b. immediately figure out and resolve the problem
I assume you answered b; immediately figure out and resolve the problem. If not, you'd soon find yourself among the unemployed.
Parallels to a Web site
The same scenario is happening on your Web site right now. It's been going on since the day you launched the site, and will continue until the problem is resolved. In fact, most Web sites lose 80% of its visitors during the first impression (home page). Potential customers simply give it a once over and leave.
Ignorance is bliss
Dare I draw a deeper parallel? Imagine your prospect walking in again, and instead of rising from your chair to shake hands with a greeting, you remain seated reviewing your notes and say:
"Loading.... Please wait."
She stands there stupefied and insulted, to which you repeat:
"Loading.... Please wait."
Sorry Charlie, she's gone. Think she'll ever meet you for coffee again?
How to measure these lost opportunities
Grab your Web site traffic reports and locate the area called "single access pages." This metric is loosely defined as the number of times a visitor enters and exits a particular page without viewing another. Or in simpler terms, she enters and leaves before clicking through to another page.
How often does this happen on your site -- or on the home page? Once? Twice? Depending on your traffic volume, it probably happens thousands of times each month.
Putting the numbers in perspective
The best way to determine if your single access page volume is high, low, good, or bad is to compare it against the total number of visitors who entered on that page. Metric: "Entry pages."
For example, if 789 visitors entered your Web site on the home page, and 651 failed to click beyond it (read: single access page), the page is only 17.5% effective ((789-651)/789 = 17.5).
We have a well-crafted, relevant, industry standard term for these types of pages. We say they suck.
Pop quiz
What will you do?
a. ignore it, pretend it's not happening, and wait for the next opportunity
b. immediately figure out and resolve the problem
About The Author
This article was written by Rick Costello, The Web Site Profit Doctor.