Squarespace Website Call To Action Best Practices and Design
How To Create A Website Call To Action Graphic That Works
For many architectural and interior design firms, a website is often an online portfolio with minimal lead generation capabilities. It often looks attractive but probably results in a considerable number of missed opportunities. From a lead generation point of view, step one is where you want to capture the contact information of the prospect with a call to action so that you can continue to stay in touch. The problem with not having a lead generation marketing process that keeps your firm top-of-mind is that time passes between the moment a potential client is researching project and the moment they sign a contract. This often results in a lost opportunity. Getting prospects to sign up for an ongoing series of emails is your best opportunity to stay in touch and demonstrate your capabilities. The typical steps from research to signed project typically are,
Finding your website in search engines and viewing your portfolio
Scheduling an in-person meeting to discuss their needs
Signing an agreement and moving forward with the project
With a growing trend towards an increased level of research before purchase, the time people take can mean months. If you think about it, you probably research purchase more than ever as well. This research has changed the face of marketing home design and improvement services. The most effective marketing today is marketing that answers questions and promotes a firm as a thought leader. Website call-to-actions are the visual prompts that encourage an exchange of contact information for the expertise that answers a prospects question.
When built to market your firm intentionally, a website should encourage a sign up so that you can educate prospective clients with information about the work you do. The simple act of sending emails about your services can act as a lead generation tool. This is done by having keyword rich, written content on your site that attracts prospects (ideally with a blog) and once on your site, trading advice to those visitors for their contact information. It is called inbound or content marketing.
Websites designed for inbound marketing work best for two types of built environment businesses.
Firms whose business goals include growth beyond a circle of friends, former customers, and business associates.
New firms are seeking prospective clients and awareness without spending tens of thousands of dollars on print advertising in home magazines.
Moving visitors from informational pages to lead conversion pages is done with what is known in marketing speak as a call to action. A call to action (CTA) is a clickable item, such as a button or link on your site, that takes a visitor to a separate page. Typically, a CTA has the goal of moving prospective clients towards pages with an intentional sales goal like landing pages. Landing pages are pages that contain a marketing offer such as a guide, study, pricing or product that is made available if a contact form is filled out. Landing pages are designed to encourage an exchange of information for the permission to market to visitors again in the future. Most commonly with email marketing. CTA's are an integral step in transitioning anonymous visitors into qualified leads by requesting visitors to do something rather than operate as merely passive visitors to your site.
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CTA's are asking for an investment from a prospect, and they only work when the "ask" comes at the right time in the sales cycle. Some CTA's make requests that have a low barrier to entry like exchanging a name and an email address for a guide or paper. Others require a greater commitment from your prospects such as requesting a meeting or phone consultation. It is important to think of blogs your writing, offers, and emails, as well as the call to actions as steps in a buyers journey. A CTA that asks a prospect to "Learn More" would be an early stage CTA whereas "Add to Cart" is a CTA that falls at the end of the cycle because it commits a customer to make a purchase.
Tip: Consider mapping out your buyer's journey before you jump into writing blogs, creating offers designing CTA's and developing landing pages.
Types of Call To Action Prompts
Learn More
Use a "Learn More" CTA to engage visitors who are at the beginning of the buyer's journey. Use them to build trust. A good practice is to attach some Learn More CTA's to landing pages and allow direct content downloads without the need to give up contact information with others. A recent study by Houzz stated that the average sales cycle from initial contact to signed a contract on a simple garage or outbuilding is just over six months. Take the time to inform prospects about what it is that you do and how they can engage your services with offers that encourage giving up contact information. At the very least and if well written, ongoing emails keep your firm top-of-mind during the six-month (or longer) buyer's research period. "Learn More" CTAs are great at the end of a page, content block or the bottom of a blog article. Locating a CTA after a topic provides you with an opportunity to drive visitors towards more in-depth information on a subject they've demonstrated an interest. Take the Paul Harvey approach. Provide just enough information to encourage visitors to click on your CTA and fill out the form on the landing page to get further information. "And now, for the rest of the story." Like most CTAs, Learn More buttons tend to be large or have a contrasting color that's designed to grab visitor attention. Choose your design wisely. Especially on busy pages like blogs.
A companion to the Learn More CTA is a Download button. Download buttons are useful when you have a high-quality piece of content that warrants an exchange of information. In a Download button, consider including relevant information such as the content type and size. An example of this would be, "A Professionals Guide To Remodeling a California Bungalow. Download our 22 Page e-Book." These small details should not detract from the primary CTA. Use them to set expectations, and give an added boost of confidence that will help encourage a click through at that the critical moment.
A Sign Up Call To Action
A Sign-Up used to get visitors to commit to ongoing contact compared to a single informational download. Use them in the midpoint of the buyer's journey where visitors are beginning to trust that you will not waste their time with poor content. Keep in mind that you will always have prospects that are more willing to sign-up for a one-time event then are eager to sign-up for an indefinite commitment of ongoing contact. Use Sign-up CTA's for e-newsletters and for sending blog articles to prospective clients.
An Event Call To Action
A related CTA is to encourage visitors to attend or register for an event. This could be a trade show, an open house, a webinar or a class designed to help people better understand your services. Event registrations are a great way to add middle-of-the-funnel leads to your pool of potential customers. Because registration is a one-time event, it's also less of a commitment from a potential lead, which should lead to more click-throughs. But keep in mind that click-throughs are only one indicator of success. They still need to commit to attending the event. Even if they fail to attend, you'll have their email to follow up, possibly even entice them to download a summary of what they missed!
Tip: Link your CTA to the free service Eventbrite to encourage sign-ups and to share your event with an audience that may not have heard of your firm.
An E-Commerce Call To Action
If your interior design business sells accessories online, a CTA that fits important. We see "Add to Cart" buttons only on individual product pages. Some alternatives include "Buy Now" or "Add to Bag." This CTA has become common enough to be represented simply by a shopping cart icon. Major e-commerce retailers like Amazon have standardized their design for the Add to Cart button, even using a slightly darker—but similar—shade for the "Buy now with 1-Click."
How To Design A Call To Action For A Squarespace Website
We always recommend using a professional to create your call-to-action buttons but if you are looking to build them yourself give Canva a try. Canva is a free design tool that allows you to create a set of consistent, branded CTA's that work within your websites color scheme. Testing and analysis are the only sure ways to know your CTA is generating the best possible numbers of click-throughs. Keep the following in mind when designing your CTA's.
Increase contrast and use bold colors that make the CTA the most visually important design asset on the page
Use white space (or, negative space) around the CTA to signify importance and attract attention
Balance the CTA so that it is large enough to attract attention but not so large as to dominate the space
Write your CTA's in clear, simple, and direct language. Do not be verbose.
Use a font that is brand consistent, large and bold, without feeling out of place from the rest of the page
Instill urgency and include a reason for visitors to act sooner rather than later
If necessary, use supporting information. It should be smaller and a different color to keep from distracting from your objective.
Add icons or images to help get results. One of the most familiar icons added to CTAs is an arrow for downloading
Keep your CTA file sizes small. Quick load speed is essential to search engine optimization
Your Squarespace website will require ongoing updates and careful curation, not just to stay current with technical requirements but to be found by search engines as well. Make sure you are making updates a regular part of your marketing and include new call-to-actions, landing pages content offers and email marketing as part of those updates. Inbound marketing is the holistic act of providing great content to prospects who want to educate themselves. CTA buttons enable you to gather contact information and engage prospects on a regular basis.
Additional Articles On Squarespace Website Design
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How To Choose a Squarespace Template Design For Your New Website
Marketing Your Business Using a Pop-Up on a Squarespace Website
Search Engine Optimization: Building A Squarespace Website For SEO
Squarespace Blog Design: Formatting Blog Articles For Improved SEO
Squarespace Index VS Folders: Website Information Architecture
About Michael Conway and Means-of-Production
My firm builds Squarespace websites, content marketing and lead generation solutions for home improvement professionals. Contact me for a free-of-charge consultation and marketing review. It takes about 40 minutes and you'll be provided a list of actionable improvements designed to solve your specific marketing problems.