Oct 13
We’ve worked with hundreds of clinics from around the world that are frustrated with their web presence. Invariably they’ve spent a lot of money on their website and failed to see results.
What’s worse is that they frequently don’t know what the problem is. They then turn to yet more designers thinking that the colour scheme or graphic design is at fault, when they should be focusing on the core proposition of communicating their information efficiently to their visitors.
The following are the top 10 most frequent mistakes that we see clinics make when they first build a website.
- Creating a splash page. This is a page that appears before the main content that ‘introduces the tone’ of the clinic. This just gets in the way of the visitor and the information they are looking for. RevaHealth.com usability studies have shown that the majority of visitors don’t progress to a second page. Get the visitor to the content that matters as soon as possible.
- Background music. You may think it is soothing – it’s not. Most people find background music irritating, especially if this is a repeat visit to your website. Audio can be used effectively especially in the areas of treatment descriptions, however this is very much an advanced technique.
- Original navigation. We have seen everything, even using the teeth in a jaw as way to visually navigate a site. This just confuses the visitor. As a general rule, use tabs.
- Clinical photography of procedures on prominent pages. Your patient is interested in results – in general it’s only other professionals that are interested in photographic details. It can be good to include these photographs but only include them on deep pages that are clearly linked to with text similar to “view detailed photographs of this procedure’.
- Expensive, flashy design. Your site needs to look professional; however it doesn’t need to be flashy. It is very easy for clinic owners to get caught up in the design of a website and lose focus on the whole purpose, which is to inform the visitor.
- Hit counter. You may want to boast about how much traffic your site has, however why does the visitor care. They want to be treated by your clinic, not take out advertising on your site.
- Not doing the SEO basics. The basics of search engine optimization are simple and given that the search engine should be the #1 distributor of your content there is no excuse not to do them. Give each page a unique title; make sure your website doesn’t require JavaScript and sign up for Google Webmaster Tools.
- If you are using an agency to create your website many will offer to supply you with stock content, such as treatment descriptions. Don’t use them. The search engines will recognise them as duplicate content and will not rank you for these pages. Worse still they may think you’re a spam site and remove you entirely. Write your own content.
- Not including basic information that a visitor may want – like a map or opening hours. We will publish a list of the most frequently requested information by visitors in an upcoming post.
- No call to action. Why do you want a website in the first place? Is it because you want more online enquiries? If so then there needs to be a large and effective call to action – A big red button with ‘Click Here to Contact the Clinic’ or somthing similar on it.
Let us know any common mistakes or omissions from websites that you’ve come across in the comments.
Great points completely not limited to dental clinics!
I nearly exploded when I recently saw a brand new music website (won’t shame here) using splash, background music and horrendously huge images that took ages to load.
All very important points. Another I would say is navigation and the importance of having a consistent primary navigation on every page. You see many sites, where there is different primary nav’s on different pages. Awful
Another good feature is breadcrumbs and makes navigation so much easier. I think you could make a list of 20 but this is definitely a good start
Thanks for the comment Joe and Mick.
Mick, you’re right that the list could go on and on. I know that you where talking about websites in general, however when it comes to health clinics in general most of them are 6 pages or so and rarely do they require anything other than top level navigations (we recommend tabs). Breadcrumbs are redundant on site this small.
I welcome more suggestions – let’s build the list out.
My top hate would be the splash page or a whole site done in Flash for no good reason. People need to get directly to the most important pieces of information and these should be the main elements on the homepage.
Sites like this over look the importance of good content in favour of graphics and looks. The importance of content can never be over stated and as said above generic content will actually hinder rather than help!
I agree that some of my suggestions are for more larger sites. However if we focus on smaller SME sites, I think an important quality is visual. You see to many sites where the visual presentation of the premises and facilities are extremely small. Big quality pictures offer a key point of differentiation, something many SME sites fail to maximise.
Believe it or not I have seen a a dental clinic’s site that asked you to select your mood before allowing you to progress to the rest of the site. Your mood subsequently changed the colour scheme and the background music!!! Worst of all it was meticulously coded and probably cost a fortune.