When visitors come to your website, what exactly are you feeding them? Have you ever stopped to think about it? Is your copy like a greasy burger and fries that you didnt put much thought into picking up, or more like a lovingly prepared home cooked Sunday supper with all of the trimmings?
Why the food comparison? Well, its actually quite logical. Your web copy provides your visitors with the information that they need to decide whether or not they want to purchase your goods or services. So in essence, your copy is food for their buying decision. The question is, do they leave your website properly satiated or will they find themselves hungry for something more substantial mere moments later?
The best way to ensure that your content provides readers with the information that they need to pick up that phone or submit your online form is to supply your cooks (aka your writers) with fresh, nutrient-dense ingredients. Truly nutritious content should have your fingerprints all over it. It should be redolent with your unique brand voice, toothsome with hearty information, and it should linger in their minds like a fine wine on the palate. If you want to convince them and convert them it is essential to offer something more than fast food copy.
Stanford Smith has a point: most bloggers do have a secret love affair with their sidebar. After some research and testing, though, it's pretty clear that they're the only ones. Blog readers aren't looking to be sold to, whether you're selling your blog archives, a subscription, other people's content, or an old fashioned advertisement. As humans in the 21st century, we've trained ourselves to ignore these types of things without even having to think about it.
Take a peek at the image above: the highlighted areas are the ones where readers spent their time, and the green outlined areas are where extra sidebar-esque content lived on the site tested.
When providing content to your readers, just get down to business. Provide quality and exceed their expectations - spend more of your time on that and less of your time on the sidebar and other parts of the page you're including mostly to please yourself.
This post also includes some interesting alternative actions you can take to achieve some of the things you might have been attempting with your sidebar content.