by Catherine Franz
By Catherine Franz There are five types of people that browse the web: When you identify the type of people you want to come to Specific Information Seekers (SISers) To convert Specific Information Seekers into prospects, you SISers like to ask questions, usually diving right into the SISers like several different levels of information. With They also like an up-to-date websites with changing Their decision to buy is usually immediate if you have what In a retail store, SISers browse the aisles. They know what Even though this group only reads what they need from a Current Information Seekers (CISers) Current Information Seekers are curious people who find CISers enjoy reading a high portion of the newspaper and Use caution, this group does make suggestions that can lead To use this group to your advantage define one or two topic CISers compare before buying. If everything is the same and CISers aren't a great group to receive testimonials from This leads us into the next group, the group that chases Bargain Hunters Bargain Hunters shop free for anything. Converting them to Add a monthly giveaway at your site and you will attract The upside to this group is that they are easy to please -- Since "deals" travel fast, be assured that if you offer a Contests and games attract them as well as giveaways that Like the SISers, Bargain Hunters also respond to detailed Bargain hunters are completely different from the next Entertainment Seekers (ESers) Entertainment Seekers get bored easily. They frequently They frequently visit the horoscope, recipe, sex, drugs, and Bright contrasted pages, black and multi-colored backgrounds You will need to provide them with "advertainment". Provide Unlike the next group, this group likes cleverness, however, Specific Buyers (SBers) Specific Buyers have something in mind that they want to
(1) Specific Information Seekers
(2) Current Information Seekers
(3) Bargain Hunters
(4) Entertainment Seekers, and
(5) Specific Buyers.
your website, or the type of people coming now (for those
who already have a site), as well as what gets them there,
what keeps them there, then and only then can you design
your site to attract the type of visitors you want.
will need consistent marketing and multiple trust building
strategies. SISers usually search for a particular piece of
information. If you have it, they will visit and might stay.
If not, they want to find out fast that you don't and poof
they are gone. This group is after timely and relevant
information. It is an either/or decision -- either you have
it or you don't. If their search engine searching
continuously sends them to your site and you have on several
occasions let them down on having the information, they will
see the URL link in the search engine and not ever return.
question, giving little or no background to the question.
If they have a deep sense that you have the answer, they
will generate a quick e-mail to you. They are frequent
visitors to the FAQ (frequently asked questions) pages. If
you want to attract the SISers, track all the questions
customers and prospects ask, provide answers, and post on
your site. You can make them happy by placing the answers
in larger or bold print.
each click you can barrel down the details. You can do with
an overview page and then in a separate page add the full
description and other details. Design the overview page for
on-line reading (large font, white space, and fast, flowing
language) and the detail pages for off-line reading
(printable).
information. If the "last update date" is older than one
week, or if your articles have old dates on them, they
usually will not even enter the site. First impressions
mean a lot to them and determine if they will ever return.
Credibility is the second decision maker for this buyer. Do
not compromise the integrity of the information you provide.
If you're an affiliate just say so, they don't mind.
they want. This group reads by scanning on the Net. They
will scan and read bold, colored and highlighting in long
sales letters.
they are looking for before they enter a website or store.
Retailers call these people aisle browsers. In a store,
they walk through a store, first checking the aisle
platforms for bargains. Men do fall mostly in this
category.
book, the next group, CISers read the whole book.
everything interesting. They can be reading about Mars and
next learning about cooking, and later into something
different. They purchase material based on whatever is hot
in their life at that moment. Usually they over purchase
material and get behind in their reading. Yet, that backlog
does not seem to bother them, they would feel empty without
it.
read the whole book. They want something
interesting...something useful...something they would not
have found on their own. They want something that will give
them an edge, an advantage, an insight, something
unexpected.
you astray. They also cannot understand why others pigeon
hole (their viewpoint) themselves with their businesses.
They value exploration and freedom.
categories that fit in with your niche. Then change the
material daily or weekly. In addition, since they are so
busy running after the latest and greatest, you will need to
make sure they are consistently aware of those changes.
Send them updates. They will find the frequent updates
useful, interesting, and amusing even if they've heard them
a million times before. They will return frequently.
Frequent updates will keep you on their hot list and
bookmarked.
your shipping is 3 cents less they will buy from you.
However, they make sure they are exact offers. If you have
something that looks more attractive, whether it pertains to
their needs or not, they will also purchase from you.
unless they have used your material and it has worked for
them in some BIG or EXTRAORDINARY way.
free.
customers is tough because of the "free blinders" they wear.
As long as they think they can find it somewhere free, they
will keep searching for it. Time to money ratio for them is
distorted -- even if they spend 40 hours looking for it and
the offsetting cost is $10. They relish in the challenge of
finding it free. They also like to brag about how they
found it free (use this to your advantage).
these visitors. It does not always need to apply to
anything they are interested in -- they want it because it
is free. They may print out a 200-page free ebook and still
think it is a bargain because it was fr*e*e. They don't make
a connection that printing equals cost.
just offer them bargains. The downside is that there is
less than a 1% chance you will convert them to customers
unless you offer them free for a long time. Sometimes you
hear them comment something like, "I've been checking out
your web site for years and I've finally decided to buy from
you."
deal they will pass along the message at lightening speed.
Great viral marketers in this sense. They can create noise
to other ready buyers.
accompany an order. Adding lots of fre-e bonuses to your
deals work well with this web browser. Suggestion: Make
the bonuses available after a purchase. Freebies are great
pullers to get them to visit your sales page. Pile it on,
they have a weak no threshold.
product information. They also like to justify what they
are buying to others. And for this they need to know the
benefits very clearly.
group. The next group age range is from teenagers to 30-
year-olds. Between 30 and 40 the need for fast
entertainment begins to subside.
browse the web when bored. They like interactive games,
interactive contests and flash. You can attract them if you
provide animation, sound clips, contests, games, and the
latest and greatest in technology deliveries.
music pages. They begin browsing at their favorite sites,
then move towards searching for new latest and greatest
stuff, and then return to playing their computer game. If
the first page seems flat, they don't even go past that
page. They assume the rest is boring as well. The
exception occurs if they enter and can transition to SISer
mode seeking a specific piece of information.
pull them in. Holding their interest is tough because of
the Internet's relatively flat presentation. If you want to
convert them to customers, your product has to offer them
the same type of perceived entertainment before
they will buy. Keep the same color palette as well.
advertising that sells your product while providing
entertainment value -- similar to the info-mercial strategy
used in television advertising.
the next group is the one that most independent
professionals want to attract.
buy. They demand an easy ordering process and fast
delivery. They want it now. Prefer ebooks to the wait time
of a book purchase. Make the benefits of buying very clear.
SBers like ideas and creativity. Add a "what's new" page or SBers also like to purchase things in complete packages – a In Conclusion Now that you can define who you want to attract, keep in 1. Know your current customer profile well. About the Author
Catherine Franz, a Certified Professional Marketing &
some type of interactive shopping helper (help them to make
a selection) to your site and they love it. For services,
you need to offer a phone number they can call, preferably
24/7 and 800, where they feel free to ask questions without
obligation.
package with all the answers to their challenges. A package
that gives them everything from A-Z so that they do not have
to look any further. Because of this, they usually do
comparison shopping to find the best package for the best
price.
mind these five overall steps to get people to buy on your
web site:
2. Know what they are looking for on the web and how
they browse the web.
3. Choose the best approach to attract these buyers.
4. Deliver what you want to attract on your site. Like
attracts like with all energy.
5. Make it easy for them to buy from you.
Writing Coach, specializes in product development, Internet
writing and marketing, nonfiction, training. Newsletters
and articles available at: http://www.abundancecenter.com
blog: http://abundance.blogs.com