| Web Site Checklist Can Help You Plan for Success |
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Web sites are popular. Are Web sites good business? I think so. A Web site can help you establish a brand identity, describe your product or service, sell your product or service online and create a home for your company—be it a firm with you as the solo entrepreneur or a small business with 100 or more employees. First, don’t invest in a Web site without thinking about business strategy, the purpose of the Web site, maintaining the site and cost. Treat a web site as a component of how you will succeed in business. If a Web site makes sense to help you grow your business, then and only then take action. Second, if you decide to launch a Web site, establish business goals and a Web site outline. Set clear expectations for the site and define the scope of the project. Your Web site can be effective without becoming a monumental project with a lot of complex features. Choose what’s best for your business and keep the focus on building awareness, marketing products or services and giving customers/potential customers access to your company
To help you think through the Web site as a strategic business
tool, we have developed a topic-by-topic checklist. This checklist is
designed to give you some key points to consider before creating a Web
site and some ideas about technical questions you will want to answer
to be sure a Web site runs effectively over time.
Web Site Strategy
Web Site Set-up 2. FLOWCHART—Did you think about preparing a flowchart to identify all the components of the Web site? Have you identified what subjects within the site might link to other subjects? 3. COMPUTER PROGRAMMING—Will you need custom computer programming to enable features on your site? Do you plan to have a guest book, shopping cart, order forms or a calendar of events? Do you want any information or interactive inputs to be related to a database for marketing or sales purposes? 4. COMPETITION—Who are your competitors online? Of those, which competitor sites do you like and why? What competitor sites do you dislike and why? How can your site beat the competition? 5. HOT LINKS—What Web sites would you like to link to? What Web sites do you want to link to your site? Have you thought about registering your site with search engines? 6. TEXT & GRAPHIC SCANS—Is all of your content both text and graphics in electronic form? Will you need to have photos or artwork scanned into electronic format? 7. SEARCHABLE—Do you want your entire site to be searchable by users? Have you thought about what vendor can help you set up this and other features? 1. FREQUENCY—How often will your Web site be updated? Do you plan to update daily, weekly or monthly? 2. HYPERTEXT MARKUP LANGUAGE (HTML) SKILLS—How proficient are you or the person(s) maintaining your site with HTML? Can you afford to have a vendor update your site or do you need to update in-house? 3. STAFF VS VENDOR—Who do you foresee maintaining your site? How much will it cost? Will staff prepare content and a vendor handle HTML conversion and posting to the Web site? Are you willing to pay a monthly fee for site maintenance? 4. TRAINING—If you or your company will maintain the site, have you planned for online administration tools? Will you or an employee need HTML and web site management training? Web Site Marketing 1. MARKETING TOOLS—What forms of marketing will you use to promote the web site? Do you plan to place the Web address on all stationery, business cards and brochures? Will you place ads, send direct mail or market the site online or a combination? 2. INTERNET PROMOTION—Are you planning to register the site with search engines? Will you contact the media to review your Web site? Do you plan to buy any Web banner advertising on other sites? 3. STATISTICAL FEEDBACK—What do you want to know about visitors to your web site? Do you want to know where they came from to reach your site? Do you want to know what pages on the site were viewed? Do you need to know the total number of hits and page views? 4. ACCESS LOGS & REPORTS—Who will review the Web sites access logs which record some of the statistical information mentioned above? Will reports about hits, page views and popular site elements be compiled monthly? The World Wide Web has the potential to contribute significant profits to your business by expanding your market area, providing suppliers information about your current inventory levels, giving customers online access to product catalogs, allowing online purchases, and by simply bringing attention to your company. However, a Web site can also be a drain on company resources: if it is not set up with users in mind, if usage isn’t measured correctly, if top management isn’t committed to maintenance of the site or if the site is poorly organized and doesn’t attract visitors. Plan your Web site before you spend money. With forethought you can create a powerful Web site for your business. |