How to Create Successful Product Websites that People Love
You just launched a new product. You want people to tell others in their social network. You want word of it to spread like a virus from person to person, eventually resulting in more buzz, attention and sales.
And you want to do it using the internet. Purely online. No TV, newspapers or radio. No print ads. Assume you’ve already done all of the above (you should have) and just want an online strategy that will work.
There are many things you can do. Every experienced online marketer will agree that the first step is to set up a home base or launch pad. Some website where people can find you and your product online. Some place where you can funnel attention and traffic towards. It’s where you pitch your work. It’s what people will be sharing.
This article will talk about how to create an effective website to promote your new product (or just about anything you want).
How People Usually Promote Products Online
The most common way of promoting a new product involves the development of a new website or web page to showcase it. In both cases, the goal is to provide information about the product, capture attention, generate interest/desire and sales.
If a new webpage is built, it usually takes the form of a straightforward sales page and is hosted on an existing domain. If a new website is developed, the sales page format can be extended into an informational site with a community built around the product.
It’s impossible to say what works for every product out there. So let’s avoid generalities and assume a specific scenario. Say your product is a new book and you want to promote it. Here are some of the common methods used:
- Method One – Set up a landing page for the book on your existing personal website or blog. A product page is also often created on the publisher’s website or a distributor like Amazon.com. This is usually a page with promotional blurbs or recommendations, along with a synopsis of the book and reviews from the press.
- Method Two – Buy a new domain name exactly similar or related to the book’s name and set up a website just for the book. This will include a blog where you can share knowledge by posting essays, articles related to current events or updates/news regarding the book. Press reviews, testimonials and author bios are included too.
From what I’ve seen, all book authors or publishers take either one of the above two approaches. If you’re really savvy and smart you’ll do both method one and two: Optimize your own personal website and set up a new hub just for the book. Connect them together.
Then proceed to put up regular articles, not veiled infomercials for the book but actual content that informs and benefits the general reader. Provide value first. Sales is almost an after-thought. First thing to remember when creating successful product launch websites.
Develop a Laser Like Focus on Delivering Maximum Value

Image Credit: Dashu Pagla
Let’s retrace our steps. You want people talking about your book and telling their friends and family. You want word-of-mouth to spread naturally and ripple outwards. Every day you want someone who has never heard of you to discover your book and tell someone else about it.
In order to do that you need to increase the value you offer to everyone who lands on your website. You need to sculpt that value until it has a laser-like focus. It should be extremely engaging and incredibly tangible.
For most book marketers, method one and two is the extent of what they will do. But it often results in a pretty boring website. And boring doesn’t help you to get word of mouth.
Here’s what I think: Method one and two do work. But they aren’t focused enough to deliver maximum impact. People can be easily distracted online. After getting to your site, they first have to orient themselves and then after that, search for the value you offer. What’s so cool about you or your book? What’s your message? Why should I care about your book?
Imagine being a visitor who lands on your website. What do they see? A bunch of testimonials and blurbs floating around somewhere to the side, a blog with content related to the book’s topic, news of a book signing in a city they don’t live in and even if they do get so far… a bio of someone they don’t know and most probably won’t care about.
Is that the best way to encourage word of mouth? Refine your website. Make it better.
Create an Experience to Magnetize the Attention of Your Visitors

Image Credit: roujo
Thought-provoking blog posts are valuable for your audience. So is a free chapter from your book. Sure, they are all beneficial. But there are many other types of value. Some of them are better for encouraging massive word of mouth.
You goal is to make your entire website a buzz generator. The whole website functions as a congruent whole. Every page has a certain mood. It is designed to elicit a specific thought in the viewer’s mind. That thought could be ‘this is intriguing’, ‘this is really cool’ or simply ‘wow’.
Ideally, that thought should end with ‘I have to let others know about this..‘ or ‘XXX will be really interested in this..’. You want them to pull the pass-it-on trigger and share your site.
Follow the AIDA model. Get their Attention first with your landing page. The first image they see. Hold their Interest and lead them through your site so they don’t wander off and click away. Make them Desire to know more by teasing with your best bits. Get them to take Action by asking for the sale/share and making it easy for them to proceed.
Want an example of how to do it? Check out PhoneSextheBook.com
It’s a website set up to promote a book featuring interviews with phone sex operators. There’s still room for improvement but I think it’s a good example of a product launch website. Apart from the naturally stimulating topic, the entire website is designed in a minimalist way which provides maximum value up front. Here’s a picture of the homepage:

The only way you can navigate through the simple but inviting front page is to click. And you will click. Because you’re curious.
Once you’re in the curious mindset, you’re presented with a short introduction to prime your thoughts. Notice how the minimalist design is maintained after the first click. Just one click after the introduction and you’re IMMEDIATELY in the frame of exploring the product. There’s no need to search for anything, scan headlines, read testimonials or click to download a free pdf. It’s just there. Right in your face. You cannot avoid it.

People don’t come into this website looking left and right for something interesting or cool. The juicy value-added content is shown directly in the middle. The best bits come first.
Instead of putting out large chunks of text that may be a turn-off, this website uses only brief snippets of content and pictures. This is a great because of two reasons: 1) It teases by providing only a taste. 2) Less information to process facilitates movement through your site. Not everyone has the time to invest 10 minutes on each individual page.

If you don’t like just sharing snippets and want to share more content, try using infographics. They can pack a lot of usual information into an image that can be read in a glance or two.
The last page of the website has the publisher/author details, link to a PR agent, a downloadable press kit as well as a link to Amazon.com. Not pushy at all. No hard sell.

Personally, I would have included a few other elements to enhance a product website like this:
- A blog. This could be created as a sub-directory at phonesexthebook.com/blog. On the last page, a ‘find out more‘ link to the blog could be added. This blog will use a more conventional layout and will include news, more info on the making of the book and other related topics. It can also be used as the place from which to create content that will attract links and traffic.
- More pages. Since the pages displayed are visually engaging and not text-heavy, more of them could be included to make the whole site more substantial. This might not be suitable because the whole book only has 50 pages but in general, giving a little more away increases the overall value for your visitor. People don’t want to share 5 pages and a sales pitch at the end. People want to share something that’s worthwhile enough to add value to their social network.
- Click prompters. For additional usability, I would prefer to have a small but noticeable ‘next’ or ‘continue’ button/link somewhere on each page, which will encourage continuous click movement towards a definite end. It’s like turning a page and taking your visitor on a journey through a story. If you design the site well, they WILL keep clicking and seeing what you want them to see.
- Opt-in form. Depending on the type of book or product, you may want to collect emails so you can update your prospective audience. They may not buy immediately but want to stay in touch. You can set up an opt-in email newsletter to share news about the book or general research tips on a certain topic. Other types of capturing attention include displaying a RSS of your blog or a link to your Twitter profile. This is all optional of course, but it never hurts to nurture a following.
- Pass-it-on buttons. After going through the content, many of your visitors will want to share what they learned or experienced with others. Make it easy for them to do so by including a simple email-a-friend form or post-to-Facebook-Twitter button on the last page or somewhere on your site. Don’t underestimate their ability to generate word of mouth traffic. Assuming you get 10,000 visitors in a day and 1% of them used the pass-it-on buttons. That’s 100 people. And they may refer a substantial amount of people to your site, especially if some of them are influencers with a large social network.
- More copy. I liked the introduction used because it seemed like an authentic artist statement. It’s not snobby or sale-sy and it succeeds in giving the book some gravitas. If you’re selling a different type of product you may have to use a different style of copy. The words you use are extremely important because of the minimalistic set up. The introduction page sets the mood for the rest of the pages so prepare your text carefully.
I like the idea of telling a story but choose what works for you. At the last page, it would be useful to include one or two high profile testimonials. This works very well to seal off the experience. Look at it this way. Your visitor has just finished perusing content and their opinions might not be fully developed yet. Testimonials reveal what others think and tune your visitor towards a favorable perspective.
Such a site is noticeably quite different from a salespage or a blog. Simply put, it’s a distraction-free experience that’s 100% content-focused. But careful. Don’t go overboard with the design. The site should be easily usable and the pages must load really FAST. I cannot emphasize this enough. Slow loading pages built with flash or other unnecessary design elements will result in impatient visitors clicking away.
Can minimalistic multi-page slide-style websites work for every product type? Of course not. But I think it works really well for many products and offers. Can this work even if you don’t have your own product to sell? Of course. Affiliates, non-commercial organizations, artists and individuals promoting themselves can use this method as well.
The key point is to lead them through your web site towards a result you want. Be it a new subscriber, greater awareness on an important issue or an affiliate conversion. Go test it. It may work better than what you’re doing now.
Interesting post, I have some experience as a internet marketer, but you somehow always over deliver on topics that have been covered before and that’s what makes you unique and makes me coming back for more. I always learn something new or see something at a different angle in your content. Never just another rerun.
Very good points of staying laser focused on your main objective or keeping to your main point and nothing else. Also about creating value and interest towards your product and sites are definitely key for success. I definitely need to continue to get better at implementing those skills.
Thanks Maki for another great post and will spread to my followers.
You are right that people come to your website looking for juicy bits of information. Remember people on the web are ‘users’. They go to a site for a purpose and are impatient and click off as fast as they came, if they do not find what they want. What do they want? They want something usually for free and something that is of value.
Further, I would add that a website is not linear. When people land on a page or a part of your site they are easily confused or disoriented as they do not always land on your home page. Each part of a website needs to explain itself in relation to the whole.
Given the above, you are right. You basically have to lead people by the hand, dropping juicy bits in their hand, rather than come at them with flashing lights and sirens, that is, you need to pull rather than push.
Maki, thanks for the post on creating websites that people will love, I look forward to your next post and of course I will tweet your post.
Interesting. I just had this thought that you have to deliver something different today. Interrupt the surfers patterns, because they are so used to seeing the same stuff over and over again. Overdelivering is one way of doing this and you mentioned many more. I tend to be lazy and not do these things. I guess I’d have much better results if I put some effort into it
This kind of minimalistic website is an interesting idea, especially as promotion/sales webpage in this case. It takes limiting the amount of possible choice to the extreme, there’s just one, click to continue.
In a sense it’s a kind of sales funnel one might implement through autoresponder, but here, it’s a sequence of “slides” instead of emails. It’ll be interesting to see if more “sales pages” like this will start to pop-up.
I like the way you have presented this for those who have never built a site, and need to have a presence on the web. Part of my IT business was site development and design. Sometimes it is hard to put ourselves in the past, when we were learning the fundamentals of almost anything on the Internet. I think we need more articles like this with good explanations of the basics.
One good way to promote an ebook is 1)Build a mini site with wordpress 2)Hire some one to wirte an appealing sale’s page or write it yourself 3)Submit the ebook to Clickbank and let others promote it.
I don’t have a product of my own up to now.But I will create my own product some day.Probably I will write an ebook or hire some one write it for me.Even I will jsut buy master resale rights.I think the key to promote a product depends on two factors 1)the sales page 2)the affiliate network
Hey Maki,
To retain visitors you have to focus on their experience and providing maximum desired value.
Like you mentioned when analyzing the example you provided, by keeping things simple, only the essential is left. The value (which should be remarkable and desirable, of course) comes front and center, and there’s nothing else to click away from, hunt amidst links and buttons, or find through pages and pages of content.
And a simple design lets people get to that desired value as quick as possible. Good design gets out of the way.
Plus, like Katarzyna mentioned in the comment above, websites aren’t linear, s0 the design should also facilitate exploration. Maybe a new visitor wants to read every single thing on the site, or maybe they only need to read 1 or 2 examples and then click on the “buy” link. If they have to click through more stuff to get there, they’ll almost for certain get bored or frustrated and not end up clicking on that link.
Nice article breaking down an effective website to the essentials (desired value and a simple design that facilitates exploration and then clicking on the main link). I particularly like your simple AIDA model – easy to remember and a good guideline to follow.
Looking forward to your next article,
Oleg
Really nice post Maki and im glad to see your blogging again, but you see all the above steps require some money or at least a $100. You see I don’t think i can afford that, im a teen blogger just struggling to pass 8th grade. Now the first thing im concentrating on is to build high traffic to my blogspot blog. Once i get good traffic and good money it will be easy for me to kick off any product or website. The reason people like Darren Rowse and Yaro Starak get instantly successful product is their high audience and plenty of availability of cash.
A very long (and long waiting) post.
Detailed explanation and worth trying tactics. Never heard of AIDA concept and it’s really fresh for me…
Thanks
“People can be easily distracted online” – I’m the worst among that group. Unless you hook me quickly (whether it be first time to a site, looking at an article, viewing a promotion or offer, etc), I bounce away in a heartbeat. Best to stick to the point and create maximum value while keeping it simple- simplicity is what I’ve found to keep my attention best, so I assume it works for others. When a blog or site has too many options or directions for me to go, it’s fighting a losing battle…
I am currently working on writing my first book so I’m glad I read this post. Landing/sales page, and a domain with the title of the book in it, sound like very simple ideas bu I did not even think of them!
Maki,
Excellent article! Delivering maximum value is something you are an expert at.
You always explore a topic like this in depth to a point that other writers just aren’t willing to do, because it requires so much work. However, in the end that extra work makes your writing rise above everyone else.
Maki, this is one of the best articles I’ve read here… Very useful… it has excellent examples, precise descriptions of what to do, I am very impressed with your article…
I think something new is needed, the old one page sales pitch will soon be recognizable and avoided by internet users. I wonder how blind people have become to it already?
Great article as always Maki.
Ramsay
PS – Still waiting for that article on marketing ethics!
VALUE is the key word in your article IMO. So many peeps are running around scraping information or repackaging material, there’s just so much garbage out there. Just because they made something free, these offerings are an utter waste of everyone’s time.
Where’s the originality anymore? All I want is a decent writer who speaks to me, entertains me, and informs me. Is that too much to ask?
That website is a perfect blend of minimalism design married to a wonderful curiosity factor. I’d love to see you do more posts/features like this one. Awesome!
You give tons of great information in this post. One thing I will add is that a sales page must have well-written copy. You have to entice your visitors with every word on the page so that they are encouraged to continue down the “sales funnel” and BUY. That’s the point. Here’s a great book I used to create content for my Two Page Mini Business Plan™ web site: Web Copy That Sells by Maria Veloso. Thanks again, Suzanne
I’m wondering. Most people are not spending very much time on a website. Therefore, even a blog like yours Maki…I just wonder if short, concise posts (articles) would be better for the majority of people? I’m talking out loud hear, but it seems like minimalistic is “in” right now. Google has done it very well since it launched, and other sites like zenhabits.net is nearly bare now, but it is more consumable IMO
I have always come from the angle of more VOLUME, and it seems it has bitten me in the butt most of the time. I have what I think is a very good ebook for a niche, and it is 247 pages…but…lots of pictures and bullet points, not just paragraphs of text. Result? I get complaints at how long it is
I’m giving it serious thought to short, yet still valuable blog posts, as well, as minimizing my content for selling products on my sites.
Anybody want to jump in here?
Cheers!
Great information and very timely as I have almost finished my latest book. Thank you!
Hello
thanks a lot for this great article.
I created a landingpage according to your hints.
It’s not complete more a work in progress.
Thanks again from Germany
You rule, Maki! I will follow your advice when my next book will be published
I feel like you are Jesus of the internet. When you first start blogging or even marketing anything you think the more crap you can fit on the page the better like you should totally blast your potential customers in their face with an overload of information, then you realize people have 20 second attention spans and they care about the stuff your saying about 10% as much as you do. So you have to be intriguing, pull them in, be funny, be risque, be how you say in english, magnetic.
And, yet again, I want to go back and redesign my website. Thank you for a most useful blog post. You always have something profound to say in relation to internet marketing. It isn’t always relevant to what I want to achieve, but it is always of interest and always gets me thinking. I also appreciate your tweets – often eye-opening. Congratulations on your ability to contribute something useful to the online community.
Great article, I love coming back to your blog because you always provide great knowledge and articles. I especially like your six elements that will help with a new product. I think that more pages and content will help because this will give the consumer more information to research about the new product.
wow…this is gold info, nice post. I discovered your blog a couple of days ago and spend hours a day to read the old articles
thanks
Yes big up’s to the sites designer, great jobs man. Tons of usfull info here. Keep up the great work.
I always listen to Leo Laporte on the weekend on KFI! Great show.
Thanks for posting this column
Thanks Maki for this interesting post. It’s timely for me because am right now studying web copywriting. You presented a good sample website and at the same time you gave what you think would further improve it. That surely is a great help for beginners like me.
Thanks too for pointing out where being minimalist is effective.
Jose
Glad to see you speaking of value, client experience, story… It’s hard to get entrepreneurs to realize that their prospect doesn’t want to hear about them, except in terms that are useful to the prospect.
If a marketer interrupts me to provide information about a product they want to sell, they’ve just assured that I probably won’t be happy with the transaction.
However, if they manage to communicate to me, in the first ten seconds of my reaching their page, that they will PROVIDE VALUE to me, they’ll earn another minute of my attention. If there’s truly useful content in that first minute, they’ll get another. If I’m still around a few minutes later, I’ll probably be back.
The website which you shown in the post awesome. until now i never came across such a site for the single book. You have give an interesting article regarding how to create a successful product website?
while i reading this post i have a question.
How can i know the market level for a particular product before i creating a successful product site?.
If i know this market level then only it will helpful to create such a successful site.
Hope i will get the ans
As far a landing page is concerned, a great sales page will make all the difference. Focus on a “skinny” site. A narrow site without a sidebar will guide the reader down. Have lots of H2 headlines, pictures, videos to make it interesting. And don’t forget lots of testimonials interspersed throughout.
I think the idea also applies if you’re marketing your website without selling a product. You just need the concepts behind this and it will all workout. The only focus is that you’re marketing information and you have to deliver it in a different kind of way
Once the great John Reese said that the best way to increase your online earnings is to increase the ‘quantity’ of real estate on your website/s. I think that’s exactly what you are saying by having a
*Blog
*More posts
*More copies
And then with Opt-in-forms and ‘click prompters’ you are increasing the conversions. These tips really can’t get any better!
All in all, a great post, thanks Maki!
This post is really interesting and gives me the general concept on how to promote my products through website. I’ll certainly revisit this page for reference when i launch my product website in the future. Some of the points are very useful for all website instead of just product website and can be applied to get more visitors. Thanks for the great sharing.
The phone sex website you go through in the article is *awesome*. It’s always neat to see how the most incredibly simple principles, properly applied, can be devastatingly effective.
Good tips and insight. I’ll definitely be keeping these in mind for 2010. My resolutions are for more pass-it-on buttons and interesting copy!
As usual, you’ve taken a common problem and clearly, effortlessly (or so it seems) laid out the best way to attack it.
Product website should = its own engaging entity, rather than just a lousy, web-based billboard. You make it seem so obvious
, wonder when more new marketers will figure it out, too?
Yes great article for sure, although I do have to say that with a topic like sex the WOW factor is already there, it does not require much creativity on the marketers part to come up with a new way to stun people.
I have been using the first two methods when I promote my product websites. Thanks for the tips, you have a very good mind when it comes to doing business on the internet! Also keywords are very important in your articles when promoting your products or websites.
Great template and information to follow. Being around a while in the IM arena, I’ve never seen such a minimalist product launch! SO used to all the hype and bombast. This is brilliant – I wish more products launched in this fashion.
I like your additional ideas as well. The pass-it-on in particular could really improve the total sales numbers in a very non-threatening way.
Best to you,
Scott
Interesting read, actually I thought the website could have been just a little more exciting, it didn’t entrig me to look further, maybe I’M old fashion. It could have a little more readability!
The way you’ve presented absolutely fine. Designing landing page is important. When you promoting product in your website then use eye catching design with quality content. Your content should describe the customer need. Then you can able sale your product.
Hello Maki,
I like your article. It’s full of good basic ideas. The two most important concepts for me are; content before sales, and fast loading XHTML pages – forget Flash (it’s way too slow).
Wow, this was a lot of great information. I am going to have to bookmark this post for future reference. Thanks again.
Chris Owen
Hi Maki. it’s been some time since you last posted. Are you all right? Can’t wait for your next article for inspiration
Whatever you are doing rite now, i wish you all the best.
An interesting article. You have established a different viewpoint for Sales Pages. The normal thought about a salespage is a long and draggy page with lots and lots of content and testimonials that are a bit difficult to digest. In fact that is how a salespage is supposed to be or, at least that is what the big boys teach.
This was an entirely different approach to a sales page.
I have always been put off by the long sales pages. Not in the remotest of my thoughts have I ever read such a sales page completely. I either click away from the site or, scroll down to the end to see the price of the product and make a decision to buy or, defer.
So far as my thoughts go, a good sales page is not one that is long and has draggy content, but should be one that tells the reader what is the benefit of the product, what are the features and the WIIFM. This can also be done by a not so long sales page.
This is an excellent example Maki. Focus is key here. Everyday, I come across webmasters who focus too much on SEO and they forget about good, clean landing pages with laser focus. I think they will soon learn that if they can’t convert the traffic, all that effort into SEO counts for nothing. This is an excellent case study. And you have chosen a most interesting website
Very very useful. Thanks for sharing.
Phone Sex was a great example to use.
Thanks for the article.
Great points! My only concern is your suggestion to add more copy and pages. While these will add depth to the website for SEO purposes, it may detract from the overall user experience. The old “three-click rule” is quite outdated (as consumers are willing to click more than three times per website these days), but adding additional clicks and unnecessary copy can take away from a positive experience. Don’t you want to get your customers/visitors to the end goal as quickly as possible? Of course, this is a balancing act, as you must find “what works for you” (and I thank you for saying those exact words).
I really like thinking about creating a website with the goal of generating buzz rather than providing straight-forward information! Thank you.
Very interesting post, thank you!
As Matthew Day Said, juicy unique info is what makes your site stand out from the crowd…
I currently have a resource site for beginner’s with well written basic info for people to get started with a website but yet too ad my personal touch to it. Although its good info most of which is not really fresh and deeply unique. I have pleanty of new idea’s for some fresh thinking posts but not really sure the best way of getting the traffic to read those posts. I have been using the standard methods:
Article Submission
Forum Posting
Press Release
But in all honesty not having a great deal of luck. Did you just keep plugging away at backlink generating until you ranked well with Google or were you able to build a good reader base before you even ranked well on big G?
I look forward to your response…
Thanks for all the hard work, deeply appreciated.
What I like about this article – I see myself in it. And that’s very appealing. I actually see myself, especially when Maki mentioned that people get easily distracted online (very me, I open multiple tabs the moment I sit on my throne).
The main thing problem is, when we build our site, our attention gets diverted to “selling” and we become someone else. Like what was mentioned in another article here, about adding value to others, we should be giving first before trying to get something.
Great articles here in doshdosh. I recommended this to my friends.
Looking forward to more of these.
Original content that adds value to a reader is Key!! Great post!
Thank you for a really great post.I have just started creating my own product for the nice “Get Your Ex Back” and your article is very useful in my work.
Nice Blog!
Annette.
One of the best website I have found. The post is very interesting and I also added the list of social media websites you have added in one of your post. Your blog is useful for the affiliate marketers and seo too.
thanks a lot for this great article.
I created a landingpage according to your hints.
It’s not complete more a work in progress.
Thanks again from lithuania
I’m just a fan of the fact that you found such a great example to illustrate your point. I do think that for some subjects it’s very difficult to implement this strategy (if they’re boring that is) but sex is so easy to sell it’s almost like cheating to use it as a strategy.
Chris Guthrie
u know there is error on your footer: Fatal error: Call to undefined function akst_share_form() in /nfs/c01/h15/mnt/36436/domains/doshdosh.com/html/wp-content/themes/DoshDosh4/footer.php on line 10
Great Content Maki, creating a well presented landing page will really make a huge difference to your bottom line. Would be great to see you actively posting on DoshDosh again. Cheers.
Every body should learn from your post. People without spending enough time on research about their product or service, simply publishing their site as result they are loosing the visitors also target. So my point of view is before publishing we should analyze our service and our audience who is going to take our service.