Saturday, April 8, 2017

content - Where do campaign landing pages belong in my site architecture? How do I manage them?


I am working on a website project with a core focus on service areas. The central hierarchy of the services section looks like this:


1. Service Name 1
- overview
- features and specs
- Plans and Pricing
- offer page
2. Service Name 2
- overview...etc


You get the picture, I hope.


Now what happens is that campaign content from external marketing agencies keeps coming in but none of it really belongs to the main site architecture. Its temporary in nature you see, and does not need to appear in the site hierarchy. And yet, perhaps it needs to link to it.


Now what should I show users that come on the website? Should I hide the main navigation? Will it confuse them if I don't or if I will? What if the campaign content ends up repeating the main site's content?


Can anyone recommend best practices for integrating such temporary content on a website?



Answer



This article on landing page best practices has these UX-related recommendations:




  • Ensure the primary headline of your landing page matches the ad visitors clicked to get there.


  • Make your call to action (CTA) big and position it above the fold.

  • Use directional cues to direct attention to your CTA.

  • A landing page should have a single purpose and thus a single focused message.

  • Congruence: every element of your page should be aligned conceptually with the topic and goal of the page.

  • Edit to remove unnecessary content. Be succinct.



The Perfect Landing Page differenciates both kind of landing pages:



A. Landing page(s) integrated into site architecture and style



It is most efficient in terms of effort in content creation to make landing pages part of the main site information architecture. The downside is that they may not work so well in terms of converting both direct referrers and browsers navigating from elsewhere on the site.


B. Bespoke landing pages that are not part of the main site structure


These are used where a more “stripped down” page than standard content is required which focuses on converting visitors from an online ad campaign.



Finally, this other article on best practices recommends a



Clean design with an eye for contrast, whitespace and clarity. A clear call to action that describes what will happen when it’s clicked.



All of these put a strong enphasis on conversions, if this is the purpose of your landing page, then best practice is to make it almost a microsite. If the purpose of your landing pages is to get users to know the whole site then using the regular look would be better, in which case I would consider having a top level category for "campaigns" and hang all campaigns from that category in the site map.


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