Friday, September 18, 2020

"This is what we got . . "

 

“This is what we got.
If you want it, come in and get it.”

That’s how action-hero Jack Reacher described the window of a retail store in The Enemy. Nothing else about that book is relevant here, but the way he described that window reminded us of some websites we’ve seen. Not focused on tempting the user.

Your website is probably on a very short list of marketing tools you still have turned on. So it better be doing more than just showing up. What it better be doing is creating desire for your property.

Pre-Covid, you might have been able to just to sit back with a “Here’s what we got” website and get your fair share of bookings, more or less. Plus there was repeat business. You got some web traffic from PPC, some from advertising or PR and some just stumbled in out of the cold. A website with some beauty shots, room descriptions and special offers was generally serviceable.

Those days are over.

You’re probably advertising a lot less, so when you do get a visitor, you need to work it. Sell the joys and benefits of your property. Don’t just present information and let visitors draw their own conclusions. Even repeat customers need to be sold on coming back now.

The irony is, with revenues down, coming up with the money to re-vamp your website can be a challenge.

So there are two things here. There’s no getting around the fact that finding a way to invest in keeping your brand message alive and in front of people is worthwhile. Not necessarily because it’s going to fill the place up tomorrow, but because if you make that investment now, then you’re going to do a lot better a lot more quickly when things loosen up. That’s a fact. Maybe take a little bit from other budgets here and there. Definitely look into barters, trades and extended payments, but don’t just go totally dark.

Here’s something else. As beneficial as it might be to re-do your whole website, if you even just re-purpose your home page, you’ll be ahead of the game. The cost/benefit equation there can be pretty favorable.

Your home page is like those store windows. Or the guy who works the sidewalk outside a hoochie-coochie show. It’s there to hook your audience and give them a reason to come in and look around. And ultimately, spend money.

Don’t fill it up with mountains of copy nobody is going to read, SEO fantasies be damned. Make it easy for visitors to get the point and remember it. Be creative. Even if you have to get some help to augment the technical skills your web provider brings to the party.

And, while everything you’re doing to address the Covid-19 crisis is important, let’s be honest – that’s sort of expected these days. Everybody is doing it. So it shouldn’t be the lead or the focus of your home page – certainly not at the expense of selling your property.

So open up your website and look at your home page. Does it create desire?

Or does it just say “This is what we got. It you want it, come in and get it”?

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