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What’s a “Landing Page” and Why Should I Care?

June 16, 2014 by Dennis Fischman 2 Comments

There are really two meanings to the term “landing page.”

Each one answers a different question.

Question #1: Where do people go on my website?

Not everybody who looks at your website starts on the Home page.  Some people may go directly to your blog.  Others may start on the page where you advertise your jobs.  Partly, it depends on the search term that brought them to your website to begin with.

A “landing page” can mean the first page the visitor to your site sees.  You can track each visitor’s journey from the landing page to the last page they look at before leaving (the “exit page”), and everywhere in between, using Google Analytics.

Why would you want to know where people go on your website?

  • To make your website more useful to your audience.  If visitors read your About page and then leave–it is both their landing page and their exit page, so you have a high “bounce rate“–you might want to make that page more enticing.  You’d rather have them explore your site and get to know you better.
  • To nudge your audience toward where you’d like them to go.  You probably came to www.dennisfischman.com today just to read this blog entry.  You might not even know that the blog is part of a larger website, or who I am.  But knowing that the blog is a lot of people’s landing page, I’ve given you a lot of other things you can do on this page:
  1. Use the tabs at the top to see my business website and to contact me.
  2. Go to the search box in the right-hand column to find out what I’ve written about some other subject that interests you.
  3. Follow me on Facebook or Twitter.
  4. See other recent blog posts.
  5. Find out more about me.

You can do the same.  Pretend people who visit your site are tourists.  Give them maps, guides, free gifts, and other reasons that make them want to stay longer and explore.

But “landing page” can also mean a stand-alone web page designed for a single focused objective.  It can answer Question #2: How do I make it easy for people to sign up for something?  We’ll explore that on this blog tomorrow.

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Know Your Audience Better, On a Budget

June 12, 2014 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

And here are some thoughts from Steve Heye about tools that small nonprofits can use, that larger ones can’t: http://steveheye.blogspot.com/2014/06/small-org-tech-setup-example.html

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What Nonprofits Can Learn from Scott Brown–How NOT to Do It

June 10, 2014 by Dennis Fischman 1 Comment

Sooner or later, someone will accuse your organization of wrongdoing.  When that happens, don’t act like Scott Brown.

Brown is the former U.S. Senator from Massachusetts whom Elizabeth Warren turned out of office.  He moved over the state line, and now he’s running for the Senate from New Hampshire.  He started out with great name recognition.

But now, his campaign is in trouble because he accepted stock worth $1.3 million to advise a Florida company, GDSI, originally founded to sell beauty products on its merger with a bankrupt firearms company.

Brown initially denied that there was anything wrong with GDSI or his role there. Then on Wednesday, June 4, he resigned from the company.  On Friday, June 6, the Boston Globe reported the company had lied about the value of the company it was acquiring.

Where Brown Went Wrong

I’m not a fan of Brown’s.  I don’t know anything about corporate mergers.  But I can tell you that from a public relations perspective, everything Brown did was wrong: both before and after he resigned from GDSI.

If you ever face a possible scandal, do the opposite.

Before: No one at the Brown campaign seems to have understood that the GDSI connection would destroy Brown’s brand.

  • Brown portrays himself as a good old boy who wears a barn jacket and drives a pickup truck.  Somebody should have asked: How does that jibe with being a high-paid corporate advisor?
  • Brown claims to be a truth-teller and a straight shooter.  Dodging questions about GDSI for days and then resigning because “it had become a distraction” looks like being just another politician.  Did nobody realize that?

 

What you should do instead:

  • Get an outsider’s perspective.  Find out how you look to people who don’t know as much, or care as much about your organization as you do.
  • Reinforce people’s sense of what’s right about you and act decisively to address what’s wrong.

 

After: In his Massachusetts race and his time as Senator, Brown started to acquire a reputation for being thin-skinned.  The way his office responded to the news of GDSI’s allegedly fraudulent press release reinforced that damaging perception.

“Your conspiracy theories and assumptions are completely wrong,” Brown’s communications director, Elizabeth Guyton, said  in response to [Boston Globe] queries.  She did not elaborate, and Brown would not agree to an interview.

Even allowing for the Globe’s “gotcha” journalism, that was a poor response.

 

What you should do instead:

  • Sound concerned.
  • Get the whole story, and put it out first.
  • Give the media what they need, so they’ll move on.
  • Remember that people will find out how you speak to the media. Be unfailingly polite and patient, and never defensive.
  • Rally your allies.  Prominent people outside your organization and clients of your organization can help you restore your reputation…and change the subject.

 

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