh, we just launched this content. Let me promote everything, and I'll
just try and capture a small bit of everyone's attention." This focus is not
nearly as good as trying to be a little bit more of a, "Here's how to navigate
to these sections. Let me just promote the most important thing and make that
homepage more of a focused experience."


We've seen tons and tons of examples of folks A/B testing and testing
different versions of their homepage, and that focus, really, really critical to
driving people through.


Old way: focus on lots of keywords. A lot of homepages would focus on a lot
different keywords. The reason beingâit's not that hard to
understandâthe homepage, in the classic old, old Google, it would be your
highest PageRank page and, therefore, could rank the most things. Then, as
Google got more sophisticated and less about just PageRank, it was also the page
that earned the most links. Often, the anchor text was fairly diversified that
would link to that homepage, and so were all these other signals. So the
homepage could rank for a lot of stuff that other pages couldn't. So, "You know
what? Let's just smack all the keywords that we possibly can onto the homepage."


In the current model, we actually don't need to do that, because Google and
Bing have both become much more sophisticated about understanding, "Hey, this
site is about all of these things, not necessarily just this page. We're much
more considerate as engines of the site's authority in different areas and
around keyword terms and phrases. So, if that site has a page that specifically
focuses on these topics, you know what? We're going push that up there, even if
the page itself doesn't have all the signals that it needs to rank, because the
site does."


You inherit your site's strength and authority into your internal pages.
Because of that, I can now focus on a small subset of keywords on my homepage,
possibly only one or two, possibly not even any keywords. I can just think about
branded-centric keywords, not even unbranded keywords, and I can really have
landing pages specific to those unbranded keywords deeper down in the sections.


This also means that you don't have to make the focus of the homepage so all
over the place. You can get it much more refined and defined to focus on that
specific set of people who are coming directly there.


Because of this, too, the old style was to put lots of text to help the
homepage rank for all those pages. Now, we don't need that, but we really do
need to communicate quickly, because web users have become more and more
impatient. They're not going to read through paragraph and paragraph and
paragraph of text. Therefore, many, many websites have found it valuable to use
visual-centric homepages to help communicate and to quickly convey the primary
value proposition to those visitors. Sometimes that's a video. Sometimes it's
just an image or graphic that explains things really clearly. That can work out
great.


We also used to have to serve many types of visitors. This was both for SEO
reasons, but also because people would come for lots of different reasons and
then expect the homepage to guide them to whatever is interesting. Now, people
use search engines to find those different things around your brand and then
navigate directly to them. Social media is really about referring to specific
pieces of content, not just the homepage. Not like, "Hey, the Economist wrote a
great article. Go to TheEconomist.com" No, they're going to send you a link
right to the correct page. So you have a little bit more of that focus. You can
just work on the most critical visitors and their needs and the messaging that
you need to convey to them.


There also used to be this real concept of, "Keep it above the fold."
Thanks to things like tablets and phones, as well as wider screens and that
sort of stuff, now we do a lot more scrolling. We're used to a lot more
scrolling. So really people will scroll. I still urge folks to just make sure
you keep some page content at the scroll line or near the traditional scroll
lines, depending on your visitors' resolution. Keep that experience compelling
to draw the eye down. The thing you don't want to do -- I'll show you in my
sample homepage hereâthe thing I don't want to do is have the scroll line
or the fold line, one of the big traditional fold lines for my primary visitors,
be right here, so that it looks like I can get all the content I need above the
fold, but in fact there's all this above the fold. If the scroll line instead is
right here, and it bisects this secondary text section, perfect. Now I've drawn
the eye down. Now people certainly will scroll, and that stuff will have
visibility. You'll have that expectation.


So, speaking of this sample homepage, I'm going to talk about some things
that I, personally, would nudge folks and generally nudge folks to do on their
homepages. This is not to say that every single company should go with exactly
this type of homepage, but I think that these nudges can help to order your
thinking and to possibly give you some ideas about things you might be doing
right or wrong on your site, might want to test, might want to talk about as
you're kicking off 2014 with your homepage.


So first up, (A), right up top here, the logo and the nav. This is just
standard 101 stuff. My general bias is to keep this the same logo and nav as
other pages. However, the homepage is unique in that it's sometimes okay to be a
little different from other pages on the site. I would urge you to have
consistency across the rest of the site. If your homepage has to be a little bit
varied because of some things you want to do, that's okay. But I like that nav
staying consistent throughout the whole site. That's my general bias.


(B) Check out this image. I'm going to imagine that I'm Pocket, Pocket app,
which I have on my phone and I use on my desktop and laptop computers. It's a
great little app. The idea is that I've got an article that I want to read,
maybe on a plane, and I want to read it on my phone. But, of course, I don't
have a wi-fi signal on especially international flights, but even most of my US
flights. Or I want to read it just anytime. I'm sitting in the car on a long
drive down to Portland. Great. So I can click and save any article, any web page
I see on the Internet, I can save that to Pocket and go fetch it for later, and
it automatically caches. So I don't even need a web connection to be able to do
that. I love Pocket app. It's great.


But explaining it with a bunch of heavy text and having like "read things
later" and lots of different keywords stuff, that probably doesn't make sense.
What does make sense is, "Let me quickly and easily explain it to you." So
here's a guy, he's on his phone, and here's his thought bubble saying, "This is
cool, but I wish I could read it later." Oh. "Go to Pocket, and now you can.
Read anytime on any device without a web connection." Ah-ha! The value
proposition of Pocket app is instantly conveyed in a visual format, which, as we
all know, human beings are much better at taking visual cues and interpreting
information from visuals rather than text alone.


So that's (B). Visually explain, make it visual, to easily explain what the
product, company, service does. I want that visual. I would urge you to test a
visual to easily explain what that does. Show it to a bunch of people who have
no idea what you do. If they grasp it, great.


If you offer lots of products, make sure to convey the value proposition of
what you do. If you're a clothing brand and you offer lots of different things,
"Well, which picture should we use?" Well, quickly convey what your unique value
proposition is. What it is about your clothing line that's so great, that's so
much better? Is it where it's made and that it's hand crafted? Is it the quality
of the material? Is it price? Is it something else? Make sure that you're
delivering that unique value proposition. So I've got this (C) section. Does it
work for XYZ? Like, "Well, can I use this on my Android? Can I use it on my
iPhone? Will it also work on desktop?" Ah-ha! Excellent. I'm going to be
empathetic and intuitive. Oftentimes this comes from experience. You know the
things that, as soon as someone hears about your product, they instantly have
these questions. So just answer them right there. I really like that section
existing on the homepage. Then you can go into more detail in product pages as
well.


(D) I like giving social proof. So lots of websites do this on their
homepageâshowing the logo of news outlets that have covered them or big
brands that use them that are very trustworthy or testimonials. I personally
have found a lot of value in testimonials. I like them quite a bit, especially
when they're people who your audience knows who that person is. So you see an
Avinash Kaushik or a Wil Reynolds or a Will Critchlow recommending Moz, you kind
of go, "Well, I know who those guys are. They're very impressive, well-known web
marketers from across the industry. Let me check that out. That must be good."
So that's social proof credibility signals.


And the last thing that I really like having on your homepage is a call to
action. Last, but certainly not least, a call to action. "How do I install
this?" "Well, you do this, you do this, or you do this." So, for Pocket app, it
might be, "If you have an Android, go to the Google Play Store. If you have
Apple, go to the iPhone store. Want to use it on your desktop? Install the
widget right here." Great. Cool, right? There's my call to action just sitting
there, ready for me to go and do something. I think guiding someone to that next
step is a key part of how successful a homepage operates. Then you can really
test the success of your homepage as well, based on whether people engage and go
there.


So I hope you've got some great ideas for your homepages in 2014. I look
forward to hearing from you all. Thanks so much.



Video transcription by Speechpad.com
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