Chapter 1. deciding what to do

"After exhaustive research, innumerable high-level meetings, and a lot of hand-wringing and soul-searching, we've decided to stampede."

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don't miss ...

  1. Tell me: Why do you need a web site?

  2. How to write a mission statement

  3. Setting measurable goals

  4. Action section: What will you do with your site?

  5. 4 steps to defining your site's features

  6. Action section: What features will your site include?

The first step in creating a web site is the most important and perhaps the most difficult. You have to decide what to do. It's not enough, you see, to know you need a web site. You have to think about why.

Too often, companies simply hire someone to build something similar to what other companies have. And while they may end up with a workable web site, they miss an opportunity to really move their business and waste some money in the process.

It's a phenomenon Martha Brockenbrough sees all the time in her Seattle consultancy, where educating clients is a full-time job: "Often, a client's first question is 'How much is this going to cost?' But the real question is, 'What do you want this web site to do?' What do you want it to do for your business?"

"I primarily work with very small businesses," Brockenbrough explains. "And they usually have no idea what a web site can do. They just feel like they should have one. But that's the biggest mistake you can make! You should have very clear goals for what the web site can help you achieve."

And small businesses aren't the only ones blundering: Corporate giants are just as likely to stumble through their Internet strategy. Ask Jeffrey Veen, whose consulting firm Adaptive Path works with clients large and small.

"The first question I ask any client is 'Why do you have a web site?'" Veen says. "I ask that question and sometimes there's just dead silence. They can't answer it beyond 'We have to have a web site. Our competition has a web site.'"

It's not enough to know you need a web site. You have to think about why.


So whether you're launching a new site or rethinking an old one, you should start with some provocative questions about why you have a web site in the first place.

Ask yourself:

  • Why does my organization need this site?

  • Why do my visitors need this site?

The answers will form the basis of your Internet strategy. Together, business needs and user needs will guide all your decisions. And if you answer these questions well, everything else honestly, everything else will fall into place.



The Unusually Useful Web Book
The Unusually Useful Web Book
ISBN: 0735712069
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2006
Pages: 195
Authors: June Cohen

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