How to make the most of your website
Head on over to the Webfooted Designs blog for the first part of our Top 10 tips for making the most of your website article. Second part coming soon!
Web Design for ROI: Turning Browsers into Buyers and Prospects into Leads

I was going to apologise that my first book review in a zillion years is on the face of it a web design book, but actually I don’t think this book warrants an apology at all. Yes, it’s called Web Design for ROI
but having avidly read it from cover to cover I’m of the opinion that it’s a book for anyone who runs a website (and that’s a fair few of us isn’t it?), not just web designers. You may need to get the help of your web designer to implement some of the ideas, but it would definitely benefit you to have a grasp of the ideas in the first place.
Before I carry on I’ll just explain what ROI means (I’m sure you already know, but it doesn’t hurt to have a reminder). ROI stands for Return on Investment, which (quoting Wikipedia) is “the ratio of money gained or lost on an investment relative to the amount of money invested”. So this book is about making your website as effective as possible so that you make the best return on your investment in it. To use some more jargon, it’s all about improving your conversion rate – i.e. increasing the number of visitors to your site which take a desired action, whether that is buying something from your online shop, signing up for a newsletter or making an enquiry about your services.
This is a book that I’m going to come back to again and again. I’ve already picked up a lot from it and I’m sure that I’ll learn a bit more each time I read it. Can you tell that I enjoyed it? Seriously, it’s making me think very carefully about what makes a persuasive and successful website.
The book has a very informative and persuasive introduction to what ROI is all about in the context of a website, and the benefits of improving your site’s conversion rate over throwing more money at advertising. It then has a chapter for each of the important sections of a site:
- Landing Pages
- Home Pages
- Category Pages
- Detail Pages
- Forms
- Checkout Process
Finally, there is a chapter giving further resources (books and websites) for those who want to read more.
I thought this was an excellent book – I found the writing style very easy to get on with and feel inspired to put some of the concepts into practice.
Rating: 




Buy “Web Design for ROI” from Amazon >
The New Rules of Marketing & PR

I had high hopes for The New Rules of Marketing and PR
by David Meerman Scott. The book is about “how to use news releases, blogs, podcasting, viral marketing & online media to reach buyers directly”. I thought it was going to revolutionise my online marketing. I’ve managed to trawl my way through it and I feel … disappointed.
Why’s that then? Why aren’t I skipping off to my computer right now to market my business? (Oh yes, I’m already at my computer…) I’d say that the book is definitely food for thought. There’s no doubt that it helps you look at things with a fresh eye. But…
… I find myself left thinking “now what? now what do I do?”. Yes, it’s given me a lot of theory but nothing that I can really get my teeth into. I find books like that frustrating. It’s like I’ve asked a cook “how do I bake a cake?” and they’ve replied “in an oven, you can make chocolate cake, or carrot cake, or coffee cake, it’s great”, when what I really wanted to know is how much flour to use, how to compile the ingredients and how long to cook it for. Do you know what I mean?
So, I would say that if you’re interested in reading up on the theory of using the web to market your business then this could well be the book for you. But if you’re after a step-by-step guide to putting the theory into practice then you might not get so much from it.
Rating: 




Buy “The New Rules of Marketing and PR” from Amazon >
Get into Bed with Google

There’s nothing worse than somebody who knows a little bit about a subject but thinks they know a lot. Unfortunately this somebody with a little bit of knowledge has seen fit to write a book. Big mistake. I feel terribly sorry for all those people who have read this book and taken it all as fact. I don’t know what is annoying me more: the fact that he has actually got some of it right or the hideous inaccuracies that had me groaning.
The book is Get into Bed with Google by Jon Smith. I was really looking forward to reading it – it was published this year and is a British book, and (possibly more importantly) our library system had a copy. I ordered it to my local branch with a view to seeing if it was worth recommending to those of our clients who like to be more hands-on with their search engine optimisation. What a waste of 50p! The information is given in no apparent order, giving you no identifiable procedure to follow, and on the whole appears to be based on the author’s conjecture. That’s not to say that he gets it completely wrong – a lot of the techniques he suggests are based on sound reasoning. However, the book is absolutely littered with inaccuracies, which had me screaming at it.
What’s this nonsense about if you do a Google search you get ‘about 12 results per page’. Eh? Google displays 10 results per page by default and you couldn’t even change it to 12 if you wanted to. Couldn’t he even be bothered to count? I know that’s a minor detail but it is a book about Google!
My advice is to steer clear of this one unless you’ve got an SEO expert to hand to check your facts with.
Rating: 




Buy “Get into Bed with Google” from Amazon >
Google Advertising Tools

I’m having a bit of a love/hate relationship with Google Advertising Tools
by Harold Davis. I bought it because we’re working on a project which involves putting advertising on a website and I have been doing some research into the options. With this in mind the book was a huge success. I now feel that I know a lot more about web advertising. However, along the way there were things about the book that I struggled with.
Firstly, it doesn’t seem to know who exactly it is aimed at. It is split into four sections:
1. Making money with your site, which contains just the sort of information that I was looking for. It’s ideal for someone looking to set up a website that aims to make money through advertising. There is a small amount of technical information but I would say it’s still suitable for someone who is new to websites.
2. Getting the most from AdSense, which follows the first section well. It provides a good overview of using AdSense, including information on setting up an account. Again seems to be aimed pretty much at the beginner.
3. Then we come to Working with AdWords, which is about using Google AdWords to advertise your website. A bit of a departure from making money from a site as this involves spending money on advertising yourself. However, it’s still relevant as to make money from a site you need to attract visitors and this is one way to do so. The level is very much the same as the first two sections, giving you practical advice about setting up your AdWords campaigns.
4. Using the AdWords APIs. Now this is where I start to have a real problem. The previous sections appear to be ideal for somebody setting up a money-making website for the first time. However, it then leaps into APIs which is full-on programmer territory and useful for someone managing a large number of AdWords accounts. Eh? If sections 1-3 are for you then you’d find yourself lost in section 4, but if you are a web marketing professional looking to utilise AdWords APIs in managing your accounts then sections 1-3 would be way too basic for you. I’m somewhere between the two – I have experience of web marketing and therefore am familiar with quite a lot of the concepts in the beginning of the book but am new to using advertising on a website so found that information invaluable, however I’m not a programmer as such so found it difficult to follow section 4 (in fact I have to admit to giving up on it).
So who exactly is the target audience of this book?
Secondly (sorry, it’s a long time since the ‘firstly’), as someone with an in depth knowledge of how websites are put together and experience of web marketing, I had issues with some of the information given in the search engine optimisation (SEO) bits of the book. Some of it I would say is wrong or at the very least not the best approach.
To sum up I would say that the book is worth a read but do consider what you want to get out of it first, and do take care about which SEO techniques you apply – if you’re unsure read up on them elsewhere first.
Rating: 




