March 28, 2024

How to Build a Website that Adds Value to Your Brand

Brands are powerful. When a business is successful in creating a brand, it almost works as if the power of inbound marketing is at play (even without the actual digital equivalent of the entire inbound marketing process). Customers trust the brand enough to spend their hard-earned money on your products and services. They’d go out of their way to spread the word. Customers don’t think twice before buying products or services of particular brands ñ irrespective of the price ñ since they believe in what they will get in return. Brands have value embedded in them.

Brands, however, are not limited to large business groups and companies worth billions of dollars. Everyone should strive to create a brand and that includes individuals and small businesses. Since building your website is usually the first step towards the entire subset of work that goes into building your brand, here are ways to make your website work for you to add value to your brand:

Simplicity succeeds for a reason

How to Build a Website that Adds Value to Your Brand

Simplicity is almost always a part of success stories for a reason: it’s just the way we humans are. We might fancy something complicated but we won’t be happy with it. Simplicity has a way of easing up things. It has a way of getting things done. Simplicity is in everything from effective writing to some of the world’s best designs. Try anything complicated and you’d lower your chances of success.

Keep your web design simple. If you are a small business, all you’d need are a couple of pages about what you do and a blog (and maybe even a well-laid out store). You’d not need a ton of pages with content bleeding through the edges. You certainly don’t need flash. You get the drift, don’t you?

Make the website for others, not for you

Let’s go back to life 101: no one cares about you; at least not as much as you think they do. Most businesses end up building websites to show off how large or successful they are. Their “About us” page extends into multiple scrolls and almost reads like an unfinished book. Their blog posts are almost always about the conferences they participated in, the weekend party they had, an employee’s birthday they celebrated, and the brand new features of their product.

While all of that is good, it’s just not that important. Focus on building and maintaining a website for your readers, visitors, or customers. Don’t make it about you, because your customers don’t care. It’s your customers who buy from you, so why build a website to satiate your craving for personal branding (use your personal website or blog for that)?

Invest in the “first impression” elements

How to Build a Website that Adds Value to Your Brand

Since all businesses start from scratch and have no brand to speak of, there’s no empirical evidence on how good your products or services are at this juncture. A few things, however, can still make customers trust you. These elements might seem mundane and insignificant, but they aren’t. Assuming you started with a catchy name to build your brand on, create a logo that is simple and yet captures the significance or meaning of what your brand stands for. Developing a logo like that requires investment but it is well worth the effort.

The colors you use for your website, the placement of buttons, the way text is aligned, the responsiveness of your website, and the graphics will all create those important first impressions that will be your only trump cards when you are just starting out or when you are in the initial stages of building your brand.

The copy talks: So, what does it say?

Brands help customers gain impressions of what your products and services solve their problems. While the logo, the graphics, and the overall look of the website does determine first impressions, your website copy helps solidify these first impressions.

When customers begin to read your web copy, dig your posts on your blog, and even notice nuances such as writing ìGo on. We know you want to read more… instead of just read more you know that your copy is working for you. It’s no coincidence that some of the greatest copywriting samples are the reason why some businesses still rock the boat.

What is your marketing story?

How to Build a Website that Adds Value to Your Brand

Sonia Simone of CopyBlogger writes about five things every marketing story needs: you need a hero, a goal, the truth, and a moral. Among other things you need the power of storytelling. You’ll need to persuade, motivate, inspire, and captivate your audience. Merely doling out ads by the dozen, writing bland copy that you hope will drive conversions, and publishing trite content regularly because everyone talks about content marketing these days isn’t going to help.

You will need a story. Your business needs a purpose. Identify that purpose and find a way to reiterate this purpose throughout your website. Make it all easy for your customers to know you, love what you do, and trust you to solve their problems.

No value is possible with glitches

Most websites have links that lead to 404 pages. Worse still, clicking on links (broken) take customers nowhere. The navigation is too clunky, pages load slowly, and most of the important content goes below the fold so visitors have to scroll to read what you are all about. The design is uninspiring at best with nothing more than all-too-common royalty photos. Some pages don’t even load completely, and you sometimes have problems with shopping carts, irresponsive buttons, or forms that just don’t function.

These might seem like little things but it’s these little things that matter. Customers are notoriously low on patience. Once they leave, you have lesser chances of getting them back to you (even with new marketing methods such as retargeting).

Get all this right and you are on your path to create a brand. Your business is now on the verge of providing value (and also being able to communicate about it) well enough. While a lot of things go into websites, copy, your marketing strategy, and your brand, these are at least the beginning steps you need to take.

How does your website achieve the critical task of communicating value?

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Abhishek Agarwal heads Rightway Solution, which develops functionality-focused cross-platform mobile apps. Abhishek is also an astute responsive web design specialist – you’ll find his articles on all the leading design blogs. Catch him @rightwayindia on Twitter.

12 Comments

    1. Abhishek Agarwal Reply

      Cameron,

      Do you mean in the sense it was a bit basic? It’s a reminder of the fundamentals, which most web designers overlook, regardless of whether they know them in the back of their minds or not.. Do let me know!

  1. Bianca Board Reply

    “Trust is built on first impressions.” Ain’t that the truth. I’ve done a lot of split testing on website and changed models to see if they would influence sales. And yep… obviously they do. It’s amazing how simply changing the sex of a model will improve sales.

  2. Omer Reply

    I am very thankfull to you for this. I was searching this for a long time. It is very helfull and interesting material for me.I appreciate you for the informative work.

  3. Jake Reply

    Great post! Often times as designers and developers, we get caught up in what ‘we’ think is best. However, at the end, its all about the visitor and what they think.

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