9 Ways to Boost Visitor Engagement on Your Website

Regardless of your niche or target market , there is absolutely no shortage of competition on the web. No matter how you look at it, you’re ...

Regardless of your niche or target market, there is absolutely no shortage of competition on the web. No matter how you look at it, you’re locked in a fierce battle for the attention of website visitors. And therein lies the challenge. Not only is there a staggering amount of competition, but people’s attention spans have dwindled to the point where we can measure them in mere seconds.

Here is the problem this creates: Your website was built with a purpose in mind. 
That might be attracting new clients, selling a product, promoting a service or maybe it’s a news site that relies on visitors and ad impressions. The point here is that when a new visitor lands on your site, there is something you’d like them to do.

9 Ways to Boost Visitor Engagement on Your Website

If they leave your site without taking your desired action, you’ve wasted your opportunity. That’s why simply focusing on traffic numbers is such a waste of time.

What really matters is how engaged your visitors are with your website. Are they sticking around long enough to take your desired action? Most of the time, the answer is no, they’re not.

In this post, we’re going to focus on some different ideas that might help you boost visitor engagement on your website. The longer someone is on your site, the more likely they are to take the desired action and convert against your goals.

Design for Your Audience

There is a lot of talk around the web about the value of minimalist design, the benefits of conversion optimization or how your most important information should be positioned above the fold. If you are publishing adverts on your site, it gets even more complicated. Less than a month ago the subject of ad-blocking in IOS9 came up and had since turned into a hot topic. Do people really want to see ads? Are desktop ads OK and mobile ads taboo?

With so many opinions out there, how are you supposed to know which one is best for your site? For example, you might be thinking that a clean, minimalist design is ideal for your news site. Maybe it is, but you’d also be interested to discover that the folks at Survivallife.com changed from a beautiful, clean design to a messy, information-packed home page. Guess what happened? If you think that their metrics went downhill, you’d be wrong. Instead, the messy homepage resulted in an increase in time on page, total page views, and unique visitors.

Who would have guessed?

Those results don’t mean you should be switching to a cluttered home page anytime soon. What is does mean though is that you should spend time figuring out what changes might work best for your site and which ones you should avoid? Test, measure and retest until you find the optimal layout for your website

Regardless of which design path, you head down, there is one thing that makes a difference to every design. Professionalism. A well-designed minimalist site and a well-designed site with two jam-packed sidebars can both look great. They can also both look horribly unprofessional. Choose wisely and invest time, money and energy where it’s important.

Create Awesome Engaging Content

Nobody cares about the volume of content that you produce. If you’re producing massive amounts of content only because you believe content is king, there is a good chance you are throwing away time and money. Is content relevant? Sure it is. But only when it’s done right.

Accessible content and content that keeps visitors engaged and coming back has some specific traits that are worth taking note of. If you’re producing content that is helpful to your visitors, that’s a great start.If you spend a little time browsing through the Online Living Blog, you’ll notice a huge number of tutorials, reviews, and how-to articles. 

Almost every single article attracts comments and shares. Another type of post that does well is opinion pieces. Having an opinion in your articles virtually guarantees that someone will want to present a counter opinion.

Good content is also easy to read. Using clear, unambiguous titles, headlines and subheadings will help readers know where they should be spending their valuable time. Of course, don’t forget the importance of images either. According to HubSpot, articles with images receive 94% more views. Lastly, use a style guide. If every post on your blog uses different size images along with various heading sizes and fonts, readers won’t know what to look for, and hey, it looks sloppy.

Once you’re confident that the content on your website will engage your target audience, you’ll also want to make sure that it has a high probability of being ranked well in the search engines. If your content is easy to read for humans, it’s probably suitable for search engines as well. With that in mind, it’s also a good idea to make sure you implement consistent on-page SEO tactics to increase your odds of ranking well and attracting organic traffic.

Interact With Your Visitors

This is a subject that draws opinions from both camps. Primarily because if you’re creating remarkable content that draws a lot of comments, it can become very time-consuming to respond to each of them. That said, building a business of any type requires strong relationships, and sometimes that begins by responding to the comment your readers leave on your blog.

No matter how you slice it, people like to be recognized. By acknowledging their comments, people will feel more inclined to say more. Like a snowball rolling downhill, the level of reader engagement will increase slowly over time.
The benefits of interacting with your visitors in this way can include increased brand loyalty, more return visits and a better connection with your target audience.

Collect Email Addresses

We all know that the money is in the list. And we’ve all heard about the demise of email. Whatever your opinion is on the matter, know that your ability to drive traffic back to your website is critical to your success. If someone visits your site once and fails to return, you’ve lost an opportunity.

Collecting email addresses and communicating with subscribers is a great way of driving visitors back to your website and increasing engagement whenever you have something new to say. Using a plugin like Bloom will allow you to tie into all of the popular email marketing platforms and start building your list of subscribers. Sidebar Opt-in forms are great, but pop-up opt-ins convert better. Test what performs best on your site and stick with it.

If you’ve decided to run with the excellent content idea that we discussed a few seconds ago, consider having an opt-in form at the bottom of each post or alternatively, a call to action.

Be Generous With Internal Linking

Internal linking is not only important from an SEO perspective but for site visitors as well. Frequent use of internal linking allows visitors to navigate your website more quickly. Just as your post titles and headline (see how I did that?) are unambiguous, so should your internal linking be. If you’re going to point a visitor to a relevant article or piece of information on your site, never break their trust by sending them somewhere unexpected.

As far as the types of internal links worth considering, your choices are plenty. A great place to start is from within your content. If you have an opportunity to reference another post that might be capable of expanding upon your current topic, include a hyperlink and relevant anchor text.

At the bottom of each post is an excellent opportunity to link to other related articles. While you could do this manually, there is also a plugin called YARPP (Another Related Post Plugin) that is worth taking a closer look at – not to mention the similar functionality found in the Jetpack plugin. If a visitor has taken the time to work their way to the bottom of an article, there is a good chance they’ll be interested in reading something that’s along the same subject lines.

Finally, consider placing a list of your top posts or most-commented-on seats in the sidebar of your site. Visitors gravitate towards these lists, and they’re an easy way to bump up your page views.

Make Your Site Easy to Navigate

As with internal linking, a straightforward and well-structured navigation structure will stop you from losing visitors unnecessarily. If you’ve ever been to a site where it seemed impossible to find what you were looking for, you’ll know exactly what I’m talking about. Nothing will frustrate users faster that lousy navigation.
If your website requires scrolling, consider placing at least a partial navigation menu in the footer of your site. Again, this is about convenience and encouraging your visitors to click through to another page.

Optimize for Mobile Traffic

Most WordPress themes these days are mobile friendly. You probably already know the importance of a site that keeps mobile users happy. A typical small business website today is seeing mobile traffic surpass the 50% level on a regular basis. Catering to these visitors is no longer an option if you want them to stick around on your site.

One thing in particular that is worth considering is the removal of nonessential elements for your mobile visitors. This might mean eliminating sidebars, ads or unnecessary graphics. You should also make sure that things like opt-in forms, calls to action and contact forms work properly across a variety of mobile devices. When these elements don’t work properly, visitors just leave your site.

Keep Your Site Lightning Fast

Page speed is now an official Google ranking factor for the simple reason that visitors hate interacting with a slow website. If you want people to engage with your site, the process needs to be efficient and fast. If your site is slow, engagement will suffer no matter how great your content is or how well structured your navigation might be.

Look at Your Analytics Data

One of the easiest ways to keep visitors engaged on your website is by taking a closer look at your analytics. With a little practice, you’ll be able to pinpoint not only the pages and posts that are doing well but also the ones that are having a negative impact.

Some of the things you should look more closely at include your top exit pages, the pages where visitors spend the least amount of time and which entry pages have the highest bounce rate. But don’t focus on just the bad news. If you have pages or posts that are performing unusually well, figure out why and do more of the same.

If you review your statistics and discover that visitors are clicking through to your about page and then exiting, it should be a red flag. What can you fix or change on that particular page to reduce the exit rate? Solve potential problems and then measure the improvement.

Wrap Up

We’ve covered quite a few ideas in this post that are capable of boosting the engagement levels on your website. Many of the ideas are simple to implement but often overlooked.

Having a site that’s user-friendly is always the first step towards keeping visitors engaged. Nothing will scare visitors away faster than a site that is slow or difficult to navigate.

Producing great content is also important if you want visitors to return to your site with any level of frequency. Content that is helpful, opinionated and relevant has a greater chance of attracting and keeping visitors than if you’re just writing for search engines.

At the end of the day, your objective is to keep visitors on your site long enough for them to decide to take the desired action – either making a purchase, contacting you, signing up for a newsletter or subscribing to a service.
What specific engagement techniques do you use on your website? Are there any that you find work better than others? If so, please share in the comments below.

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