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A
professionally presented business website is a powerful and
essential marketing tool: it's the first thing prospective
customers will look at before they decide to contact you. If
the copy on your website is not written to an acceptable
standard, it may be losing you customers. It’s not enough just
to have amazing graphics and imagery: you need the words to
make it complete. Is the spelling correct? Are punctuation marks
in place? Does the copy make sense? These are questions that
website designers should be asking themselves before they upload
a new site.
One of
the biggest flaws with website copy is inconsistency: for
example the word ‘website’. Some sites spell it as one word,
some as two words; as far as I am aware both are acceptable, but
not both versions on the same site! In my opinion, a lack of
consistency will deter a significant amount of would-be
customers from using the services of a company that has not
taken the trouble to proofread their website.
Poor
spelling on a website is another costly but avoidable mistake.
The majority of visitors will leave the site very quickly if
they find too many spelling errors. This again will give them
the impression that the site owners don’t really care; and they
would be right! Copy that has been ‘padded out’ with
insignificant trivia is also a big turn-off for visitors –
clear, concise and informative is the order of the day.
Anything containing textual content should as a matter of course
be proofread: it's important that not only are mistakes in
spelling, punctuation and grammar found and corrected, but that
the text flows smoothly for the reader. The copy on a website
should not be treated as the 'poor relation' of the project. You
can have the most up-to-date, eye-catching graphics available
but you will still need well-written copy to compliment them.
There
are the odd few web design companies around that will happily
inform visitors how they can supply them with a state-of-the-art
website but then insert second-rate copy, which totally negates
any good work they have achieved. This will reduce the initial
impact of the site, and more often than not will have an adverse
effect on business.
It pays to have the copy checked professionally, whether the
design company has written it themselves or had it supplied by
the client; it may cost a lot less than you think to have a
website proofread - it could cost you considerably more if you
don't!
Remember: if visitors to your site cannot find the information
they are looking for because of badly written copy they will
simply leave the site. The only people to benefit will be your
competitors.
John
Sheridan is a professional proofreader of hard copy items and
website copy. He also writes web copy and occasionally accepts
small copy-editing assignments. He can be contacted at:
john@textcorrect.co.uk website:
www.textcorrect.co.uk
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