Writing your business website's content is a daunting task. You don't know where to start. Or, you don't know where to stop.
Well, follow the simple directions here, and you'll write the content for a fully functional, search engine indexable, six-page business website in 60 minutes. More importantly, you'll have a sensible website organization that can expand logically as you add content.
The time limit is part of the solution. It forces you to simplify. There will always be more details you want to add. If you try to get your website content completely written all at once, you'll be overwhelmed with minutiae. By imposing limits on how much time and effort you spend on each section, you get your main points said and your website done.
First, prepare to write your website. Think about the words and search phrases a potential customer would use to find your website. Don't worry about keywords in the meta tag sense. Most search engines recognize meta keywords for what they are: planted words intended to attract hits. Instead, search engines look at the content in your website, and determine relevance from that.
So, take two minutes to write down six to ten words or phrases that describe your business and the information people can expect to find on your website.
Use nouns and verbs (such as plumber, plumbing, and emergency). Avoid adjectives (such as fast) and superlatives (such as best). Put stars by the three or four most-important keywords.
Keep this list in front of you as you write, and make sure your keywords are on every page of your website.
Next, write your home page. This is where you tell who, what, where, when, why, and how. Who you are. What you do. Where your business is located. When you're open for business. Why someone should choose you over your competition. And, how to contact you.
Most of this is easy. You know your name, business, address, hours of operation, phone number, and email address, so five of the six items are a matter of moments to write. Your business name and description will automatically contain some of your selected keywords. You'll spend the most time on the why. Just think of what you'd say to a customer if he or she asked why to pick you over someone else. Refer to your list of keywords as you write, because every keyword should be somewhere on this page. If a keyword doesn't fit naturally on this page, you need to question whether that word is truly a representative keyword.
Next, write a products or services webpage. This is an extension of the what component on your home page. If it takes you more than two or three minutes to put a list together, then you probably need to narrow your focus. Ideally, you'll be able to take a moment to say a little about each item on your list. Depending on your business, this may be the section in which to provide pricing information. Remember to try to weave your keywords into your copy. Take no more than ten minutes for this section. If after five minutes, all you have is a list, then so be it. Create category headings (which should reflect keyword choices), alphabetize it, and move on.
Later, you can expand this webpage with more products or services, more descriptions, or it may become a page of links to product or service categories on separate webpages. Either way, you have your essential information written.
Next, write a webpage called qualifications or résumé or about me/us or something similar. This is an extension of the who component on your home page. If you have a résumé handy, this webpage is done. This should take about five minutes, less if you have the information close at hand.
If you have other key personnel, you might want to put each person's résumé on a separate webpage, with this page becoming a page of links to the individual résumés. You might also add a paragraph about combined years of experience - but don't worry about that right now.
Next, write a webpage called experience or case studies or clients or applications. Here's where you list a few of the projects you've handled, or the types of clients you've served, or the ways your products can be used. You'll have time later to add more description, so don't obsess over it right now. If it's a list, longer is better, but be satisfied if you just get category headings. This may become one of your largest sections, which is why right now you should spend no more than eight minutes writing this.
If this section later grows unwieldy, as it often does, you can break it up into multiple webpages based on the category headings. However, for the time being, you've at least got the basic information to build on and you've got a page with your keywords in a relevant setting.
Next, write a section called FAQ or Q&A. Here's where you answer a few common questions about your product or service - if you've been in your field for any length of time, then you know the top three or four questions. Start with those. If one of those isn't about your prices or shipping policy, then add those. This is another opportunity to add keywords and search terms throughout your copy. Spend about ten minutes here.
Finally, write a webpage called why - advantage or benefits you offer. Here's where you tell what makes you different from your competition. It's an extension of the why component on your home page. Remember at the end to close the sale. This might take some thought, so spend five minutes thinking and five minutes writing, for a total of ten minutes.
You're not done yet. Spell-check your document. Then, read it through one last time, checking for facts, grammar, and blatant omissions of essential information. That should take less than ten minutes.
You now have the essential content for a basic but fully functional six-page website that can be indexed meaningfully by search engines.
The website content you just wrote has other uses. You could turn it into a six-panel brochure. And, the copy for your why me/us webpage could be used as ads, postcards, or in-location posters.
For a 60-minute investment, you've just developed a business asset that'll pay dividends in many areas for years to come. Saving money. Saving time. And making the most of both.
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