Discover
The Benefits Of Exit Grab Technology
By Vincent Newton (c) 2008
According
to an article in PC World Magazine, the average visitor spends between
25 - 45 seconds viewing the main page of a web site. That's about
enough time to read this article to the point you are at right now
and, maybe, most of the way through the next paragraph.
With that short an amount
of time available to get someone's attention, your main page better
do a pretty good job of selling. The problem is, most main pages do
not get the job done as well as they could.
Sure, you could hire a
professional copywriter to re-work your sales page. Then all you have
to do is keep testing different copy versions until you either run
out of money or you hit upon the winning combination of words.
Or you could give the reader
a gentle "slap in the face" and call their attention back
to your site when they try to leave.
The face slap is actually
a good idea, figuratively speaking, and it has been tried to various
extents but with disappointing results.
A Brief History
Lesson
The earliest attempts to
draw a visitor back to a page when he or she started to leave used
the JavaScript onUnload() function. This function gets tucked away
in the HTML page's tag. It's designed to be activated when the browser
detects that the user is leaving the page from which the function
is called.
It didn't work very well
because the browser was unable to tell whether the user actually intended
to leave your site, or if he or she was just moving on to another
page such as the FAQ or the order form.
Another problem was that
as both Internet users and browser software became more sophisticated,
people started learning how to block those types of JavaScript calls.
The next generation of
"slap in the face" visitor-stoppers were pop-ups. Website
owners got away with using these for a while, but they really weren't
the answer either. For one thing, the exit pop-up strategy fell victim
to the same technical flaw as the onUnload() function. It really didn't
know whether the visitor was actually leaving the site or simply going
on to another page. Of course, the second problem was the fact that
pop-ups were so annoying that an entire pop-up blocker industry quickly
sprang up. Now all modern browsers have incorporated pop-up blocking
technology right inside the product.
Other variations of the
pop-up idea such as slide-ins, roll-overs and peel-downs came and
went but none of these had the amount of impact necessary to stop
a departing visitor dead in his tracks until the recent emergence
of exit grab technology.
Exit Grab Technology
is the answer to the "25 - 45 seconds" of viewing problem
for three reasons.
1. It doesn't depend upon
outdated technology that can be blocked by any of the current crop
of browsers. Its sophisticated programming goes far beyond simple
JavaScript functions.
2. It actually "knows"
when a user is trying to leave the site. It can differentiate between
mouse clicks indicating that a user has chosen to go deeper into your
site and mouse clicks indicating that a user is preparing to leave
for good.
3. When it's triggered,
the effect is so astounding that it actually does stop a user dead
in his tracks.
Exit Grab Technology
is a "slap in the face" that really works!
The true beauty of this
new innovation lies in the fact that it has the ability to track mouse
movements. As long as the mouse remains within the live area of your
web page, it lies dormant. Let the mouse move outside of the live
area, such as towards the URL line or the 'X' button, and it wakes
right up and springs into action displaying your user-defined message
in a big box in the middle of the screen. The user can close the box
and keep reading. But if the user tries to leave again, the box pops
right back up.
Of course, this technology
doesn't trap the user on your website. Users are free to ignore the
box and move on; but most people don't. They stop at least long enough
to read the message inside of the box.
That message can be anything
you want it to be. You could offer a discount, a free trial, free
bonuses, or anything else that will make a sale. You can even this
strategy on your Thank-You page and deliver a one-time offer after
the sale.
Adding this technology
to your website can definitely increase conversions by pulling the
visitor's attention back to your offer. It can also generate up-sell
and cross-sell revenue. What you do with technology is entirely up
to you.
Order
Now