Cubic Compass Software

Web designers will often debate whether a B2B web site should be aethestically pleasing with rich graphics and clever copy or simply a bunch of well organized text with links to more information.

At i-Dialogue we strive to find a happy medium between the two schools of thought. But in the end, B2B sites with text-heavy copy and links tend to perform better.

In fact, this recent Marketing Sherpa case study showed that there was a 7% increase in sales and 13% less time spent on pages before clicking using a text-heavy design.

From the article:

... "He decided to test three significant changes:"

#1. Text-format with textual hotlinks instead of colorful graphics with click buttons.

#2. Main options listed in a vertical column instead of a horizontal row.

#3. Moving the user sign-in form to a small corner in the upper right of the screen, rather than allowing it more valuable real estate.

DeHaven ran the test for a week, splitting traffic to discover which page converted more visitors into sales. He also examined back-end data to see if sales reps were having better luck converting leads that had been to the test version of the site.

Then, DeHaven used results to create one more test panel. This time he tweaked all the hotlink wording on the page to see if longer, wordier hotlinks that search engines love would be better for human beings as well. (Link to sample below.)

The design team didn't think much of this test. "Everybody who saw it internally said version C was way too crowded and there wasn't enough white space. We worried people would see it and feel overwhelmed with links."

RESULTS
Turns out everyone was wrong. The heavy-text version that got thumbs down internally won more customer accounts than the cleaner, more graphical design.

It seems that business executives prefer to look at fairly plain textual content online rather than cheerful graphical interfaces. Plus, they prefer vertical to horizontal groupings of options and longer, wordier textual click links.

Read the complete article...

Posted: Thursday, August 24, 2006 10:05:48 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #   
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As was alluded to in a previous post, we've been studying the ins and outs of open source to offer web developers maximum control over their interactive web portal implementations.

Our parent company, Cubic Compass Software, recently made the transition to open source and we have BIG plans for the Salesforce .NET Developers community.

A .NET Portal Toolkit for Salesforce.com is in the works and should be available soon (definitely before ADN), complete with ASP.NET and C# source code examples on how to integrate your web site with Salesforce.com. Watch for a new Developers section on this web site.

Posted: Wednesday, August 23, 2006 1:27:46 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #   
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Problem: You need to create several personalized landing pages that have similar content, so you cut-and-paste the content from another page.

Google crawls your site, finds the duplicate content and penalizes your Page Rank because your site has the characteristics of a spam farm.

Background: Unscrupulous Search Engine Optimization specialists have in the past created hundreds and thousands of mock pages with nearly identical content in hopes of fooling the search engines into thinking their site is more focused on a particular keyword than the competition.

Therefore, Google bot has been modified to look for these "farms" of spam pages that contain duplicate content and remove them from the search results.

Solution: How does a honest Marketer go about creating several personalized landing pages that contain some overlapping or duplicate content? You simply tell Google bot to ignore the duplicate pages.

Here's how to do this in i-Dialogue:

1) Login as a site admin or publisher.
2) Create the personalized page with duplicate content.
3) Select Edit Page Content from the Tools menu
4) Un-Check the "Allow Robots to Index This Page" "Allow Robots to Follow Links on this Page" option and then click Finished (see screenshot below).

When Google, or any other META tag confirming robot, visits your landing page, the bot will simply ignore the duplicate content.

Posted: Tuesday, August 22, 2006 5:09:53 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)  #   
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