Regardless of the complexity of your products or services, when it comes to your website, you have one goal: Make your website easy to browse, easy to navigate, and easy to understand.
A lot of that ease of use comes back to educating your website visitors, especially in more technical industries such as manufacturing. One UX expert has developed a website-specific knowledge gap, which is the amount of information a user needs to know in order to successfully use your website. Ultimately, you want this gap to be nonexistent, meaning that a user should already have all the knowledge he or she needs to use your site before he or she gets to your site.
If your services or products are especially complex or technical—and maybe totally new to the market—how can you set up your site in a way that is totally intuitive for your visitors?
Seventy-six percent of consumers say the most important factor in a website’s design is that “the website makes it easy for me to find what I want.” So do it: Make it easy for your visitors to find the information they’re looking for.
You can start with the homepage by presenting your visitors with information that they expect to see. Although it is true that the way website visitors engage has changed and above-the-fold content is no longer a necessity, that doesn’t mean they’re willing to travel to multiple pages of your site in order to understand what you do and how you can help them. Eighty-six percent of visitors who land on a company’s homepage want to see information about the company’s products and/or services. Give them that information.
Chances are high that visitors will use the navigation to gain a further understanding of who you are, what you do, and how you can help them achieve their goals. Make your navigation as intuitive for your visitors as possible. Here are a few ways to do this:
It’s not enough to get visitors to the right page—visitors must also be able to understand the information presented on the page.
Your visitors might be new to your website, your products, and your terminology, but they’re not new to the online research process. Think back to the knowledge gap and how much visitors already know about how websites work:
Those are just a few of the standard website practices, but they represent the norm that visitors have come to expect while browsing online. By bringing these standard website conventions to your more technical website, you’ll be amazed by how easily visitors will be able to use your website to find the information they’re looking for.