Tips and advice for startup website launch
-
Hi guys
I'm looking for tips and advice to help prevent a startup website launch from embarrassment or disaster.
Couple of examples I have so far are:
- Test contact and download forms
- Check website for duplicate content, lorem ipsum and missing content
- Check page load speed
What would be your best advice/tip(s) be?
Thanks
Anthony
@Anthony_Mac85
P.S. Just to be clear, I'm not looking for advice on how to growth hack a startup website launch.
-
Hey there!
Launching a startup website is an exciting venture, and I'm thrilled to share some tips and advice based on my experience with my e-commerce website, Leather4Ever, which has been running on WordPress for the past four years.
Choose the Right Platform:
As you rightly mentioned, WordPress has proven to be a reliable platform for managing an e-commerce website. Its user-friendly interface, extensive plugin support, and customizable features make it a great choice for startups. However, it's crucial to explore and choose a platform that aligns with your specific business needs.Mobile Responsiveness:
Ensure that your website is optimized for mobile devices. With a significant portion of internet users accessing websites through their smartphones, having a mobile-friendly design is imperative for a positive user experience and search engine rankings.Quality Content:
Content is king! Create compelling, relevant, and high-quality content for your website. This includes product descriptions, blog posts, and any other information that adds value to your audience. This not only engages your visitors but also contributes to better search engine visibility.SEO Strategies:
Implementing strong SEO strategies is essential for driving organic traffic to your site. Focus on keyword research, meta tags, and creating SEO-friendly URLs. Regularly update your content and stay informed about the latest SEO trends to stay competitive.User-Friendly Navigation:
Make sure your website's navigation is intuitive and user-friendly. Visitors should be able to find what they're looking for without any confusion. Clear menus, a logical site structure, and a search bar can significantly enhance the user experience. -
What you need to know when you start a big startup. We have the means to launch, as well as an approximate idea. But we haven't got to the point of developing and finding investors yet; we want to work through all these stages correctly.
-
yes you can use so many options to do this task like you can add some blog posts about it you can learn more about it here.
-
Hey guys
Just wanted to thank you all for your suggestions and let you know that all of your suggestions are included in the final blog post here.
I've thanked you all at the end
Thanks again, I really appreciate it.
Anthony
-
Great shout Craig. Every now and then I'll find a "#" link on live websites. Looks careless and lazy!
-
Hey Dirk
Great advice! I'm a big fan of Screaming Frog too. A handy free tool especially for small startup websites.
Thanks for commenting
-
This is a good point. I am working on a group of sites on wpengine. So dev was using something like name.staging.wpengine. When they went live the directories etc switched to the live domain but scattered throughout the site within the content the URLs remained the same. ScreamingFrog is your friend.
-
When I prototype a website I use a lot of # href links. I would suggest a search through the source code for "a href="#"" thus removing any of these "dead" links before you go to production.
Note to self: remember to actually do this yourself.
-
Do a full crawl of your site with a tool like Screaming Frog. If you configure the spider to respect robots.txt & canonicals it will behave like google bot you will see if all your pages are indexed properly. The tool also gives you valuable info on things like H1, Title, Meta descriptions (and standard filters to check if they are missing, duplicates, too long/short,...). It shows your internal site structure (number of clicks needed to get to each page) and the size of your images. You can even use it to check if the analytics tag is present on each page using a custom filter.
It's not free if you use it in spider mode (the free version only spiders 500 URI's) - but if you have a sitemap, you could also do a crawl based on the list of your url's (which is free, regardless the number of url's). Limitation is that you don't get the structure and the internal links, but if it is a brand new site and not too big, that shouldn't really be a problem.
rgds
Dirk
-
Not forgetting our own personal mobile devices too
-
We've used all of those
Others we use are Bootcamp, Virtualbox and we also use inspect element in chrome to emulate devices and remote inspect element using Safari.
-
BrowserStack is the one we use--it seems to work pretty well.
-
We have a few tools that our developers use when they need to - BrowserStack, Virtual Box, VM Ware, iOS simulator, etc. - most of which are pretty standard. Do you all use anything different?
-
Love all of these Fuel Interactive! All of which we do here too so it's pleasing to hear other agencies doing the same
I think cross-browser and cross-device QA is extremely important given the browsing habits of the modern day consumer.
Do you use any tools for cross-browser and cross-device QA?
-
Hey Michael,
Yes, an incorrect robots.txt is definitely more common than you would think.
I guess the overarching tip to the fetch and render function would be to register your site with Webmaster Tools and make use of their tools.
Thanks for sharing!
Anthony
-
Linda - awesome tips!
Especially number 1. User testing is something that just isn't on some people's radar, yet it can unveil plenty of unforeseen usability issues.
Thanks for sharing
Anthony
-
Definitely agree with the "check robots.txt" comment - it really does happen more often than people like to admit.
I would also be sure the website has any relevant schema markups implemented to give search engines as much information about your site as possible.
Check the website in different browswers / different devices to make sure nothing looks wonky and everything functions properly.
Double check / audit title tags & meta descriptions (this can easily be done by using a crawling software like Screaming Frog or something similar)
Be sure any tracking you want to use (Ex: Google Analytics) is properly in place. Also make sure the site is verified with Google Webmaster tools if that is something you want to monitor (which you should). Submit sitemap to Google Webmaster tools - will need XML version.
Check for any broken links and check to be sure the site has any redirects / canonical tags needed in place.
Also definitely recommend user testing and getting feedback from people not involved with the website.
Some of these might not be user-specific, just wanted to give a general rundown of things we often check.
Hope this helps!
-
"Check your robots.txt, meta noindex, and other exclusions to make sure you are not blocking your own content (once you are live)."
Yes, this is far more common than people like to admit. I'd also add it can be useful to use the Fetch and Render function in Webmaster Tools to check what Google can see once live. Occasionally robots.txt needs a tweak to stop blocking a particular resource.
-
-
Invite test users who were not involved with the development to try out the website and see what they find.
-
Check your robots.txt, meta noindex, and other exclusions to make sure you are not blocking your own content (once you are live).
-
Got a burning SEO question?
Subscribe to Moz Pro to gain full access to Q&A, answer questions, and ask your own.
Browse Questions
Explore more categories
-
Moz Tools
Chat with the community about the Moz tools.
-
SEO Tactics
Discuss the SEO process with fellow marketers
-
Community
Discuss industry events, jobs, and news!
-
Digital Marketing
Chat about tactics outside of SEO
-
Research & Trends
Dive into research and trends in the search industry.
-
Support
Connect on product support and feature requests.
Related Questions
-
My Website is not Coming in Google News. What should I do ? Already verified.
Hello Friends I verified my site in Google News but all articles are not coming in Google News. When I type www.example.com in Google news then only few stories shows but not coming on daily basis. What to do my fellow members ?
Branding | | sourabhrana0 -
Google+ how to optimize [best practice tips]
I would like to learn more about Google+ optimization to help the brand and rankings, etc of the company I work for but I do not know where to begin. Anyone with advice? Or links to this type of information? The website is www.stillfrisky.com Thank you, Gina
Branding | | gina_m0 -
Competitors' dummy websites --- What SEO (or other?) strategy is this?
I work for an e-retailer. I've noticed that at least one of our competitors (and, I think, a second as well) has set up a neutral "third party" website that attempts to provide unbiassed information about different manufacturer's products. Of course, their products always win out over the competitor in these comparisons. But this one site (and another whose corporate backer I can't seem to figure out) is keyworded so poorly, and not branded at all. There are very few (if any) links to the corporate sponsor, or links, period. It's definitely not serving to have "Little Brand x" appear next to "Big Brand Y" in search results, either (again, really poorly keyworded). Other SEO seems really minimal. What do you think their strategy is? Is it a dumb waste o' money or something really smart that I'm not picking up on? Your insights most appreciated!
Branding | | Novos_Jay1 -
Need advice on old brand names
A couple of years ago my company put all effort into one brand name, closing multiple sites with good names. All traffic going to ie OldBrandName.com is now redirected to www.newbrandname.com/OldBrandName. Here our customers are being told about the fusion/merge and we are linking to the key-products of OldBrandName, on our new age. We have 4 of these pages for 4 different brandnames. These pages still get a lot of traffic. Now to my question: how do I get as much juice as possible out of these OldBrandNames? They have high page authority and many inbound links. But I would like to pass the juice and the links to our frontpage or other relevant pages. What is optimal? Should I just redirect all the traffic to www.newbrandname.com? The redirects was made approximately 2 years ago. We are in the travel & leisure business, so customers often visits numerous times a year, closing deals 1-2 times a year. All 4 OldBrandNames have their own specialities (family, low budget, off-the-beaten-track, wellness). Any recommendations on how to approach this?
Branding | | alsvik0 -
Do you think my simple design website reflects my product better or worse?
Its been suggested my holiday cottage letting website maybe could do with a professional polish up and maybe restructure and navigation and if it would improve bookings I wouldn't hesitate. My only thought pattern is that this particular website is certainly not high-tech (this website was designed by me in Dreamweaver) I have a great guy working for me which is much better web design than me and technically more capable of producing a professional standard website, but with this new sideline I'm presently a small home-based company currently only letting eight old cottages. My thinking was keep the website simple, personal and homely for the moment. http://www.endeavourcottage.co.uk/ The website tends to be competing against large agencies which have often hundreds of properties on their books and you have to go through their filtering system to find the small number of properties that might be of interest. I can see that if I was selling large quantities of electrical equipment or something similar you just in a very polished well-designed website. The feedback I get from customers is that like the website and they like to know they can get hold of the person behind it. Which direction would you go? polished professional company styled WordPress website or simple design website with lots of pictures and descriptions. If I ever hit the big time and have hundreds of cottages I would have to join the design and more complicated navigation of the other agencies websites but whilst I’m small maybe not? Thanks for reading Alan
Branding | | whitbycottages0 -
Has anyone got any hotel (small) web marketing tips or tricks
I have a client who ranks well for his boutique hotel both in Google search and Google places. The problem now is he needs to fill his rooms next week (type of thing). We are down the Google Adwords route already. But clicks are super expensive (competing against the big hotels). We have also been trying to get his social media rolling and have started a light ad campaign on FB but I can't see clicks translating into our Google analytics account. (so not sold on it but is a lot cheaper than Google adwords) Next on the list is email marketing which we be getting ready for next week to his existing database. And we have been thinking about paid Press Releases but not sure if its worth it. (PRWEB or Prnewswire) One big bonus is he got a number 1 award on Tripadvisor a few months back (which radically spiked hits on site). So, a more long term solution is to approach media directly with a follow up story to the award but that's going to take a bit of time. Anyone had any experience with hotel marketing? Any insights would be great. Thanks
Branding | | ZATIVA20000 -
Why does Tripadvisor rank higher than official hotel website?
Hello, I am trying to figure out why Tripadvisor is ranking higher for "Royal Lahaina Resort" than our official site RoyalLahaina.com website. Could any of you help here. It is confusing because our RoyalKona.com and our HawaiiHotels.com (Hotel Chain Group) ranks 1st but for one of the hotels it comes in second to trip advisor. Please help!
Branding | | TSpike10 -
Should your company's name be in the title tag of your website?
First of all, I would like to provide some background information. Our company is small. We are just now getting into SEO research and have been improving over a couple months of research. We are somewhere in the 500,000's in the world rankings. From what I understand, the title tag provides a great amount of weight to whatever keywords you set up. The words in the title tag are supposed to represent keywords that you want to be high in the search engines for, correct? Well, in our title tag, we have the name of our company. To me, this is a waste of space. No one is going to go to Google and search for our company's name because we are not that widely known. Looking back at our search history for customers, there has not been a single search for the company name. What someone is telling me, is that when we put our link somewhere, having the name of our company in the title tag strengthens the "link juice" we get from those links. Is this correct, or is it worth trashing the company name for another keyword to optimize?
Branding | | FrontlineMobility0