Websites are
impersonal ways of communication and so they require strong confidence building
measures to keep visitors and get them to return to the site. In this post, we
have compiled 16 things that could turn people away from a website. Web
builders/designers do forget to note and implement some of these
recommendations even when they have themselves been irked by some of these
things on other people's website. That happens to most of us but working with a
simple guide like this one can help overcome some of these problems. This guide
could therefore be simply referred to as a guide to what not to do when
designing your website.
16 Reasons
Visitors Hate Your Website
1) Slow
Website Speed.
People have
real trouble waiting for websites when the load time is very high. According to
a KISSmetrics report 47% of consumers expect a web page to load in two seconds
or less, and 40% abandon a website that takes more than three seconds to load.
Even a one-second delay decreases customer satisfaction by about 16%. This can
have very strong and negative impact on website bounce rate. Faster loading
website can help reduce bounce rate more than most other factors.
Slow loading
time frustrates your site visitors and affects conversion rate and brand perception
-- especially for mobile users, who are sometimes relying on slower cellular
internet connections when browsing the web. How does slow load time impact
brand perception, you might be wondering? According to an Ericsson study the
longer it takes a website to load, the more website visitors blame the content
provider instead of their mobile internet service providers.
So,
optimizing your website load performance should be a priority and you need to
spend time and research into getting it right below 2 seconds. If you are
running a content management system, you need to pay attention to caching. Page
load time can also be impacted by poorly optimized images, code, videos, and
other factors This can be addressed by plugins if you built your website with content
management systems like WordPress
2. Website
is Not Mobile Friendly
If you are a
mobile phone user and browse with your mobile phone, you should have come
across some websites that you will have to scroll from side-to-side to read
copy on a website or zoom to view the text content of the website. These are
the painful UX people can have on websites that aren't optimized for mobile.
Google
announced a major mobile algorithm update n summer 2015 that penalizes websites
that aren't mobile-friendly, and announced it would strengthen the ranking
signal from mobile-friendly websites starting on May 1, 2016. That simply means
you have to take mobile friendliness very seriously.
The major
reason why Google continues to make these changes is to improve the web
browsing experience for mobile users. So if your site isn't optimized for
mobile devices, you'll likely lose out significantly in the organic search
rankings.
3) Poor
navigation
When someone
visits your site, do they get confused about what to do, Where to go, What
their next steps should be. You have to make navigation easy and clear to
things easy for your website users.
A research
by Small Business Trends suggests that 80% of small B2B business websites
lacked a call-to-action -- as recently as 2013. They were missing out because
they simply didn't provide any direction on their website or ask people to
click around.
To address
this problem, you will have to include clear headline copy, jargonless page
copy that explains the value of what you do, and a clear primary call-to-action
that shows visitors how to take the next steps -- whether that's subscribing to
your blog, getting a free trial, watching a video, or any other action you hope
visitors will perform on the site.
4) Excessive
pop-ups.
Pop-ups can
sometimes be very annoying. It disrupts users flow while browsing.
If you're
going to use pop-ups there is a right way:
Use them in
moderation. That way, you aren't constantly bombarding your visitors with
content they may not be interested in.
Make them
smart. Making them smart means displaying a different pop-up (or no pop-up at
all) to different types of visitors based on whether they've visited your site
before, or whether they're at a certain stage in the buying cycle.
Track them
for effectiveness. Assess the number of views and clicks on each pop-up along
with how many submissions the pop-up actually leads to. If you find it isn't
performing very well, consider editing or removing it to create a better user
experience for your visitors.
Use
delightful copy. Far too many sites use language meant to force visitors into
taking the desired action. Use a polite language and give them the option to
say no.
Use small
banners that slide in from the side or bottom of the page with a
call-to-action. They tend to be less obtrusive, providing users with more
information while still allowing them to continue reading the piece of content.
5)
Multimedia content that auto-plays.
People are
mindful about how their internet resources are used and do not just want to be
taken by surprise. If someone's enjoying what should have been a silent
browsing session and suddenly gets bombarded with your theme song or a talking
head on a video for which they didn't press play -- especially if they can't
find the button for stop - this can be very annoying for people who are very
mindful about noise and the use of their internet resources.
6) It boasts
disorienting animations.
Animations,
autoplay videos, blinking and flashing paid advertisements, and other
interactive entertainment may seem a good way to sell an idea or product very
quickly but if they're too obtrusive or disorienting, they can detract
visitors' focus during those critical three seconds. Interestingly, visitors
dislike this. Keep any animations on your website as simple as you can.
7) Too Much
Generic Photography.
Working with
images is great as they can represent a thousand words and ease understanding.
But sometimes, we use generic images to create a wonderful impression about our
company and people working there. We want to show images of happy people and we
end up taking internet photos and use generic images showing the impressions.
It ends up placing some questions in users mind about the reality about your
company or business. You've got to be real and believable with your
presentation.
cool A
Contact form With no Additional Contact Information.
Users want
to be sure that they are dealing with a real company. On the contact us form,
you should have more information about a physical address and telephone number.
A Contact Us form should not be used just to generate a mailing list.
We have seen
users using a contact us form to generate a mailing list and end up with lots
of spam mails. The reason being that some persons just contact you with fake
email entries just to test your contact us form and when you take such entries,
you end up with lots of spam mails. You also need to realize that using the
contact us form for opt-in email list is really the least valuable form of lead
generation for you and your site visitors. Not only is it terribly generic, but
it also doesn't indicate whether or not the contact actually wants to receive
ongoing communications from you. It's more likely that they have a one-time
problem or request that needs to be addressed and may not want further
communication on other issues.
9) Poorly
Crafted About Us page.
Does your
About Us page truly explain what you do? Your about us page should be truly
professional in the use of language and should tell the reader that you know
your business, know what you do and understand the terrain.
10) Website
Fails to Clearly Explain What Company Does.
Similar to a
bad About Us page, it's will be a huge mistake and frustrating for users to
find that your website does not clearly explain what company actually offers.
You should be able to clearly present who you are, what you do, how you do it,
the advantages you offer and why you are better than competition and so on.
Your work and the products and services you provide along with the benefits
should be clearly understood on your website.
11) Too Much
Focus on Keywords - Keyword Stuffing
Keyword
stuffing had been an old practice way back around the year 2000. Website owners
will over use a keyword in order to gain search engine advantages. Those copy
were written for crawlers not humans. Today, it is recommended that you write
for humans and not the crawlers. Avoid overuse of keywords because you want to
force a high search engine rank. That's no longer beneficial and can really
frustrate your efforts at a good presentation. Write for your target visitors
and human users and not for bots.
12) Missing
social sharing buttons on content.
Having the
social sharing button on your site makes it easy for people to share your
content on the social networks. Rather than copy and paste, it is good to have
the social share button allowing your users to simply click and share.
13) Not
Having a Blog
Some website
owners think they do not need a blog simply because they may be a small company
and not interested in regular posts or publications. Many think that blogs are
for publications and news alone.
The fact is
that although not having a log may not necessarily turn visitors away, it
actually will have some effect on your capacity to attract new visits and even
to get repeat visits. Blogs are an attraction for people who want to learn new
things, get the latest advice, get product updates. Some companies feel too
small to run a blog because their activity level does not support a weekly of
bi-weekly update. No matter how small your size and activity could be, you have
some events and news to report and so you need to have a blog.
A blog will
help you provide fresh content to your website and attract web crawlers to
revisit and index your content. Search engines like fresh content and so having
a blog is a good way to gain their interest.
14) Titles
and Headlines Not in Congruence with your Content.
Build
content along the titles you have created. When titles and content are not in
congruence, in increases bounce rate as users get irritated with content.
Remember that visitors are attracted by titles, when the content does not meet
their expectation based on the title you have provided, then there is a
problem, a gap that creates user dissatisfaction.
15)
Call-to-action Not in Alignment with the offer.
Ensure that
your call-to-action delivers what visitors were offered. If you offer a free
one-month website hosting plan, do not hide it under a conditional clause for
them to subscribe to a 3 year plan before they can enjoy the one month free.
Out rightly, offer them a one month free hosting for a 3 year subscription.
When you
mislead your visitors by offering them a kind of bait-offer that is hidden in
conditions, you are not only insulting to your visitors, but it will also hurt
your reputation and conversion rates.
16) It
contains internal linking that isn't user-friendly.
Internal
links are useful both for visitors and search engines. It actually help search
engines link your internal pages very fast. When done correctly, internal links
are helpful for readers and website alike. They point readers to other relevant
information, and help you improve the organic ranking for important pages on
your own website. But some websites seem to have trouble executing internal
linking correctly pointing users to irrelevant pages, linking strange phrases
within the copy, and overdoing it to the point of making content unreadable.
Let's know
what other website mistakes drives you crazy and could get you to abandon a
page. Lets have your comments
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