Keep
Them Coming Back - Update Your Site
by: Richard Lowe, Jr.
If you are anything like me, your website is a reflection
of yourself. It contains your thoughts and communications,
exposed to the entire world at all times. Look at
virtually any non-commercial web site and you will
get a glimpse at the person behind the monitor.
I look at web sites all day long, and I am constantly
amazed by the things that people reveal about themselves
without saying anything. Is the website well organized
or just a jumble of images and text thrown up at a
moments notice? Is the site alive with color or just
dull and lifeless black and white? Is the site exploding
at the seams with content or is it just a collection
of ads, banners or links?
All of these and many other clues tell me more about
the webmaster than any of those 50 question psychological
quizzes.
One clue that tells me more than anything else is
whether or not the site is kept up-to-date. Sometimes
I will see a beautiful web page - a work of art that
comes from the heart and soul of a human being. I
fall in love with the page and want to learn more,
then click on a link and bam, page not found. I shrug,
as every webmaster has a bad link now and then. Click
on another, and another, and more than half of the
links are dead. I sigh, then move on.
Or I'm reading wonderful stories about a person's
life experiences and find, well, these are all years
out of date. A little looking around the site and
I find that nothing has been updated since 1997. I
always feel a little sad when I see this - it's as
if something inside the webmaster died. I wonder,
did she grow tired of it all? Get married and lose
interest? Perhaps even died? Who knows, there is no
clue on the site at all. It's just ... abandoned.
Another clue to a neglected site - the person created
a webring and got several hundred people to join.
The ring is obviously a creation of love as it's not
easy to get so many sites to join up. The ring graphics
are wonderful, the join page is beautifully written,
and I am actually very impressed. I start to surf
the ring and quickly find that over half the sites
no longer exist. Another dozen have removed the ring
code. How sad. It's one thing to lose interest in
a webring ... but to just abandon it? I wonder what
changed in a person's life caused this work of love
and community to just be discarded so easily.
Or it could be that a person and simply doesn't update
their site very often. There is a wonderful comic
book site which is simply beautiful, yet sometimes
months go by without a single update! It's so frustrating
as I really am intrigued and want to come back to
visit this guy's private world. I haven't checked
in a long time - why bother, since the site is updated
so infrequently?
My feeling is simple. Create the best website that
you can with the knowledge that you have. You will
never be finished, as there will always be more to
say and show. You are a living, breathing human and
you are learning more every day. Thus, there should
always be something of value that you can add to your
web site.Presumably, you've created your web site
to communicate something to the rest of the world.
It could be that you want to write up your life story,
explain about the mythology of the Greeks and Romans,
or simply compile a list of the best blonde jokes.
It's possible that you even want to make a few dollars
now and then by selling a nice product. Why settle
for just getting someone to read what you've got to
say and move on? Why not continually update your message
so that your readers come back time after time to
find out what new and wonderful things you've posted
this week.
Think you've said everything that can be said about
your subject? There are many options to this method
of continual updates. You could add a message board
to start virtual conversations with your visitors.
Or perhaps you could add a weekly column (and associated
ezine) to get people to come back. Even if you've
said everything there is to say, perhaps you can add
pictures, sound and videos or change the layout or
presentation.
Be sure and let people know what's new by including
a "What's New" section right on your front
page. This serves to your visitors right to the new
content immediately. It also lets them know that you
are updating the site all of the time, which means
they will want to come back again and again just to
see what you have written or changed.
A periodic ezine is another way to stay in contact
with your readers, letting them know what's going
on at your special website. Another great way to get
people to come back is to become active in newsgroups
or email discussion lists (such as egroups and topica).
By posting useful information at these places you
will get people wanting to come to your site to find
out what else you've got to say.
Which, of course, leads back to the original premise
of this article. If you want people to come back to
your site, you had better be keeping it up-to-date,
accurate and adding new content all of the time. Otherwise,
your readers will grow tired and move on to greener
pastures.
And that's the saddest thing of all ... an abandoned
creation of love and passion.
About The Author
Richard Lowe Jr. is the webmaster of Internet Tips
And Secrets. This website includes over 1,000 free
articles to improve your internet profits, enjoyment
and knowledge.
Web Site Address: http://www.internet-tips.net
Weekly newsletter: http://www.internet-tips.net/joinlist.htm
Claudia Arevalo-Lowe is the webmistress of Internet
Tips And Secrets and Surviving Asthma. Visit her site
at http://survivingasthma.com