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repeat visits to the website?Once a Webmaster knows his client’s customer, he can anticipate the customer’s wants, appeal to the right emotions and show that customer how the client’s product or service will benefit the customer. The discerning Webmaster must also try to understand the industry within which his client operates, his client’s competitors and what these competitors offer in comparison to what the client offers. If any of the competitors has a website, how customer friendly is the website? Does navigation within the site make it easy for the competitor’s customers to make orders? Can the customer have his most cogent questions answered right there on the Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) page without having to go through the pains of writing a mail? Can the Webmaster then create a website for his client, that will outsell the competitor’s site in these areas? While the client sometimes provides a brief explaining the kind of website he thinks he wants, the truly innovative Webmaster may go beyond this brief to add value. A word of caution, however: this should be discussed with the client. Websites are marketing tools The fundamental reality of how people use the web can be seen in the following comparative descriptive sketches of offline and online buyer behaviors. Offline, bustling crowds of would-be shoppers (or prospects) pass by your place of business (take a busy mall, for instance) and some of them may walk in, if your shop occupies a vantage location, your wares are attractively displayed and they can notice both. Online, however, people search for information. There are millions of people, but no crowds and each person searches alone. So, while the offline businessperson thinks of a vantage “location”, the online businessperson must think of relevant “information” or “content”, information that meets the needs and interests of the target market. The Power of Search Engines People who visit the web are looking for information and
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