Forum Moderators: buckworks
Consider instead first offering something that indicates the value of your product and the knowledge of your company. Having established trust and piqued the interest of you potential client, you may then ask for their personal contact information in exchange for access to a white paper, product demo, or something else of value.
You're right, the welcome page does have some good information. My reaction is that I don't understand why you are requiring my e-mail address to see a slideshow about the product.
As a potential customer I think, I'd like to just see the slideshow and if I'm interested I'll give them my e-mail address so that they can get in touch with me.
My other reaction is that it is strange to have the presentation in powerpoint and only available via html via special request.
My view of the client relationship is that it is our privelege to get to enter into a dialogue with them, not the other way around.
You'd never get me to log in to get to the HomePage, no matter what was on the Welcome page. No way, I'd just look for another site where I could see what's on the site by just plain "normal" navigation.
>Only want professional finance decision makers since we license our product.
That is what everyone wants. That's why salespeople put potential customers through a qualification process. First you get the contacts, then you qualify prospects as part of the sales process.
Then think about promoting the site. How will you get directory listings such as Yahoo and ODP which requires unique content to include a site? How much unique content can there be on one page? Will an editor approve the site for directory inclusion without seeing what's on the rest of the site?
Also, what's essentially a one page website isn't exactly putting spider food for search engines out there. Where will the traffic come from?