What makes a home page convert your visitors into customers? Is it the copy, the design and layout, the navigation, the perceived value of your product or service?
The answer is all of the above. But effective copy is a key element that propels a visitor to click for answers to his or her decision points and then take action on your site.
A home page copy makeover offers some great lessons on how small changes in wording and design can yield significant business results. In this case, the number of solid leads generated by this small business site tripled from five to seven a month to 15 to 20 a month. Here’s how they did it:
Before: www.max-effect.com/oldsite
After: www.max-effect.com
Max-Effect, a company that designs display ads for yellow pages, had a frustrating problem: It was getting good traffic to its site through pay-per-click advertising with Yahoo, but visitors were not turning into leads. In other words, its home page wasn’t “converting” clicks into customers.
Max-Effect consulted FutureNow, www.futurenowinc.com, “conversion rate” consultants who eliminate the barriers preventing a visitor from taking the desired action on a Website to convert to a customer, a subscriber or a qualified lead.
The “before” home page copy
Max-Effect’s old site, www.max-effect.com/oldsite, was “not that bad,” according to FutureNow’s CIO Bryan Eisenberg. The 800 number (i.e., the call to action) is displayed prominently. Still, the home page, in particular, had some obvious problems. The light-colored text on a dark background was hard to read. The bright red logo was hard to decipher. It was not clear where to start and it wasn’t clear where to go next (hence, few conversions to sale).
Key copy points were buried in italics below a non-inspiring headline. The most prominent bit of copy was a purple scrawl that expressed a negative spin on what MaxEffect offers: “eliminate yellow page advertising hassles forever.”
Max-Effect agreed that FutureNow would rewrite three key pages (home page, ad samples page and contact us page) to make them friendlier and to encourage visitors to pick up the phone and call to place an order.
Simple design on a white background
The design was changed from a dark to a white background and kept deliberately simple. Colors were modified from the rather-jarring purple and red to the warmer blue and orange. The new logo is more up-to-date looking. The overall effect is to make the home page more cheerful and inviting.
Reorganized copy elements
The somewhat randomly placed blocks of copy on the old home page were reorganized so that the eye is immediately drawn to the central headline: “Maximize your investment.” It’s short, positive and plays off the company name.
Precise, specific language replaces generic phrases
Underneath the headline, the central copy points are listed again as a series of bullets, but they’ve been completely rewritten. Generic phrases such as “save you money,” “save you time” and “eliminate frustration” have been replaced with more precise examples of MaxEffect’s value proposition: “Your customers will … be drawn to your yellow page ad more strongly than anything else on the page. … Recognize that you are the solution to what they’ve been looking for.”
Good copy propels a visitor to click for more information
Below is a formula for call-to-action copy on a Web page:
• Make the text scannable by bolding key phrases (this may not be appropriate for every site; it seems
to work on the new Max-Effect home page)
• Use interesting, informational headlines and subheads
• Follow the AIDA principle (engage Attention and Interest, stir Desire, stimulate Action)
• Give the reader immediate satisfaction by anticipating and then answering his or her questions
How to write an effective text link
Use hypertext links strategically. A visitor looking to buy (or compare) always has questions. Make each text link “an imperative with an implied benefit,” advises Eisenberg.
In plain English, tell ’em what to do (“Find out more” is an imperative). At the same time, imply that visitors will find the answer to their question as soon as they click on the text link.
In this way, well-crafted copy can convert readers into buyers by anticipating and satisfying their questions and by filling in the missing gaps at each step of the conversion process.
The take-home lesson
Good copy is integral to successful conversion. In addition, flaws or inefficiencies in design or navigation—or too many steps—can hamper conversion to sale.
Copyright © 2002 WordBiz.com, Inc. Used with permission.

Debbie Weil is president of WordBiz.com, Inc., www.wordbiz.com , and publisher of WordBiz Report, www.wordbiz.com/archive , an enewsletter I recommend for its cogent analysis of what makes words drive revenues online. She can be reached at debbie@wordbiz.com.