The Web Marketing Association has an annual competition in 96 industries to recognize what they believe are the best websites. In the real estate section, they list 7 criteria they look for:
- Design
- Ease of use
- Copywriting
- Interactivity
- Use of technology
- Innovation
- Content
All seven are subjective, which is fine: the organization giving the award gets to set the criteria. But looking at the winner last year, their award is doing a great disservice to any real estate agent who uses that site as their inspiration. Here is a link to the site.
Now I don’t know the people who built the site, and I don’t know those agents or their company. Nor do I have anything against them, or the award.
Personally, I think the site is fine but not spectacular in execution for what it is: a nice-looking website.
But there’s not one mention in seven criteria of results. My assumption is that most businesses want a website that is going to help them get results (i.e. generate visitors and turn them into leads). And here’s why this site is at a severe disadvantage.
It is invisible to search engines.
To you, me, and anyone else with a Flash plugin, this is what the site looks like to human eyes:
What does this site look like to Google? Here’s a visual of the actual page using a text-based browser:
It looks like nothing. Want proof?
One entry. Name. Rank. Serial Number.
A site exists. Beyond that? No information.
This site leaves money on the table. For my real estate site, according to Google Analytics, 73.4% of my 150-250 visitors per day come from search engines.
But the only way to find their site from Google is by its own name, “Elizabeth Lofts”, and if one goal of marketing is to get people who don’t already know your name to contact you, then this site had failed by that criteria.
And as of today, you won’t find it under “Pearl District” or “Pearl District Condominiums” (until the purgatory of page 5) so it wouldn’t have generated leads from people who express interest in that district.
Worse, this site has plenty of information Read more