If Content is King, This is Treason

As previously mentioned, I work for a company that builds websites (among other online marketing services). At this company, it’s a frequent thing for new clients to come to us with artwork, ideas about design, and a favorite list of bells and whistles they’d like to use on their site. Some even come with suggestions for navigation gizmos – like drop-down menus, fly-outs, even JavaScript heavy menu trees with click-to-expand functionality. They know they want great search engine rankings, and some think they have information to share about how to get them. They’ve got ideas about everything… except content.

How can that be? There’s plenty of information about how important content is. How can companies who want to succeed on the web be so disconnected from such a major key to success? Are those of us who build the web just bad educators? Is it a classic case of companies focusing on style over substance?

To add to that, many of our clients write their own web copy. Though they have no copywriter on staff, and certainly no one who is experienced in writing for an action-oriented medium like the web, they ask us to cut copy writing services from proposals. I understand why boot-strapping start-ups do it (even if they likely need it the most), but I don’t understand why companies with budget to back their marketing would.

I also don’t understand the rampant cart-before-the-horse thinking. What good will great search rankings do if the copy about your product doesn’t sell it? What value is there in turning up #1 on Google if, when I get to your site, I just end up clicking my back button because I can’t figure out what you do or why I should care?

So now I’m working with a non-profit organization, and they have great ideas about the image they’d like to present on their website, what kind of photos are appropriate, which parts of the site they might be able to charge for access to, and where to link in all the methods by which you can donate to them. “Great,” I say, “Do you have a content outline yet?”

The answer: “No, we’ll worry about that after we’ve built the site.”

Sigh.

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Neither Paper Nor Plastic

Canvas bags are better.A while ago, my husband and I made the switch from plastic grocery bags to canvas ones. It was mostly my fault. Watching the plastic bags from our shopping trips pile up was a big indicator of just how much needless waste we were generating, and so I proposed we use canvas. As it turns out, I like these much better than the plastic. For one, they hold more – if you get the right canvas bags (the ones we bought from Harris Teeter hold twice what the plastic bags do, and they don’t break). Even cooler than that, they’re far more comfortable to carry. No more getting my fingers cut off by plastic bag handles because the bag is too heavy, or having the bottom drop out of a paper bag for the same reason. These even fit over my shoulders. And we do have to throw them in the wash every few months, but that’s easy enough.

So if you haven’t switched to canvas bags yet, do it. It takes some doing to get in the habit of remembering to take them back down to the car after a shopping trip, but it’s so worth it – for utterly selfish reasons of convenience, even if you don’t care about how much useless plastic bag garbage you’re generating.