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At Room 101, we recognise that it's essential
to get as many people to visit your website as possible. However,
the true benefit to your company comes not from casual one-time
only visitors, but from those who like your website enough to bookmark
it and return to view it on a regular basis. Why might someone do
that? Well of course if they're interested in what you have to offer,
that's a great start, but if they're revisiting every two weeks,
for example, then they may find that nothing new has been added
to the site since their previous visit. This can be disappointing
- a website should be more like a magazine than a book - always
with something new to say.
A few companies are essentially news and
information based, and generate fresh content on a regular basis,
but for most organisations, keeping a constant supply of new information
is hard. To address this factor, we have invented something which
we call a carousel. The idea is to make your website appear to
have been updated more frequently than it actually has.
Reload this page to see a different
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Imagine I have a pack of cards, and that
each time someone visits the homepage, I shuffle the pack, and deal
out 4 random ones. This is basically how the carousel works. What's
on the cards? Try hitting the refresh or reload button on your browser
to see the effect on the card image.
If you have 6 high profile clients, perhaps
their photo and a small quote would make a good carousel.
"I've found Acme Ltd always service my account
professionally" - Alan Knight, MP.
Or in a retail environment, these might
be special offers, however, bear in mind that on each visit, the
website visitor will only see some of these, so they shouldn't
be crucial pieces of information, rather they should be small tidbits
or icing on the cake. How many? Well, if you have 4 items, one of
which is displayed each time, that's fine. Or you might have 12
items, 4 of which are shown at once.
The carousel is normally inset into a mainly
static page, and is often used on your homepage. From your website
visitors' point of view, it need not look like anything special,
and just blends into the rest of the information on the page. Afterall,
you just updated that page didn't you?!
Example:
The Room101 home page has a nice example of a
carousel. Hit Refresh a few times, and you'll see that
the four panels surrounding the door logo change.
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