Disgusting BathroomIn a restau­rant, clean bath­rooms por­tend clean kitchens, or so says the cliche.

Regard­less of how rea­son­able it is or isn’t, we instinc­tively attempt to con­firm a “brand promise” of atten­tion to detail in the kitchen by look­ing for evi­dence of it through­out the rest of the restaurant.

We believe in inter­nal con­sis­tency - a belief that’s hardly lim­ited to restaurants.

Clean Bath­rooms and Your Website’s UVP

where should the Unique Value Propo­si­tion go on my Website?”

Peo­ple often ask me that, and — with the clean bath­room the­ory firmly in mind — I usu­ally reply with a ques­tion of my own: “where does the cho­rus or refrain go in a song?”

Some­times it comes off as a bit of a non-sequitur, but a lit­tle guided dis­cov­ery quickly estab­lishes the fol­low­ing points about song refrains:

  1. The refrain car­ries the theme of the song.  Even when you can’t remem­ber the name of the song, you’ll usu­ally recall the refrain, because that’s the heart of the song
  2. The rest of the song fleshes out, sub­stan­ti­ates, and sup­ports the refrain.  The stan­zas and the refrain are inti­mately connected.
  3. The refrain is repeated over and over, and in the best songs, each rep­e­ti­tion gains mean­ing and emo­tional weight from the stan­zas that pre­ceded it.

To see how this works online, sim­ply sub­sti­tute “UVP” for “refrain” and “Web­site” for “song” and here’s what you get:

  1. The UVP car­ries the theme of the Web­site.  In other words the rea­son vis­i­tors would want to do busi­ness with you should lie at the heart of your online mes­sag­ing.  If it’s not, you’re spend­ing too much time talk­ing about what you want to talk about rather than what’s impor­tant to the customer.
  2. The rest of the Web­site should flesh out, sub­stan­ti­ate, and sup­port your UVP.  Peo­ple will look to see if you back-up what you claim. If the rest of your site doesn’t jibe with the UVP, you’ll lose cred­i­bil­ity and, ulti­mately, lose the sale.
  3. The UVP is repeated over and over (though not ver­ba­tim or in entirety) from dif­fer­ent angles or per­spec­tives, such that the claims and promises gain weight, cred­i­bil­ity, and emo­tional res­o­nance with each click or page.

The Bot­tom Line:

Treat­ing your UVP as a song refrain helps to insure inter­nal consistency

It forces you to check your own site for clean bath­rooms.  So when vis­i­tors look to cor­rob­o­rate your claims by cross ref­er­enc­ing the var­i­ous ele­ments and pages of your Web­site, they’ll become increas­ingly reas­sured and con­fi­dent with each click.

For exam­ple, if you are a local con­trac­tor spe­cial­iz­ing in com­plet­ing base­ment ren­o­va­tions and garage enclo­sures in half the time of tra­di­tional con­trac­tors, your Web vis­i­tors will expect to see your claimed spe­cialty and value propo­si­tion reflected in your:

  • prior work history,
  • qualifications/certifications
  • gallery of projects,
  • guar­an­tees,
  • tes­ti­mo­ni­als, etc.

If each of those ele­ments speaks to your spe­cial­ized focus and your half-the-time claims, you’ll win a lot more leads.  If they don’t sup­port your UVP, your vis­i­tors will likely go else­where for their renovations.

Also, if you claim to only hire the best, expect a fair amount of prospec­tive cus­tomers click­ing through your employ­ment pages to see what your REAL stan­dards of employ­ment are. And you bet­ter have “clean bath­rooms” because this ain’t the­ory, I’ve sat and watched vis­i­tors do exactly that via ana­lyt­ics and ser­vices such as Click Tales, OnTar­get, and Tea Leaf.

A Video­cast Full of Great “Clean Bath­room” Specifics for Websites

A great video-cast/discussion on this topic was cre­ated by my fel­low Wiz­ard of Ads Part­ner, Dave Young, when he dis­cusses the cred­i­bil­ity cues he inten­tion­ally baked into the Web­site for Roof Life of Ore­gon.

Please enable Javascript and Flash to view this Vid­dler video.

So go take a fresh look at your Web­site and ask yourself:

  • Have you woven a refrain through­out your Website’s messaging?
  • How does each page of your site work to sub­stan­ti­ate and cor­rob­o­rate your main claims/UVP?