Landing Page Makeover Clinic #28: IntelligentEditing.com

This is another addition to our ongoing series of tutorials and case studies on landing pages that work. Daniel Heuman’s software helps writers, editors, translators, and proofreaders prepare error-free documents with greater ease and speed. He tried and abandoned PPC (pay-per-click) advertising, as he discovered the folks who clicked through weren’t his best prospects. (That’s a technique that almost certainly deserves some more thought and attention another time.) Daniel is now marketing directly to prospects via email and showing some success, but he feels more can be done. Let’s see what we can do. The Goal: Generate enough free-trial downloads to sell 3 licenses a day. The Problem: If folks are downloading a free-trial and not converting, it’s a product vs. value problem. If the problem is growing the numbers of prospects to take the free trial, that’s a traffic problem. If interested prospects are visiting the site or landing page and not engaging with the message, that’s a conversion problem. The Current Landing Page (homepage): http://intelligentediting.com Value: $90.00 Click image for larger view The Maven’s 10-Point Critique My personal take is that Daniel needs to generate enough traffic – via organic, SEM and social media channels – to grow his own mailing list to which he can continue marketing to his heart’s content. A stronger, more effective homepage would offer an overall boost to his ongoing marketing efforts. #1– Make your case in the first screen with a strong, provocative headline. Why would a professional writer or editor pay $90 for additional proofreading functionality? The rational reason: Cleaner, error-free documents. The emotional reason: To look better in the eyes of a boss/client/customers. Sloppy work reflects badly on the writer and the company represented. Clean work makes everyone feel good and confident. So while the current headline: “Proofread Faster, Proofread Better” is a clear statement, I’m wondering how we can juice it up a little? How about: Just One Typo Can Rob You of Credibility and Cash You’ve just gone from “reasonable” to “irresistible” with a provocative headline that resonates emotionally with the visitor. #2 — Add more oomph to the tagline. Again, your tag is very clear on the most basic of benefits: Cleaner, Smarter, Better Documents That’s a good start, but then I’m thinking … why and for what? A great exercise for headlines and taglines is to take your basic feature or surface benefit and “Why? Because!”or “So what?” your way through it until the core emotional truth is revealed. Try working these words (or their variants) into your tagline: polished presentation reflection #3 — Invite your visitors to take your video tour from the get-go. You already have a nice little video, yet you’ve basically hidden it from view. Slap it on your homepage and do a voice-over track. I found watching the material without a guiding voice unnerving. Your voice-over would allow you to expand on the action in the video and highlight those areas of greater interest. Don’t hide the good stuff. Warm it up and share it. #4 — Be upfront about who this product is and isn’t for. The only place I see “MS Word for Windows” is in teeny type under your box illustration. I’d give this more push so Mac users can grunt and grumble under their collective breath and move quickly elsewhere. #5 — Keep sprinkling the goodies that keep visitors thinking “This is for me!” Highlight the product’s ability to proof both British and American English. This capability strikes me as huge benefit for writers/editors working internationally. You also have a strong guarantee. Get it on a homepage badge and show it off. And you make customized versions — another wow, especially for those working in big organizations. #6 — Rework your navigation for greater clarity. You’ve hidden a lot of the product goodies in secondary position in terms of your primary navigation. I suggest the following revisions: Primary navigation HOME Features Success Stories (Testimonials & Case Studies) Reviews Resources Download & Pricing Contact Us Secondary navigation: About Us — FAQ & Tutorials — Forum — Blog — Support #7 — Build your traffic organically with smarter SEO. This is your current title tag for search: Intelligent Editing — Cleaner, Smarter, Better Documents A tagline, though, isn’t necessarily a good meta title — and it’s the title tag plus the content that Google sizes up and determines your topic and site relevancy. So let’s adjust and get some primary keyword phrases in the front of the title like this: Proofreading & Editing Software for MS Word Documents :: Intelligent Editing I didn’t do the research to determine if these are indeed the best keyword phrases , but you get the idea. Frontload the terms that your prospects are using to find you … and add the product name, too. #8 — Build your mailing list with a newsletter and a blog. Since your email campaigns have been pretty effective for you, that means you need to add more names to your list so you can continue doing — and expanding on–– what works for you. Add a newsletter sign-up and offer one or more of your current resources as a bonus for subscribing. Add a blog, too. It doesn’t have to be fancy or involved. See tumblr.com or preposterous.com for some easy-to- implement ideas. #9 – Connect with your prospects with social media. Build your authority in this niche space on this niche topic via Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn. If there are writer/editor specific social media venues, make sure you have a presence there, too. Social media is a long-term strategy to building credibility and a fan base that trusts you and ultimately your products for purchase #10 — Tweak your homepage with one big Call to Action. Click image for larger view I’ve tweaked your current homepage to reflect and illustrate the suggestions I’ve made here. (I know you didn’t want me to, but honest, I just couldn’t help myself. ) You could easily flip the placement of the video and headline/bullet/call-to-action sections. (Mea culpa for the incomplete sentences, dangling participles, and other little idiosyncrasies that make editors weep and gnash their teeth. All I can say in my own defense is this: “I’m a copywriter.”) My thanks to Daniel Heuman for his patience and support of Heifer International. Look for my next makeover in approximately 4 weeks. About the Author: Roberta Rosenberg is The Copywriting Maven at MGP Direct, Inc . Find her @CopywriterMaven on Twitter. If you’re interested in a private page makeover, site audit, or other services, please email Roberta directly .

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Landing Page Makeover Clinic #28: IntelligentEditing.com

Landing Page Makeover Clinic #27: HiddenSoy.com

This is another addition to our ongoing series of tutorials and case studies on landing pages that work. Most days I just don’t know what’s safe to eat or drink, but I’ve always thought that soy was a better, more nutritious choice for my protein needs — didn’t you? More vegan and all that. Well, that’s not the way Dianne Gregg sees it. In fact, she thinks the stuff is downright dangerous to your health and well-being. Ever wonder how much soy is actually lurking in the food we eat, unannounced and unidentified? Dianne has the goods on that info, too, and she wants to share. She’s got a blog, a newsletter, and a book. She wants more subscribers and she wants to sell more books. For the purposes of this makeover, we want to focus on growing her subscriber base. Grow the subscribers and the book sales will follow. The Goal: Increase subscription rate to 100 new subscribers weekly toward the overall goal of converting subscribers into buyers for her book, The Hidden Dangers of Soy . The Problem: Need more traffic, unable to directly track sales from promotional efforts, including social networking, article writing, blogs, etc. The Current Landing Page (homepage): hiddensoy.com Value: $17.95 (a little cheaper at Amazon) & $10.50 e-book Click image for larger view The Maven’s 10-Point Critique #1 — Focus your readers’ attention with a strong establishing headline. Your content doesn’t offer a clear entry point (I’ve highlighted the different areas where you dance all around it) where you connect the dots for the visitor. You need a strong headline to tie it all together, like: “Could All the So-Called “Healthy” Soy You’ve Been Eating Actually Be Making You and Your Family Sick?” (A variant for moms could be: “Could All the So-Called “Healthy” Soy You’ve Been Giving Your Family Actually Be Making Them (and You!) Sick?”) It’s not enough to just present the danger; you need to make it personal. #2 — Focus your content on the single most important thing you want visitors to do. Here’s a heat map I did for your current site. (Courtesy of Feng-Gui.com .) Notice how your newsletter sign-up area doesn’t light-up at all. The main focus is on your book cover and your headshot. If the goal is to increase newsletter sign-ups, then all content — directly and indirectly — needs to support the visitor from first view to action. Your current content is a disorganized hodge-podge with no clear path from A to B. You need to put your book and its ancillaries in a secondary position and push your newsletter forward. Also, does your newsletter have an actual title? I couldn’t tell from your current content. If not, give it one. Add “Dianne Gregg’s” in front of the name, just like you did the website. #3 — Focus your content on building your authority and credibility for the topic. Since you’re focusing on you and your expertise, you want to give your visitors enough info on your experience, background, quality of information you present, etc. Starting with your personal story is fine, but you want to bring in scientific and medical experts as well as fans to support your expertise in this space. You do this in your book section, but there’s no reason why these kudos wouldn’t apply as general testimonials, as well. Use them that way. Get them on the homepage where they’ll do you some good, as well as a separate section on the navigation. (Please note that a poorly written testimonial from a medical professional undercuts its value to you. All testimonials — from experts and just folks — should be written in clean and properly spelled standard English.) I like the audio player. I might consider doing a video intro, as well. #4 — Provide intuitive paths for your visitor to move around the site. If you’re going to use your homepage as your main landing page, you need to have a navigation strategy that organizes your content for your visitor in a common-sense way. Right now, you have ZIPPO navigation which makes moving through the site a tedious, frustrating exercise, even for the most committed soy-information seeker. Here’s a recommended first pass: HOME PUBLICATIONS Newsletter Book TESTIMONIALS ARTICLES RESOURCES BLOG ABOUT DIANNE CONTACT You have a lot of content on the site that could easily be thrown into these or equivalent buckets. Don’t make your visitors hunt for what they need. #5 — Rethink and reorganize your homepage/website from the ground up. Detecting a theme here? Sites that do a great job of organizing their content through intuitive navigation and clean, supportive design make for a comfortable and pleasant visitor experience. The easier and more pleasant the visit is, the longer the visitor stays on your site and engages with your message. I found this simple WordPress blog template (courtesy of Notepad Theme Demo at IThemes) that provided a reasonably good format as a jumping off point for a possible redesign. Click image for larger view What works well here is that it allows you highlight several different inputs for visitors to interact with, yet still focuses the primary attention on newsletter sign-up and you. #6 — Rework the current banner. Most people, including myself, wouldn’t know a soybean from a chick pea. I don’t think the image of the soybeans underscores the ‘dangerous food’ motif. I’d substitute a new banner that’s clean, clear and forceful about your topic. #7 — Clarify your calls to action. Right now, your call to action focuses on “Send me free stuff.” There’s no connection to the benefits of your topic (I want to stay healthy) or even that I’m getting a monthly newsletter ( Subscribe or Join us now ). Again, connect the dots for your visitor. Remind me of the value of what you offer and how great it is that I’m going to get this important health information every month — free. #8 — Clarify the newsletter specifics. I read your newsletter page several times and wasn’t sure how the newsletter was formatted or what information/regular features came with it. If this was a print publication, you’d talk in terms of number of pages, size, a number of main articles and a few regular features. So using this as a model, how can you translate this kind of detail to a description of your digital newsletter? Give your prospects specifics. Design a cover visual and pop a thumbnail into the newsletter box on the homepage. Make it real. #9 — Clarify the bonuses new subscribers get. You offer a ton of free information for a sign-up (as noted on one of your interior pages), but I’m not sure what format they’re in. Are they individual reports? Articles? Separate emails? Again, be specific. Don’t just list a title and call it done. Add 1-2 sentences of description and detail. Add a value to each bonus offering, as well. Tally them up, restate the value of good health in the face of lies, and make a strong call to action that makes the prospect ‘gotta have it’ — and wrap it all with a big fat call to action button. #10 – Strengthen your SEO title and description (critical). I did a quick search for “soy risks” on Google and you were nowhere to be found. That’s because your pages are missing those super important SEO title and meta descriptions. Here are your current listings: The Hidden Dangers of Soy; Dianne Gregg Here’s another way of going about it: Health Dangers of Soy, Are You At Risk? Get Free Newsletter | Dianne Gregg Do your keyword research . What are the words and phrases people use to find your info? Those are the words and phrases that will form your site glossary for content as well as SEO and make it easier for people to find you. My thanks to Dianne Gregg for her supreme patience and support of Heifer International. Look for my next makeover in about 4 weeks. Want your own Copywriting Maven landing page makeover? Got a landing page that’s more poop than pop? Need to get better results from your online marketing? If you’re interested in a private page makeover, site audit, or other services, please email Roberta directly . About the Author: Roberta Rosenberg is The Copywriting Maven at MGP Direct, Inc . Find her @CopywriterMaven on Twitter.

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Landing Page Makeover Clinic #27: HiddenSoy.com

Hoover Institution Interview Of Rupert Murdoch

In this video Peter Robinson of the Hoover Institution interviews Rupert Murdoch. Murdoch owns the controlling interest in News Corporation, which in turn owns media properties on five continents — properties that include some 170 newspapers, dozens of television stations, half a dozen television networks, a publishing company, and a movie studio. Murdoch discusses his media empire and the current state of the newspaper business, as well as other issues on Uncommon Knowledge. Murdoch’s best quote is at 9:13 into the video in response to Dan Rather’s plea for a government bailout of the press. Murdoch says – “I think you’re talking rubbish… we don’t want government money in that we want a free press.”

2 Hoover Institution Interview Of Rupert Murdoch

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Hoover Institution Interview Of Rupert Murdoch