Should we put time and energy into TikTok? Are we ready to be experts on LinkedIn? Is X even worth our time anymore? Before you dig into those questions, make sure your website is set up to welcome your traffic with a user-focused, engaging handshake.
Digital strategy. Social media strategy. Content strategy. Heck, just plain old marketing strategy. Working on any of these things for your school should begin with a thoughtful approach to your web presence—and truth be told, too many schools are treating their websites like a bulletin board in the student union versus a journey for their users. Here’s a high-level look at how to get to a much better place.
Put your users in the spotlight from the start
The process of creating, refreshing, or updating your website can be an exciting one, but it can also become stressful in short order. With multiple voices weighing in on how the site should look, sound, and function, and competing lists of “must have” features and content types jostling for attention, even the most patient user experience pros, designers, and developers will face some major hurdles in moving your project forward.
The best way to ensure you’re making the right choices is to put the focus on your website users. If you’re developing a website for a college, users could include everyone from your prospective applicants, to parents, to students, to faculty, to alumni, and so on. Beyond those audiences, you’ve also got internal teams who will be using your site to complete their administrative and communications tasks. Their needs are important, too.
Once you’ve come up with a list of your internal and external users, take some time to work through the following questions with each one during your discovery process:
- What level of familiarity does this user have with our institution?
- What types of information do they expect to find?
- What types of tasks will they expect to accomplish?
- How will they get in touch if they don’t find what they need?
- How can I make it easy for them to pick up where they left off, if they return?Some of the answers to these questions will invariably overlap, while others will demand a special section or feature.
Regardless, you’ll have the information you need to start working on your digital blueprint and developing a site that truly meets the needs of the community you want to build online.