Website Strategy 101: The Importance of Effective Website Architecture
Creating websites that convert visitors to subscribers is the heart and soul of Internet database marketing
Making money online requires converting your casual website visitors into paying subscribers or customers. That means you must take all the traffic coming to your website and start relationships with those visitors that will eventually result in product sales.
Landing pages are the driving force for any successful Internet marketing program. A well-crafted landing page will maximize the possibility that a user landing there will take the action you desire and not click away.
Unfortunately, too many publishers allow designers to create complex and complicated sites that the average user can’t begin to navigate. Their “website architecture” is arcane at best and incomprehensible at worst.
When a user arrives at your website, whether from a Google organic search, a paid advertisement, or a colleague’s website link, you’ve taken a giant first step in making a customer.
But if that visitor can’t instantly see what you’re offering, and know, intuitively and with certainty, what it is you expect them to do, it’s game over. If they are confused, frustrated, or simply bored by your landing page, you’ve missed your opportunity. Chances are they will click away within a few seconds time, never to return.
So, how do you get users to stick around, to eventually get to your data collection page, credit card in hand and ready to buy? The key lies in crafting effective landing pages that are designed to handle the multiple sources of traffic to your website.
Effective website architecture requires your attention to the technical, aesthetic and functional aspects of designing and planning a website — all focused on the needs of the user.
Learn how to optimize every page on your site by downloading our FREE 12 Master Landing Page Templates white paper.Are your LANDING PAGES under-performing, but you’re not sure how to TEST and TWEAK them?
Our SIPA/Mequoda Landing Pages that Work webinar on June 10th features two experts: BLR’s Bob Brady and Kiplinger’s Greg Krehbiel. LEARN MORE...Job #1 for successful publishers: Building a database by using your website to convert visitors into email subscribers
The essence of online marketing is building a database of potential customers and marketing to them, both on your website, and with editorial and advertising email messages. Email can account for up to 60 percent of online revenue. In fact, some publishers on the B2B side tell us that every name and email address in their database is worth an average of as much as $70 annually.
Clearly, Job #1 for an effective website is building your database — adding names and email addresses to your list. This is true for both B2B and B2C publishers, both ad-driven and product-driven.
We have identified nine pages for editorial content that should be affected by publishing any singular email-capture page (aka Rapid Conversion Landing Page). The following diagram graphically depicts how they work together to attract organic traffic, ultimately converting casual visitors into subscribers.

The homepage should tell your users exactly what you want them to do, which is to download a free report and/or sign up for a free email newsletter. The most important and visible graphic, button or section of your homepage should be dedicated to collecting the user’s email address.
The topic page is dedicated to one primary area of editorial content. For example on Fuelnet.com, a site dedicated to marketing smarts for the small business owner, if you look in their left hand navigation, you can see that they have 19 topic pages. Here’s a topic page on “Customer Relationship Marketing”. When a user lands on this page, they can see a list of the articles Fuelnet.com has ever posted on that topic, they are also pointed to the RCLPs from this page.
The article page contains narrative content, with the objective of capturing the users’ interest in the editorial content and leading them to browse more content. We call an article a Minimum Information Unit or a Post.
Article pages should be designed as permalink pages, which means they each should have a URL and a hypertext link that will remain valid after the article is archived on your website. Here is an example of an article page. Every article page should point to the RCLP of a related free report.
The subject (or tag) index page is analogous to the glossary in the back of a book. The subject index page is essentially a list of your site’s keywords, in alphabetical order, each linked down to an individual subject meta-page. Here is an example of the subject index, or tag glossary page, on Fuelnet.com.
The subject (or tag) meta-page is a directory of articles, images, or other online media that have been tagged with the same keyword. This page on the FuelNet site is an example of a subject meta-page. This page points back to an article page which points to a related RCLP.
The author index page is simply a list of all the writers contributing content to the website, much like a contributor’s page in the front of many magazines. These pages came into existence when publishers noticed on their internal search logs that a lot of website traffic was arriving via organic search of their website’s authors. This page on the Business Management Daily site is an example of a great author index page.
The author meta-page is a biography for each of the contributors, and frequently includes a list of the articles they have written for the website, usually in reverse chronological order. This page on the Business Management Daily site is an example of an author meta-page.
Learn how to optimize every page on your site by downloading our FREE 12 Master Landing Page Templates white paper.Are your LANDING PAGES under-performing, but you’re not sure how to TEST and TWEAK them?
Our SIPA/Mequoda Landing Pages that Work webinar on June 10th features two experts: BLR’s Bob Brady and Kiplinger’s Greg Krehbiel. LEARN MORE...


January 29th, 2009 at 3:25 pm
Your article is very informative and useful. Glad I found it. Cheers.
February 3rd, 2009 at 2:49 am
Nice post! Internet marketing is indeed gained popularity and has earned its spot of being a money making IT field.
February 3rd, 2009 at 5:35 pm
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February 11th, 2009 at 10:43 pm
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