Top Web Design Mistakes You Won’t Want to Make

Based on over eight years of experience working at providing professional web services to business, here’s my top list of web design mistakes you won’t want to make.

1. Don’t let your web designer register your new domain name under their own company name. Make sure you own your domain out right.

2. Make sure you have all the details AND ownership of your web design project in a contract. It is important that you clearly outline and understand who owns your website. You may find out that you do not that you only own a license to use the site and only if the web designer is hosting and webmastering the web site.

3. Make sure that your website is transportable. If you are using Yahoo Web hosting or even Hostway for hosting, if you have built your website using their proprietary tools including their graphics, it is important to know that sites of this nature are NOT transportable to a new web host if you get disenchanted with services.

4. Do not package your web hosting fees with web design and webmaster services. In all cases where clients have asked us to do a review these co-mingled services always cost more than going ala carte. Make sure that you are not tied to your webmaster for future content updates. You may want to stick with them for a while, but have the option to leave if they become unresponsive to your needs.

5. Don’t move to a new web host unless you really need to. Many clients think that they should shop around for price and get the cheapest web host. You may actually pay more to move your site depending on the technology and scripting used to move than you would have saved from a cheaper web host and webmaster. Every client who we have helped to move has always said at the end “this was much more complicated than I had any idea that it would be”. Our recommendation is to stay where you are especially if you have an e-commerce store or database driven application unless there is a real reason to move. Remember that when you move a site like this EVERYTHING will break. Your contact forms, database application, secure socket layer, credit card processing will all need to be set up and tested all over again.

These are just a few tips to consider before you start a new design or look for a new webmaster for your project.

Google Quality Score Insights From Catherine at Google AdWords

I spoke with Catherine at Google AdWords this past week and as she and I were talking about the quality score for an account, she mentioned something that I thought was important to share with my blog readers.

First, I was speaking to her about a top performing AdWords account that had gotten hit with some “poor” quality score ratings on seemingly important targeted keyword phrases. She commented to me that Google weights by default all general phrases with a location description at a lower quality than a phrase without the location description. For example, bed bugs New York City will not perform as well in Google search results as bed bug exterminator New York City or for that matter bed bugs. She mentioned that when there is a location descriptor, Google is looking for an additional context clue about the services provided on the landing page. So bed bugs New York City would be a good phrase for an information site, but not one for a pest control firm. A better phrase for a pest control firm would be bed bug control New York City, or bed bug exterminator New York City.

Additionally her insight was on location description in the Google quality score index. She said by default these keywords will not be searched with the frequency that keywords without the descriptor will be in the Google index and so by that very nature these phrases will carry a lesser quality score regardless of what YOU do. That is interesting news, particularly for advertisers that are targeting a local market in campaign settings.

Google has long said that adding your city name to your keywords is not necessary when you are advertising in a radius or city targeted setting. Now we know that actually, if you have those keywords in your list, you may get a poor quality score simply due to the way people search and the way that Google weights those words in their index. You may receive this lowered score regardless of the fact that you may be highly optimized on your landing page for that geographic descriptor — very interesting!

Thanks Catherine for these important tidbits that will help locally targeted AdWords programs and help us to understand better the evolving changes to AdWords quality score!

Google AdWords Changes Cause Sweeping Impact in Cost Per Clicks

In the second week of September, Google AdWords rolled out some big changes. Some of the impacts of these changes are just now beginning to be felt by many advertiser accounts.

First, what Google did was to do just a few important tweaks to their highly profitable ad delivery system called AdWords. Here the changes are in a nutshell.

1. Keywords are no longer marked “inactive for search” – Google now allows all words to be shown in the search index and will deliver clicks based on quality score, bid price, and daily budget.

2. Quality Score is now more accurate – Google has stated that they will evaluate the quality score as the search query is entered.

3. “First page bid estimates” replace “minimum bids” – Google also said that they would start showing information to help advertisers know how much to bid for certain hot property keywords to appear on the first page of the search results.

What has happened in accounts, as of this change, has been broad and sweeping. The change has particularly affected advertisers in major market such as Los Angeles, Washington DC, New York City, and San Francisco, just to name a few. The change has been pretty striking in regards to increasing the cost per click, as much as a 35% and sometimes even more to have specific hot property word appear on the first page of Google search results. This impact has been felt particularly on “Poor” quality score rated keywords, but even keywords with an “Ok” rating.

What I have seen just a few days after the AdWords rollout was a striking drop in average ad position across the board on many accounts in many diverse business sectors in major metropolitan markets. Typically we like our client’s average ad position to be from 2 to about 6; depending on the client’s daily budget, the importance of the keyword, and the price to be competitive with the market competition. We saw many accounts which had been operating at this level suddenly have an average ad position drop to an average position of six to nine or lower. We have needed to adjust the maximum cost per click in many of these accounts; fattening Google’s pocketbook and stretching the client’s budget to the limit.

Many smaller markets such as Cincinnati, Ohio; Louisville, Kentucky, and other similar markets have not really been impacted by this recent change. However, the major metropolitan areas have been hit hard. What I found even shocking, as a professional account manager, was some of the notes on what Google recommended that the advertiser pay to appear on the first page of Google search results. Just one example is for family dental care (for the Washington DC metro area) the bid was $57! I do want to make sure to caution clients, who self manage their Google AdWords accounts, to be careful on upping the ante to these recommended figures. Remember, Google is in this to make a profit, this tactic may be considered “up-selling.” This is also a good time to evaluate the quality score of a keyword and to pause or delete those keywords that may be sapping your program’s health.

What I found interesting was that for many of the keywords where Google suggested a huge increase such as $15 to $26 PER CLICK to be on the first page of search results, the monthly figures showed that the keyword already had an average position of 2 or so at a figure of around $6.50 per click and in some cases have a quality score of “Ok” and a decent click through rate. In one specific case, the maximum cost per click was set at $12.00 but the actual cost that Google billed was $2.02. Remember, the client whose ad appears in the number one position is definitely being charged $12.00 per click by Google as they are the price leader.

Here are my recommendations from about two weeks worth of careful review of many Google AdWords accounts.

1. If your budget is under $500 for clicks per 30 day period translating into an figure under $16.67 per day, you really must consider increasing your click spend in order to get in the game. If you really cannot increase your spending level then you should only run one or two ad groups in your account. You can identify if you have fallen out of the competitor mix by reviewing your ad spend. If Google has not been able to spend your monthly budget for clicks, then your cost per click setting is too low and you will not garner the impressions needed to make your AdWords advertising program successful.

To read our other recommendations please subscribe to our e-newsletter and receive the full article in your in box on the morning of October 1.

Our New Website Design

This past weekend I have launched a new website design for the parent website for The Web Authority blog. You can check it out at www.McCordWeb.com. The design is simply yet classic in nature and built in CSS. It features a menu from f-Source which builds complex CSS, XML, SEO friendly navigations.

I have moved my pages to a wider screen layout to accommodate the growing screen widths and have tried to simplify my design to keep the eyes focused on content. Additionally I have reorganized the architecture of the site.

Simply won’t appeal to everyone, but the layout is clean, uncluttered, and streamlined. In addition to a rework of our website, I have revised my firms business strategy to focus on what generates our income. We started out eight years ago doing web design, but have now grown into more of a web service provider than a designer.

That being said we’ve just recently launched a new website for a client. You can view the work at www.AMWarnerInsurance.com. This design is more complex and elegant. Take a look at both and let me know what you think.