Chris, a new consulting client, asked me to help him
increase sales on his affiliate marketing site.
As he was describing his site and the problem, I thought,
"This is going to be a quick fix."
How wrong I was!
His site was excellent. Other than a few minor points, it
followed all my basic rules for a successful affiliate
marketing site.
The site was focused around a single theme in a profitable
niche, with an excellent selection of high-priced,
high-commission products.
Chris had gone the extra mile to have his site
professionally designed, and it was simple, elegant and
user-friendly, employing consistent navigation and a nifty
database-driven search results system.
He was working directly with his merchant partners to create
ad copy that offered his visitors the best possible deals.
And he was advertising in the pay-per-click search engines
to drive tons of targeted traffic, and using hundreds of
keyword listings with brilliantly worded titles and
descriptions.
So, why on earth were his sales so low?
I knew I was picking at straws, but during our first
session, I made a host of recommendations for improvement,
which included:
- a domain name change
- a background color change
- reformatting the page table size
- rephrasing offers more positively
- adding relevant graphics and photos
- dropping poor performing merchants
- adding a newsletter
- adding new products
- redirecting non-buyers to additional offers
Chris implemented all my suggestions as well as a few of his
own. After giving the new version a few weeks to prove itself,
we scheduled our second teleconsulting session. I was
anxious to hear how well the site was now performing.
You can appreciate my dismay when Chris told me that his
sales had actually dropped!
Aargh!
I reviewed his site again, and it suddenly struck me...
he should try blue links!
Why?
Because web design convention suggests that links should be
blue, visited links purple and active links red. Although
nothing written in stone about link color, I believe that
those conventional colors should used whenever they
compliment site design.
I'd changed my own site links, Sage-Hearts.com, from
maroon to blue sometime before and noticed a nice
conversion rate increase.
Sure enough, that WAS the answer to Chris' site problems...
His conversions increased 1100% almost overnight JUST by
changing his link color to blue.
In addition to being underlined, people expect links to be
blue, and in some cases visitors may have problems with
sites that don't conform to their expectations.
With the average site visit lasting only about 8 seconds, we
don't have time to waste confusing our visitors with basic
site navigation. Use blue links if possible to keep your
navigation instantly recognizable, unambiguous and
consistent.
? Copyright Rosalind Gardner, All Rights Reserved.
Article by Rosalind Gardner,
author of the best-selling "Super Affiliate Handbook: How I Made $436,797 in One Year Selling Other People's Stuff Online". To learn how you too can suceed in Internet and affiliate marketing, go to:
http://NetProfitsToday.com