APE APE Issue 0419 | Page 10

MARKETING MATTERS Web Wonders MONICA PITTS Know the marketing strategy of your online presence By Monica Pitts What makes a good paving website? What makes or breaks any website can apply to your paving website: you need original content, a good design that re- flects your brand and professional look- ing images. Technically it should be fast loading, display well on mobile and utilize modern coding standards. But what a paving website needs specifically to knock it out of the park is: a built out services section, a robust projects section and a targeted careers section. Let me explain what I mean by each of those items. A Built Out Services Section. To properly build out a services sec- tion you need a page for each of the ser- vices your company provides. A page for each of your services will give you a better chance of ranking for each of the keywords people use to search for those services in Google. On each one of your services pages you’ll need more than just a bulleted list. Add around 500 words of original content describing the service and why you do it better than your competition. Include your contact information and examples for the different types of busi- nesses you work for most often. And last but not least, include links to proj- ects you’ve completed using this service. Link those projects to pages in your ro- bust projects section. A Robust Projects Section By robust I mean functional for you and your team to easily add and update projects, upload photos and easily for- mat the information about each project into a similar formate. Did I mention it should be easy for you? I’ll say it again, it shouldn’t be like learning another language to update your projects, if it’s difficult or time consuming you won’t do it. And you need to add projects to your site regularly. By robust I mean easy to use for your site visitors. Share your projects on your site, not just in an attractive way, but also a way that allows visitors to sort through the projects and find the ones that are most relevant to them. Start with a page sharing photos and just a very very brief project overview. Give them only what they need to evaluate if they want to learn more about the project but don’t overwhelm them with words - I’m talking project name, loca- tion and type. Let visitors sort projects by type, location or industry if applica- ble. And let them click on individual projects to learn more. And last, by robust I mean each project Continued on page 12 www.callape.com [10] 1.800.210.5923