Archive for the ‘Uncategorized’ Category

Is optimizing a webpage really that hard?

Posted by Edo on May 16, 2012 - 10:57 am

Every good question usually comes with an annoying answer: Yes and No. On one hand, it is so much harder to drive organic traffic to a website than it is to change a font color or image – and doing those small things can often improve a sites usability and conversion. BUT – on the other hand, we dont have a magic crystal ball that can tell us what changes to make. So while making changes to a site is easier than driving traffic, at least we know what we need to do to drive traffic…

We all wrestle with this dilemma daily. Here is my advice and what I do with seevolution.com

1. Relax : ). You can’t really go wrong with either effort, but having a fresh, stress free mind often prevents us from making really bad decisions (like complete re-designs for no reason or thousands of dollars spent in ad words)

2. Pick one page – not the whole site, and run some basic heatmaps on that page. See what people are clicking on, where the fold lies, and what people are paying attention to. Here is an example. We recently launched a page displaying our click maps and upon running a scroll overlay on that page I noticed that only 50% of that pages visitors actually saw the sign up button on that page. Adding an additional call to action, via a button or link in the text will take me 5 minutes to deploy. That is time worth spending.

Example:

3. Now that I’ve made one improvement to that page, I will probably spend a little money driving traffic to that page and see if my click through rates on that that page improved at all. I do this with click heatmaps and with some metrics that I pull from Google Analytics.

4. Pick another page and do the same as above. Making small tweaks using intelligent tools is relatively easy and affordable. You don’t need to think of entire site re-designs to drastically improve conversion and usability.

Here are some real-world tweaks that our clients have made using heatmap analytics:

  • A lot of sites have a large banner on the homepage, but then use that same template for the rest of their site. Using scroll heatmaps, we’ve uncovered that most times, this design negatively affects the internal web pages conversion rate. Removing the banner or making it more narrow can allow more products and calls to action to sit above the fold.
  • Adding links to text early in the copy. What does this mean? Let’s say I sell beef jerky on my website and my intro paragraph on my product page says, “our Turkey Jerky is low in fat…” Having the word Turkey Jerky be a link to that product’s page can make a huge difference. Use click maps to determine how users click on those links.
  • Change verbiage and tag lines to be less subjective and more objective. An example: Our products are fun and great – try them  VS Our Products are BPA free and weigh less than 5 oz.

In short, optimizing a web page can be easy is you follow the following principles:

1. Use intelligent analytics tools

2. Optimize one page at a time

3. Start with small easy to change tweaks like the ones listed above

Good luck!

Edo

 

SeeVolution Gets Recognized Once Again

Posted by Chris on April 11, 2012 - 11:51 am

SeeVolution Keeps On Winning

Recently, our friends at Web Hosting Search which is one of the leading web hosting, design anddevelopment guides online is featuring Seevolution as one of the bestwebsite monitoring resources for 2012.

With the number of recognitions growing under our belt, we assure to be always ahead of the game just to provide our clients with the best services
to identify the strengths and weaknesses of their websites.

Passover, Easter, and Heatmap Analytics

Posted by Edo on April 06, 2012 - 12:30 pm

As we enter the holy weekend for Jews and Christians, I’d like to first and foremost wish a happy Easter and Passover to our readers and users.

Both holidays share a simliar theme: humility. Easter via fasting (durring Lent) – which removes physical pleasure to achieve higher spiritual awareness and repentance; and passover by removing leavened bread from ones diet. Bread represents arrogance, and matzah represents simplicity and humility.

In creating and launching SeeVolution, our aim was to provide website owners, designers and product managers with tangible takeaways on how to improve ones websites. Heatmaps are core to this principal. They show a website’s essence: what people actually care about and provide instant visual examples on what can be stripped, removed or improved.

This coming Easter and Passover, let’s use the tools around us to access our core and strip our lives with unnecessary fat – websites included : ).

Have a happy and healthy holiday weekend!

Edo

CEO
SeeVolution

8 Celebrities Who Caught The Start-up Bug

Posted by Chris on December 19, 2011 - 12:41 pm
Ashton Kutcher

Ashton Kutcher loves investing in start-ups

This article is in response to Christina DesMarais’s Inc magazine article about why L.A. is the “New, Hot Place to Launch.”

Los Angeles is a big playground. It is bursting with beaches, movie stars, theme parks, and enough restaurants, bars, and cafés to satisfy two megacities. The latest trend among Hollywood’s elite is not a hip new restaurant or sheik clothing line, but indorsing and investing in tech start-ups. What was looked at as geeky or un-popular 20 years ago has finally become what all the cool kids are talking about.

The realm of Twitter is particularly fascinating. If you are on Twitter and following celebrities we could consider you innovative.  Innovative in the sense that your parents might not be on Twitter, but they still know who Ashton Kutcher is.  The amount of influence that these people carry is astonishing. They can drive more traffic to a website with one tweet than a blogger or SEO strategist can do with months of hard work. Real power. Real influence.

If you’re in the celebrity’s shoes, it is a lot more fun tweeting about a new startup that you are involved in at the ground floor than say a Nike or Reebok. It is about more than just money. It is about building something really cool that you can say you were involved in at the beginning. People often generate their best work when they feel they are part of something special as opposed to a mere financial incentive.

IdeaLab, Launchpad.la, MuckerLab, StartEngine, UpStart.LA, Science, and Amplify are start-up incubators that have launched in L.A. Further proof that the entertainment industry is no longer the only kid on block in L.A.

Why It Is Impossible To Cheat On The Internet

Posted by Chris on December 13, 2011 - 1:15 pm

Ryan Braun Gets Caught

Ryan Braun won the MVP and got caught cheating in the same month

Last week Ryan Braun got caught for using performance-enhancing drugs not too long after he won the award for MVP in baseball. In almost every walk of life there is temptation to cheat. In school, in politics, in business, every time your read the news it feels like someone is getting caught for cheating.

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10 Stats To Get You Ready For Thanksgiving

Posted by Chris on November 21, 2011 - 5:13 pm

Turkey Stats

  1. There are expected to be 248 million turkeys raised in 2011. This means that every man, woman and child in the U.S. could eat over half a turkey, and there would still be some leftovers.The total weight of all of the turkeys produced in 2010 came in at over 7 billion pounds.
  2. Despite the over $4 billion in turkeys produced domestically, during the first half of 2011 the nation imported nearly $8 million more turkeys. Most of these were from Canada.
  3. On average, each American consumed a yearly amount of 13.3 pounds of turkey in 2009. This is spread out over the entire year, so not all 13.3 pounds was eaten at Thanksgiving. However, a sizable portion would be.
  4. 750 million pounds of cranberries are expected to be produced in 2011. No word on how many of those will form the cranberry sauce shaped like a can.
  5. In 2010 the retail price of a frozen turkey was $1.38 per pound.
  6. Around 2.4 billion pounds of sweet potatoes were produced last year. How heavy is that? Over a quarter of a million elephants would weigh less than that many sweet potatoes.
  7. The total weight of sweet potatoes produced by major sweet-potato-producing states in 2009 was 1.9 billion.
  8. The value of all pumpkins produced by major pumpkin-producing states in 2009 was $103 million.
  9. About 1.1 pounds of pumpkins were grown in 2010, making billions of pumpkin pies a possibility. The state of Illinois produced over a third of the pumpkins. California, Ohio, and New York collectively produced another third of them.
  10. In the first half of this year, $5.3 million in sweet potatoes were imported into the U.S. Over half of these sweet potatoes came from the Dominican Republic.

 

Source: About.com

(Photo by nathamanath)

Greetings From SeeVolution

Posted by Chris on November 18, 2011 - 9:32 am

Are we high tech, or what?

We hooked up Skype on the flat screens

20 Popular Websites From 10 Years Ago

Posted by Chris on November 15, 2011 - 10:54 am
Apple

http://apple.com

 
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What Politicians Can Teach Us About Business

Posted by Chris on November 11, 2011 - 10:35 am

Mitt Romney and Rick Perry Debate

“Politics has become so expensive that it takes a lot of money even to be defeated” – Will Rogers

Every four years two presidential candidates take over the media. Every time we turn on the TV or go online there is something in the news about the campaign or the candidates running for office.

To me, politics is the ultimate business. A vote is a sale, and each candidate is open for business only once every four years. The amount of time, energy, and strategy that go into the roughly year or so during the campaign are unmatched. There are many lessons that can be learned by any business from those on the campaign trail, here are the three that stick out most to me:

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56 Creative Business Cards

Posted by Chris on October 27, 2011 - 10:55 am

Who said business cards have to be rectangles?

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