In order to measure the length of anybody’s attention span in doing any activity, the type of activity undertaken will affect the result. Someone is obviously capable of a longer attention span when they are doing something that is enjoyable and/or intrinsically motivating.
Therefore if a dental website was dull and uninteresting, someone’s visit to that site is going to be a lot shorter than it would be with a well designed website. Furthermore their attention span will be further decreased if the website is found to be difficult to navigate and it is slow to download sections. Frustration certainly shortens a person’s attention span.
The web has allowed people to develop incredibly short attention spans. This is because everyone knows that there are always other sites that they can look at, with similar information. In fact, there are many different ways to find these different websites: Search Engines, Directory sites, Price Comparison sites, Social Networking sites etc – they all offer a huge amount of data on services available.
Consequently it’s now a bit like a small boy being let loose for hours in a sweet shop. With the internet too, you are spoilt for choice. Therefore if you see a site with a long, long introduction on the home page set out in a tiny type size, are you going to take the time to read it, or go somewhere else? Initially, most people are not particularly loyal and faithful when it comes to websites. But once someone finds a site that gives them the information they want, in an easy to understand way, that person will keep coming back.
A dental website design strives to achieve the main dental marketing objective: ‘conversions’. A ‘conversion’ is where people (as a result of visiting a website) actually pick up the phone to make an enquiry (or they pay a personal visit to find out more). To increase ‘conversions’ we ensure a site is as highly ranked as possible on Search Engines and then the site design itself works to ‘convert’ each site visitor into an enquiry. This is mainly achieved by lengthening the site visitor’s attention span.
Adrian Adler is “the Wizard” at Dental Focus Web Design.
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Adrian Adler is “the Wizard” at Dental Focus Web Design.
Krishan Joshi is “the Master” at Dental Focus Web Design.
Positive psychology is a more recent branch of psychology that “studies the strengths and virtues that enable individuals and communities to thrive”.
“My mate has offered to do my website”. We hear this a lot, and we are very pleased that the level of ‘online literacy & knowledge’ is forever increasing. This, in turn, will also mean that so is the level of the online sophistication of the ‘audience’.
Dr Lina and Shrik Kotecha, Principal Dentists
Dr Paul Lowe, Principal Cosmetic Dentist
Kay Kelly, Practice Manager
There are a number of elements that make up a great
Its always been assumed that ‘thinking outside the box’ is wild and the most truly creative. Well no it isn’t really, when compared with solving problems by employing well used imagery and existing information, but in original ways. This is far more tricky. Take great art for instance, Leonardo da Vinci’s ‘The Last Supper’, did he start with a ‘blank canvas’ (metaphorically)? Did he invent all the characters and the actual event? No, he portrayed what was thought to have happened to a ‘brief’ from his patron (the church). He did however do it in an original way, by using facial expressions and gestures, more effectively then ever before (but he was definitely thinking ‘inside the box’). Even when he ‘invented’ the helicopter by making drawings of one, he based them on a well known medieval toy that kids threw about at the time and he modified it. He was again thinking from inside the box.