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Persuassive Architecture Means Measuring the
Ability of Your Site to Sale
With
some experience, design can be used to strongly influence customer
behavior on your site. Whether customers buy, signup, come back
or offer testimonials about their experiences is all a matter of
persuassive design. Now that part is pretty straightforward, though
not easy, but what is often understated is that to a greater extent
the influence of design can be measured online and quite effectively.
Measuring the influence of your design
Because site design is far more than colors, flash or graphics,
getting customers to do more of what you expect them to do should
be your goal. Design can be a statement about the strength and value
of your business or conversely, it can punctuate where it is weakest.
These painpoints can and should be measured almost daily.
Measuring the influence of design on customer interactions has
become easier with every technological advance forward from the
legacy of logfiles through Webtrends or Urchin to the flagship of
web analytics in Coremetrics. What we used to call facts about your
site were really based on statements of subjectivity about design.
We'd make comments such as, I don't think. We believe. Our experience
shows..".
Web analytics has begun to take the guesswork out of site management
it helps site owners measure, manage and realize greater return
on their investments, faster. But tools only carry you so far, the
results are often in what and how you measure.
Site owners now use statements about conversion to describe the
success of their web sites. Successful conversion begins at the
first point of customer contact typically revolving around the homepage.
Measuring the influence of your design is easier than you think.
Understanding how you can influence customer behavior is the key
to improving your business over time.
You may be interested in
measuring leads, sales, registrations, pay per performance or
signups. The first step is easy. What
can we help you measure next? |