Anna Walker:
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Hi everyone.
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Thanks for joining me for this
next episode of Marketing Therapy.
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Last week we talked about the importance
of copy and design together, how most
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people know that they matter, both of them
separately, but how they work together.
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Today I wanna dive more
deeply into design.
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Yeah, everyone says they
like good design, right?
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You're probably one of those
therapists like the ones that I
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talk to often that say things like,
I know what I like when I see it.
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That doesn't mean I know how
to create it, but I know what
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I like when I see it, right?
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We all appreciate it.
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We all might have different tastes
and aesthetics, but the fact is
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we like things that look good.
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And when it comes to your
marketing, you know, you should
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have a beautiful website, right?
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Like, you know, it should look good.
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You recognize that how the
website looks, matters.
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But very few people understand why it
actually matters, or what that design
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is saying to your potential clients.
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We're talking about before
a single word is read.
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Why does this matter?
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Now?
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Like I said, we all know design matters,
but most people stop at, well, I just
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want it to look nice, but pretty and
effective are not the same thing.
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Pretty might get a, like a
double tap on Instagram, but
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effective gets you a client, okay?
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So that's the difference here,
that just because something is
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pretty doesn't mean it's effective.
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And if something's pretty,
what makes it effective?
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That's what I wanna talk about here today.
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Now you know that in therapy
communication is not just about
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what you say, it's how you say it.
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If you deliver an observation
or a challenge to your
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client in one tone of voice.
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They could receive it
completely differently than if
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you presented it in another.
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That's really what your
website's doing too.
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Here.
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Your website is constantly communicating
tone and trust and safety and energy,
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and when it comes to design, that is
happening without saying a single word,
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it's about forming a first impression
and an environment where someone actually
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wants to know your niche statement.
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They want to read your copy, the
headline, you spent hours agonizing over.
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Actually lands with them.
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Studies show us that clients'
first impressions are formed
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in less than five seconds.
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That's not enough time to
understand your entire niche, right?
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Their brain is already making decisions
about whether this feels safe and
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credible if they feel connected to it.
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It's a lot like your
nonverbal cues in session.
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It's the reason therapy over a phone is
not the same as sitting in a room with
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someone or sitting on a virtual screen.
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The eye contact, the tone, the
posture, just like you read
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your clients, they read yours.
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And so design is your
website's body language.
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So I wanna today look at what's
actually happening beneath the
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surface, because your website is
so much more than just decoration.
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It's so much more than
just looking pretty.
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And if we can get this right, it
really is psychology in action.
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So I think you'll find
this one quite interesting.
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And shout out to Amanda.
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Amanda had a great question in this
week's Confident copy call and I let
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her know, Hey, I actually have an
episode coming out next week about this.
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And she was asking about
some of these very things.
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And so I know that this is relevant.
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I know that so many of you are being
mindful about what your marketing
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needs to look like and what your
niche is and how you're presenting it.
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We can't think about those things
without also thinking about
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how those things are presented.
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So there's six kind of facets to
design psychology that I want to
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go through today to empower you to
actually make some strategic decisions
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because again, just because something's
pretty doesn't mean it's effective,
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and I want the latter for you.
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All right, so the first
one is color psychology.
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Color sets the tone emotionally.
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They're the first emotional cue that
your visitors are going to register.
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So if you have warm, neutral.
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I'm talking reds and tans,
oranges, soft yellows.
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The color psychology of those warm
colors is calm and safe and grounded.
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If it's cooler, if it's
light blues or teals greens.
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This is more reflective and contained
soothing if you have some bright
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accents, which are absolutely okay.
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This is about communicating energy
and motivation and approachability.
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Friendliness.
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So the colors that you choose
actually say something.
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And so it's important to ask yourself,
what do you want people to feel
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when they land on your website?
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If your brand palette, the colors that
you're using, feel scattered or anxious
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or chaotic, people are gonna feel that
too, even if your words are perfect.
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So it, it really begins just
with those decisions about color.
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If you've been through our
therapist, DIY brand kit, you
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know that this is where we start.
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We start with thinking about how do I
want people to feel when they interact
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with your brand and with your website.
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It's one of the fundamental questions
to begin asking in order to create
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design that's actually effective.
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I mean, think about your office
space, especially if you're an
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in-person clinician, but even
your personal office at home.
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If you're online only, you probably
chose the wall color, the art,
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the furniture, the decorations.
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Because you want your clients, or
at least you to feel a certain way.
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Your website is the same thing, just
digital, and it really starts with color.
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People have actually
studied color psychology.
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It's something you could absolutely
go down the rabbit hole and learn
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all about, but this is about
setting the tone for your website.
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Next up is what we call Hicks Law, and
that essentially is that simplicity
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to your clients equals safety.
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What this means is that the more
choices someone has, the longer it
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takes them to decide what to do.
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And so one of the first things
that I see when therapists are
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working on their website, and
it comes to this, is their menu.
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So when you load up your website and
you see those items across the top of
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your website home about specialties,
if you have too many of those, or
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if throughout your website you have
too many buttons leading to too
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many places, if you even have too
many service or specialty options.
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We are inviting overwhelm unintentionally,
but it's there because we know that
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when people have fewer choices,
they actually make decisions more
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confidently and more quickly.
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So for your ideal clients, many of whom
are already navigating anxiety or decision
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fatigue, they might have been through
a bunch of therapist websites already.
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This can be the difference between
clicking contact or closing the tab.
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I want your website to feel like an
exhale, like a breath of fresh air, not
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another to-do list for your clients.
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Okay?
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So how could you incorporate
more simplicity and therefore
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safety into your design?
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Limit your top navigation
to no more than six items.
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We actually just talked about
this in confident copy as well.
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When you look at that top menu of
your website, limit that to six.
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Now there might be dropdowns, you
might have pages underneath that.
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It's not a bad thing to have a lot
of pages, but we need to make that
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journey clear and easy and simple.
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Similarly, I recommend every single page
of your website have one clear next step.
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Okay.
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Now, that's not to say that you can't
link from your trauma page to your
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EMDR page or if it makes sense to link
to your about page, but the primary
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call to action should be singular.
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Again, we don't wanna
overwhelm these folks.
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We wanna make the next step
clear and simple and easy.
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Alright, the next element
of design psychology is what
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we call visual hierarchy.
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And this is one I see a lot
of therapists get mixed up on.
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Hierarchy is what guides
our eye through design.
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So sometimes I will load up a therapist
website and at the top of the website they
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might have a headline talking about, you
know, what they help their clients do.
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And then there might be another
headline that states who they
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are and where they're at.
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And there might be a
button and I load it up.
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And all of that is the same exact size.
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Well, we were just
talking about overwhelm.
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I'm immediately overwhelmed.
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My eye has no idea where to go first.
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Hierarchy tells us, look here first.
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Look here next.
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Look here after that.
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So, creating hierarchy is
about leading people toward
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what's most important to them.
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It's because our brains are
wired to look for order.
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We scan from big to small, from bold
to light, from color to neutral.
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When this is missing on your website,
you unintentionally lose people simply
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because they're not sure where to go.
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Their eye doesn't know where to
go, and knowing that no one is
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gonna read every single word of
your website, we have to make their
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scanning and their scrolling simple.
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And when there is no hierarchy, it
can be very, very difficult to get
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to what's actually relevant to me.
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So the easiest thing you can
do, load up your homepage, load
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up each page of your website.
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Look at each section.
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Is there a place for my eye to go
first and then second, and then third?
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Or are you expecting them to
get all of it in one glance?
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Create more hierarchy, and you will
guide people through the design in
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a way that actually reaches them.
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All right, next up is a Gestalt
principle, and that's all about
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creating cohesion in your design.
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Now, you probably know that
our brains group similar
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elements together automatically.
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It's how we ultimately
find meaning in things.
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And so when things about design
feel inconsistent spacing, fonts,
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colors, the site feels scattered.
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Now again, so much of what we're
talking about here is subconscious.
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Your clients don't necessarily know
this, but it's lacking that cohesion
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and that ability to find meaning.
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When there is consistency and
balance in your website, then you are
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communicating a sense of reliability.
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When that design feels cohesive, is
subconsciously says this practice
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is organized and trustworthy.
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Isn't it funny that just thinking about
spacing or consistency in your fonts can
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do that, but these are the underlying
elements that are driving good design.
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Again, not just about looking pretty,
but about actually guiding people
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toward realizing you're the therapist
for them and making that journey easy.
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So check your website.
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Are your font sizes consistent?
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Do photos feel like they belong together
or are they completely mismatched?
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And irrelevant to the content.
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I am someone who loves symmetry in design,
and I will often load up a therapist's
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site and intentionally or otherwise,
there will often be sections where one
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side is off balance from the other.
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And if we could just even some of those
things out, if we could create that
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feeling of balance, we would automatically
create a more soothing environment.
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Anna Walker: Alright, number
five is called anchoring bias.
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I also refer to this
often as the halo effect.
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Like it or not, the first thing
someone sees sets the tone
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for everything that follows.
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If you caught last week's episode,
you heard me paint the picture of that
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boutique that you walk into and the
candle's burning, and someone walks up to
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you and offers you a glass of champagne.
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If your homepage of your website
feels premium and professional
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like that boutique, guess what?
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Your therapy work is
perceived the same way.
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If it feels outdated or chaotic,
then your expertise gets discounted
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before anyone even reads a word.
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That's the difficult thing here is that
you can be incredibly talented and able
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to serve your clients, but if your design
says otherwise, you are fighting an uphill
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battle against that initial judgment.
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Your design is what's anchoring
your perceived value in
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the eyes of your clients.
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Now, that's not to say you can't have
an effective website that doesn't meet
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every single one of these principles
and book premium fee clients.
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No way.
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But it does say that when these
smaller things, these subconscious
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things are at play, you are more
likely to be viewed as valuable and
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safe and trustworthy by your clients.
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And this is all happening within
seconds, entirely subconsciously.
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It's wild.
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I mean, imagine a trauma therapist
with a site that uses these harsh black
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backgrounds and neon text and jagged
imagery and these weird, sharp lines.
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Now, that design might be unique and
really interesting, but it also might feel
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tense and unsafe to the person reading it.
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The therapy there could be excellent.
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But clients might not even get that
far because of that initial impression.
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Alright, my last principle for
you is called priming and it's
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all about the comfort of familiar.
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We love things that are
familiar and intuitive.
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It's the reason I love to re-watch
the Office and Grey's Anatomy
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over and over and over again.
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Right.
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So when it comes to design, a good website
doesn't necessarily have to surprise.
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You don't have to reinvent
the wheel or be some unicorn.
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Ultimately, it needs to orient people.
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They need to get what they expect, a logo
in the top of the site that when they
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click on it, it goes to the homepage.
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A navigation with a handful of items.
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They can click on a clear headline
when they land on each page.
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The basics.
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That's what creates that sense
of familiarity and intuition
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where I'm like, oh, I, I know.
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I know where I'm at.
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This feels safe.
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This feels comfortable.
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When therapists attempt to push
the envelope a little bit with
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their design and things begin
feeling off or out of order, it can
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create some subconscious friction.
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So there is a line here between being
unique and not looking like every
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other therapist website, but also
staying within the confines of what is
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familiar and intuitive to your clients.
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Because familiarity is safety.
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Familiarity builds trust.
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So good design, unique design doesn't
necessarily mean reinventing the wheel.
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It means doing everything
we're talking about here.
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Maybe in a little bit of a different
way, but not foregoing or forsaking
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any of these in the name of pushing
the envelope, or trying something new.
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It means using familiar structure, then
adding your own personality through
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things like color and imagery and words.
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It's one of the reasons we love
our Squarespace templates because
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they're designed with the basics in
place, with that familiar structure,
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with some unique flare as well, and
then you get to make it your own.
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But keep the basics there.
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All right, so I've run through
all of these design principles and
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ultimately, hopefully what you see
here is that every choice on your
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website is a form of communication.
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Whether your clients realize it or not,
whether you realize it or not, there
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is something that you are sharing.
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What do you wanna share?
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Your personality.
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Are you calm and reflective?
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Are you direct and bold and to
the point, your niche, a couple's
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therapist site should probably feel
different than an A DHD specialist.
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Right?
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I love hearing from neurodivergent
clinicians, especially when we
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get to design their sites for them
because they're so mindful of who's
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reading that site and how they're
gonna be interacting with it.
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What we need to be keeping
in mind for that person.
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That's gonna be a lot different
than a couple in their fifties
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going through betrayal.
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What about your energy in session?
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Are you about being grounded
and centered and soothing?
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Are you creative and playful?
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These things can come
through visually as well.
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And of course there is a level
of professionalism that you can
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be subconsciously communicating,
and that translates to competence
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in the eyes of your clients.
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Professionalism doesn't mean
that you have to be buttoned up.
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It means you can have pink hair and
swear in session if you want, but
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there is an experience you offer your
clients that can be brought forth in
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your website so that they view you as
the premium level expert that you are.
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Can you see here how your
website is really part of your
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kind of clinical identity?
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It's about creating congruence.
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It's about feeling like
you, ' cause here's the other
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thing I want you to remember.
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If your design and you're in person
or onscreen energy don't match,
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clients experience a disconnect.
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If who I meet on the website is totally
different than who I meet in my intake
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session, there's gonna be some rub there.
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So a somatic therapist whose site
feels rigid or corporate might
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not attract the right clients.
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A high achieving professional therapist
who works with the go-getters and and the
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C-level executives, she probably won't
have a site that feels overly soft 'cause
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they might come across as too casual.
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So this is all about being congruent
with who you are, how you show
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up in session, and what your
clients are ultimately seeking.
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This is why design is so stink and fun.
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Because you get to decide how to
marry all of those things together.
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Now, I want you to know that you
don't have to become a designer
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to apply this psychology.
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I've given you some great tips here.
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Think about the site menu.
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Think about font hierarchy.
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Think about the spacing
and the balance of things.
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This doesn't require a degree, and
especially with today's website
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platforms, it's easy to do.
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But start by asking yourself, what do I
want people to feel when they land here?
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Knowing that, does the layout and
color and tone match that intention?
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The small fixes you
make can go a long way.
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Simplifying the menu, using a
handful of standard colors with
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maybe one accent, making sure
spacing and alignment are consistent,
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keeping one primary call to action.
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Nothing crazy, nothing
groundbreaking, incredibly effective.
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The goal is a site that feels calm and
clear and aligned with your energy.
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It's one of the reasons we have
so many different Squarespace
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templates to start with.
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If this was all about just one
standard approach for absolutely
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everyone, you'd only need one of 'em.
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But we have this wide range
of styles so that someone can
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choose, this feels like me.
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This feels like what would resonate
with my clients, and then you
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get to turn it into to yours.
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Now they all of course, follow these
basic, fundamental subconscious
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principles, but then you get the
design flexibility and the creative
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license to make it your own.
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It's about being both pretty
and strategic at the same time.
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I mentioned last week that our Black
Friday sale is coming next month,
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the biggest sale of the year, and.
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Primarily the biggest template
sale of our entire year.
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You can get all of the details
on the entire five days of
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deals@walkerstrategycode.com
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slash BF 25, but we're gonna offer 30% off
of every single template in our library,
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every single add-on our blog page, our
intensivess page, our group therapy pages.
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This is the deepest discount
available all year long and.
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Don't tell my designer Erica, but we
are very much hoping to have a brand
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new design released before the Black
Friday holiday as well, so that if
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you are interested in this new vibe
we are putting out there, you can snag
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that as well at a super deep discount.
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If you're wondering what the heck I'm
talking about and you've never seen
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our templates before, go take a look,
even if it's just to see some of the
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principles I've talked about in action.
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Sometimes you don't need
one of our templates.
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That's okay.
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I love pointing our students and clients
there to at least get an understanding
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of some basics to maybe grab some
inspiration because I don't want you
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to feel like you have to go hire a
professional designer if you don't want
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to create a site because you are capable
of engaging in these principles and
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creating something that's incredibly
beautiful and incredibly effective.
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So you can check out our templates,
walker strategy code.com/templates.
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If you want to go browse around
and see what I'm talking about.
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But I hope you've understood here
that design isn't just fluff.
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It's not just about looking pretty.
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There is deep psychology happening there.
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It's the nonverbal language of your
business and of your marketing, and when
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your website looks and feels aligned with
who you are as a therapist and what you
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bring to the table and what working with
you is like, then it becomes an extension
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of the therapeutic experience itself.
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People get a preview of working with
you before they pick up the phone.
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That is what makes design powerful.
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It helps people feel what it's like to
work with you before they've even met you.
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When your website matches what you
do and who you are, that is when
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your design really starts working.
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I hope this one has
gotten your gears turning.
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You've gotten some good takeaways on ways
you can be improving your current website.
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If you're like, Anna, I don't have a
website yet, I don't know where to start,
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we would love to support you in that.
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Go check out our templates.
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Like I said, if you're interested
in saving some big money, black
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Friday's coming next month.
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Walker strategy code.com/bf
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25.
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I'm cheering for you guys.
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I'll see you in the next episode.