The Most Important Pages on Your Website

The Most Important Pages on Your Website

Do you know what the most important pages on your website are?

This may come as a shock to some of you, but most of you more than likely knew this already, some pages on your website are more important than other. For those that are not aware, the most important pages to just about every business website on web today are as follows:

  1. Home Page
  2. About Page
  3. Blog
  4. Contact Page

 

In this post I am going to explain how to optimize each of these pages so that you get the most out of your website.

What does “optimize” a web page mean?

You may have heard the word “optimize” used in reference to search engine optimization (SEO) or possibly conversion rate optimization (CRO). What I am actually referring to is a bit broader, but my advice can definitely be used to enhance both of these.

The optimization I am going to be explaining is to help you create a user optimized experience with your website. While pursuing SEO and CRO are important, it is more important to have your website optimized for your users.

How to optimize your web pages

The broad framework for optimizing your most important web pages is the same across your home page, About page, blog, and Contact Us page. There are two simple questions to ask of every page, and the specifics of optimizing those pages will come from the answers to those two questions. The first question is all about the user, and the second question is all about you. So here we go:

Question 1: What is your website user looking for?

Remember, we’re focusing on the user. Why are they on the page to begin with?

There are a few things you need to know:

Where did they come from?

The idea here is to understand the origins of the user, so you can deliver relevant content.
Did they come from a search engine? (If so, which query?)
An email? (What kind of email?)
A navigation menu? (What option on the menu?)
What do they need to know?

A single page can deliver a limited amount of information, so you need to determine what that information is going to be. You want them to know something so that they will then do something (which is addressed in the next question).

Remember: Less is more. The more information you load up on your main pages, the less likely the user is to remember any of it. Give them less, and they’re more likely to remember — and do — what you want them to.

Pro Tip: Use visuals such as explainer videos, diagrams, hero shots, and so on to help compact a lot of information to a single page. To get the most out of your visuals, make sure you correctly optimize your images and videos.

Once you answer the question of what the user’s looking for, you’re halfway there. That brings us to question two.

Question 2: What is your goal for the user?

Now, you need to ask the user to do something. This is where most pages fall short. One of the critical components of a web page is its call-to-action (CTA), and many website owners don’t realize that every single page of a website should contain at least one CTA.

The point of a home page isn’t for the user to see and depart. The point of a product page isn’t for the user to look and leave. The point of content marketing isn’t for user intake, but rather, for user marketing. If you retain only one thing from this article, let it be that every webpage needs a CTA.

Why am I so insistent? Because every shred of knowledge demands some response: A web page imparts knowledge, and that knowledge requires a response. So, what is it that you want the user to do? This is your goal for the user, and it must be clearly and starkly defined as you face the big optimization question.

The question is then, more specifically, what do I want the user to do? Knowledge alone is not enough. What is the application point for the page?

Tips for Optimizing Each Page

 

1) Home Page

  • Use a big headline, and place the most important information front and center.
  • Provide flow. Make it obvious where the user is supposed to go and what they are supposed to do next.
  • Make your CTA as big and obvious as possible. A home page may allow for several different CTAs — make it easy for the user to choose by making CTA buttons large and easy to click. Oftentimes, a user uses the home page as a way of finding where on the site she wants to go. For this reason, you should make the navigation menu very clear.

 

2) About Page

  • Deliver the most important and relevant information above the fold. The user is on your About page for a reason — answer their question(s) without making them scroll.
  • Include at least one CTA. Remember, most people aren’t just looking for more information they’re seeking a deeper level of engagement.

 

3) Blog

  • Organize information on your blog clearly, and make sure that information satisfies the reasons users might be on your blog. Most users will want to read the most recent articles, so provide these. You may also want to organize categories on the blog home page, such as “most recent,” “most popular,” or other forms of categorization.
  • Include CTAs that make it easy for the user to subscribe to the blog, download a free resource, and so on. Even though the user came to get information, you want them to get engaged and connected.
  • Provide CTAs in the core design of your blog so they appear on each individual blog post. In my experience, most blog visitors land on individual blog articles through organic search, instead of landing on your blog’s “home” page. To get these users engaged, put CTAs on the sidebars, in the footer, and other places.

 

 4) Contact Us Page

  • Put the information they’re looking for above the fold — an email address, phone number, contact form, map, mailing address, and so on. Of all four of these webpages, the Contact Us page implies the most detailed level of intent on the part of the user.
  • Use CTAs that allow the user to contact you easily (since, presumably, that’s why they came to your Contact Us page). Make the CTA really obvious, and engage them by gratifying their intent instantly, using CTA copy like ”Chat now!” “Email now!”.

 

In conclusion, here’s how to optimize pages like a pro: Look at your most visited pages, figure out why users are there, give them what they want, and ask them for an action in return. Regardless of your most-visited pages or even the nature of your website, you can create more engaged users. You’re in the business of not just dissemination information, but demanding a response. The knowledge you impart requires that users response. Ask for it.

If you are in need of professional web design or development services, or need help putting together your online business plan; please feel free to drop me a line.