Tag Archives: Content Writing Tips

Relationship between quality content writing, bounce rate and SEO

Relationship between quality content writing bounce rate and SEO

Relationship between quality content writing, bounce rate and SEO.

While writing web pages and blog posts I have multiple times explained this concept – the relationship between quality content writing, bounce rate and SEO.

All these are so tightly intertwined when you want to improve your search engine rankings, that any topic on one of them automatically invokes the importance of the others.

Hence, I have created a small video to explain the concept in an animated form.

Let me first quickly explain the three concepts.

Quality content writing

When you are publishing content on your website or blog, don’t publish it just for the heck of it – just to improve your search engine rankings.

I won’t pretend.

Everyone wants to improve his or her search engine rankings because unless you get targeted traffic, nothing much is happening.

After all, there is a reason why the SEO market is worth more than $ 80 billion.

Even when I’m publishing content on my blog or updating my website, my aim is to improve my SEO.

So, yes, when you are writing content and publishing it, you’re mostly doing it for your search engine rankings.

But if your sole purposes to somehow show up on the SERPs, you will get yourself trapped in a self-defeating loop.

Just as you cannot be famous just for the sake of being famous (unless you are Paris Hilton or Kim Kardashian) and you can’t make money just for the sake of making money, you cannot have good search engine rankings for the sake of search engine rankings.

You need to offer something valuable.

Your rankings are the currency and the recognition that you get for providing value, for providing something people are looking for.

This is where quality content writing helps you.

Money is a byproduct of the value or the service you deliver.

Your search engine rankings are the byproduct of the value you deliver through your content.

Search engines like Google want to make sure that the users can find the best possible content for the searches they are carrying on.

Hence, if someone searches for “what is the relationship between quality content writing, bounce rate and SEO”, she finds my link only when Google can make out that I’m actually describing the relationship and not simply stuffing the keywords.

Initially, Google simply crawls, indexes and then uses its own AI and logic to rank my content.

After that, it begins to use human intelligence – it observes how people react to your content once they find it on Google.

Hence, the following topic…

Bounce rate

Bounce rate has different meanings in different contexts, but in terms of SEO, it means how much time a user spends on your particular piece of content after arriving from Google.

For example, if you come to this blog post from Google and leave within a few seconds and go back to Google, this blog post has a higher bounce rate.

It doesn’t offer you what you’re looking for.

Google assumes that this link doesn’t contain valuable information for the search term for which it is showing up on the SERPs.

For every such bounce, Google reduces my rankings for this link.

The converse is also true.

When you come to this blog post from Google and read a big portion of the blog post and even check out other parts of my website, Google assumes that this blog post in particular and my website in general, contain valuable, useful information.

Consequently, Google improves my SEO for this link for the search term that was used.

Hence, to reduce my bounce rate, it is very important that I provide quality content writing for this blog post.

This brings us to…

SEO

Search engine optimization.

It is the dream of every person who has a business on the web to get his or her website featured on the first page of Google, preferably among the top three search results.

People are literally ready to sell their souls for this coveted position.

This is what different SEO experts say you need to improve your search engine rankings organically, naturally and legitimately:

  • High-quality content containing your keywords.
  • Efficient use of meta tags.
  • The number of quality back links (people linking to your website or particular URLs).
  • The quality of interaction people have with your link once they find it through your existing search engine rankings.
  • Social sharing your link enjoys.
  • The age of your domain (the older, the better).
  • The frequency with which you publish fresh content on your website.

Now, except for the age of your domain name, every other aspect that Google uses to improve your SEO is attached or related to quality content writing.

The Google guidelines say that you should regularly publish high-quality content.

Your content must take care of your keywords while it delivers value and engages the readers.

Unless there is something worth linking to, why would people link to your website for individual blog posts and web pages?

Unless there is worth sharing, why would people share your content on their social media timelines?

Hence, Google has connected everything with quality content.

I have explained this whole concept in the above video.

The importance of writing voice when writing content

Having your own writing voice

Having your own writing voice.

“This is so Amrit,” is the comment someone left on my Medium blog post, some time back. On Medium I mostly publish journalistic, opinion or literary blog posts. I write in my own style. My writing has its own voice.

Do I also have a “voice” when I’m content writing for my clients? I have a style, certainly.

Clients who prefer my style of writing stick with me.

There are some content writing clients for whom I have been writing for more than 5-6 years. Recently a client contacted me after 10 years, and this is when you can easily do a search on Google and find a content writing service.

Hence, there are many clients who prefer my style of writing. But, is the style of writing also your voice?

Voice is something different. Many writers can have the same writing style. In fact, the content writing and copywriting advice that you get on the web is all about style. Everyone who has written for a couple of years is full of advice these days.

Your voice gives a unique feeling when you write. Classical writers have a voice. Charles Dickens had a voice. If I read something from Charles Dickens (aside from the fact that he was a racist asshole) and you don’t tell me that it has been written by him, I can make out that it has been written by him.

Having a writing voice renders a sense of unique personality to your content. Just because you are writing content for your business website or blog, doesn’t mean it should be devoid of personality. There are many entrepreneurs who write for their blog or website with a strong presence of personality.

Writing voice can be developed and it can be inherently present inside you. In fact, I believe that the voice is always there and when it begins to manifest, you allow it to manifest.

How I let my writing voice manifest

Honestly, I don’t do it consciously. I just let it flow. I’m not saying that I am always flowing. Sometimes my writing sounds stiff. This is when my soul is not into the topic. I’m not saying that I do a lousy job of content writing but if you ask me about my voice, it is missing.

I have reached a stage when I don’t have to worry about making writing mistakes. So, from that angle, I don’t need to worry.

Even when I commit mistakes, they are less of mistakes and more of whims. Yes, I have my own writing whims. Fortunately, I’m able to explain my whims to my clients.

Confidence is essential if you want to develop your own writing voice. Confidence must come from ease of writing. Inflated confidence can be counter productive.

I’m talking about the confidence that comes from muscle memory. When you don’t have to think to perform an activity. In fact, more than confidence, I should call it “being there”.

You must have come across the expression, “sing as if no one is listening, dance as if no one is watching.” Don’t worry about how people are going to judge your writing.

Yes, there should be no spelling mistakes. There should be no grammar mistakes. The writing must be clear. The message that needs to be delivered, must be delivered without ambiguity. Your writing must reek of enthusiasm because if you don’t feel enthusiastic about the idea you are trying to convey, your readers won’t feel enthusiastic too, and the entire effort and money will go down the drain.

Hence, this is how you have a writing voice:

  • Cover all your bases.
  • Writing must be in your muscle memory – you shouldn’t have to make an effort.
  • Write about the audience, about the reader.
  • Don’t fret about writing advice but at the same time, make sure that your writing is readable on smaller devices.
  • Focus on the message and not on your style.
  • Deliver value and be enthusiastic about it.
  • Don’t try too hard to sound verbose, but at the same time, don’t shy away from using your favorite words just because people may think that you are trying to show off.

Yes, as a content writer, I get paid for my content writing services. But mostly I’m writing for the pleasure of writing. If I have made enough money, I don’t mind writing for free. In fact, all my journalistic writing is for free, is for the love of writing. Maybe that’s why, people have begun to recognize “me” when they come across my blog posts and articles on other websites.

Use content writing to solve customer problems

Content writing to solve customer problems

Content writing to solve customer problems.

For a couple of days, I have been trying to make MS Word switch on the “AutoSave” feature. This is a good feature: automatically saves every keystroke to OneDrive.

I tried to have a conversation with their “Virtual Assistant” and it kept throwing mega-long URLs at me according to what I was typing in the chat window. After that I talked to a human support provider. I did what he advised me to do and spent 40 minutes. The problem persists.

I haven’t had much time to get this sorted but having ready-made answers to customer problems saves time from multiple angles. I would suggest Microsoft to have shorter URLs. Non-tech savvy people get intimidated by long cryptic URLs.

You can use content writing to provide answers to most of the questions your customers may have. This way they don’t have to waste their time trying to explain to a support executive or your chat bot what’s troubling them.

As a content writer I often write the FAQs section for many clients. This is a good place to use content writing to solve customer problems.

I have observed that most of the clients want to create the FAQs section keeping SEO in mind. This is not a bad strategy but if you completely focus on SEO, your FAQs section doesn’t help your customers much.

Even if you solely focus on solving customer problems through FAQs, it is going to be good for your rankings.

How does content writing help you solve customer problems?

In many ways.

I have already written about the FAQs section above. In the FAQs section, through engaging and compelling content writing, you can cover every possible question your customer may have.

Creating an FAQs section shouldn’t be a one-time affair. In fact, I would suggest you set up your CMS in such a manner that people responsible for maintaining your website are able to add questions and answers on the fly.

Each time your support staff comes across a question from one of your customers that hasn’t yet been answered on your FAQs section, the question and the answer must be immediately added to the section.

You can also write lengthy trips in the form of blog posts and “Glossary”. I have a content writing glossary on my website. Right now it isn’t as comprehensive as I would like it to be, but I have started compiling content under it.

You can have a similar glossary on your website, describing all the terms that people need to know before and while doing business with you.

When you are writing and publishing content to solve customer problems, do keep in mind that you write everything from the perspective of your customers. There is no need to be defensive.

When I’m writing about different content writing topics, my main concern is to tell my visitors how my content writing services can help them

  • Improve your SEO.
  • Increase conversion rate.
  • Improve level of engagement on their website and blog.
  • Carry out effective email marketing campaigns.
  • Increase their content depth.
  • Publish fresh, helpful content on an ongoing basis.

I also share lots of content writing tips with them.

Even when sometimes I commit mistakes or have unfavourable experience with my clients, I write about them because I know such content helps my clients.

The more helpful content you write for your customers, the more cared they feel, and the more cared they feel, the more loyal they become to your business.

15 ultimate content writing hacks for successful email marketing

Email marketing writing hacks

15 Email marketing writing hacks

What is email marketing?

Does it mean constantly nagging your subscribers and recipients (or leads) to buy from you?

Or does it mean becoming a useful part of their lives so that they begin to appreciate your presence and then, begin to trust you enough to do business with you?

This may not be true in your case, but most of the individuals wanting to use email marketing to promote themselves, assume that just because they have got someone’s email ID, it is fine to send out promotional emails.

Does someone care what a great product or service you have got?

Not really.

People want to hear from you only when you have got something useful to offer. Even when you are offering your product or service, there must be something special (a great discount or an offer or an insider information) that can bring your recipients a massive benefit.

Otherwise, your email message is going to be ignored.

Are people still using email marketing?

Yes they are. There is a reason for that.

3.8 billion people actively use email daily. Compared to this, Facebook has 1.5 million daily users. Everyone from the age of 15 to 64 uses email daily. 73% of millennials prefer email communication from businesses.

The best part is, 99% consumers check their emails every day. People are twice as likely to sign up for your email newsletter as liking your Facebook page.

Hence, you may feel that most of the people are moving towards social media and instant messaging, but when it comes to doing some serious work or getting business offers, email still rules the roost.

How you write content for your email marketing campaigns has a big impact on your success rate. You may have come across the content writing hacks for successful email marketing at many places, already, but just in case you haven’t, you can considerably improve the success rate of your email marketing by implementing at least a few of these content writing hacks.

1. Have a convincing subject line

Writer a convincing subject line

Writer a convincing subject line

The importance of the subject line can never be stressed enough. It is your subject line that prompts people to open your email.

What subject line should you have? It depends on people’s familiarity level with you. They are not familiar with you, or if they don’t come across your name in their inbox quite often, the subject line needs to be very specific.

Anyway, whether people are familiar with you or not, keep in mind the following:

  • Keep the character count around 50 because there isn’t enough space for very long subject lines.
  • Keep your subject line simple and straightforward. No ambiguity.
  • Don’t make false promises. People these days can make out false promises easily.
  • Be experimental. No harm in using humor as long as it doesn’t confuse or mislead.
  • Shock and awe. Again, the purpose of your subject line is to make people open your message, but at the same time, never mislead them into opening something that doesn’t deliver on the promise made in the subject line.
  • Subject lines with a sense of urgency, curiosity, timely relevance and recognition are more prone to be opened.
  • Personalize. Although personalization is more effective if people are familiar with you or your brand, given a choice between being personal and not being personal, always be personal. By the way, don’t take “being personal” in the wrong way.

Remember that the biggest challenge that your email message faces is people not opening it. Half the battle is won if your subject line manages to make people open your email.

2. Just focus on one, single person

Focus on a single person when writing content for your email marketing campaign

Focus on a single person when writing content for your email marketing campaign

Frankly, I apply this advice even when I’m writing webpages and blog posts. Don’t write as if you are writing to a big group of people. Write to a single individual.

For example, if you think your email is going to a person named Frank, then address the problems that Frank faces. Talk to him. He must feel that you are just writing to him and no one else.

As a writer, I know that when you write thinking that you are writing to a single person, the person reading the email can actually feel it.

3. Always provide something useful

Provide something useful in your email marketing campaign

Provide something useful in your email marketing campaign

Remember that the person opening your email message is using his or her precious time in doing so. Don’t waste his or her time. Always send an email marketing campaign when you have something useful to offer.

What can that offered be? Depends on your business. If you sell something, you can offer a discount. If you are introducing a new feature, you can send it as an update so that people who can really benefit from the feature can upgrade.

If the person has already bought from you, you can offer him or her a discount as a privileged segment of your customer base.

In the times of Covid-19, you can send tips to your customers about how they can do business with you without exposing themselves to the virus.

4. Talk about their interest

Talk about what interests them when you are writing

Talk about what interests them when you are writing

Nobody is bothered about growing your business just for the heck of it. Even people running charity organizations won’t pay attention to your email marketing campaigns unless you talk about their interest.

Always write your email messages from their point of view. Convey to them that you empathize with the problems and troubles you are having. Be their advocate through your writing.

5. Use powerful words

Use powerful words when writing

Use powerful words when writing

What are powerful words? First of all, they shouldn’t be deceptive. They should invoke a strong emotion. Some of the powerful words that you can use are

  • Free
  • Urgent
  • Limited
  • Breaking News
  • Dazzling
  • Stunning
  • Guaranteed
  • Powerful
  • Amazing
  • Easy
  • Strong
  • Exclusive
  • Lifetime
  • Unlimited
  • Affordable
  • Valuable
  • Discounted
  • New

Frankly, the list can go on and on. What sort of powerful words you use depends on the context and what sort of emotion you’re trying to convey. Again, just make sure that you really mean those words.

For example, if you are offering something stunning, then you should actually believe that you are offering something stunning. If you believe that something is easy to use, then it must be easy to use. If something is affordable, make sure that it is affordable to your target audience. If you are offering a discount, make sure that there isn’t a catch.

6. Use the “preview text” optimally

Writing email preview text

Writing email preview text.

In the above graphic, the text that is not hidden is email preview.

These days most of the email clients display you the preview text. If you have maximized your browser window, provided that you have used a small subject line, the remaining row is filled with the preview text. It gives your recipient a preview of your message. If you use the preview text convincingly, it can increase the chances of your recipients opening your message.

7. Write for the audience who reads on the mobile phone

Write for audience who reads on mobile.

Write for audience who reads on mobile.

I keep this in mind even when I’m writing blog posts. There is a great chance that the person on the other side is reading your content on a mobile device. The same is going to be the case with your email marketing messages.

How do you write for mobile readers?

Write shorter sentences. Don’t use big paragraphs. Use bullet points to organize different ideas. Use headlines and subheadings judiciously. Stay to the point. Make sure that you don’t use extra sentences because anything can distract them. Keep them as much focused as possible.

Although, personalization can make your email messages effective, make sure that you don’t get too conversational. This can also distract people.

8. Use segmentation features of your email marketing service

Email segmentation when writing content

Email segmentation when writing content.

MailChimp has it. Others must also have this feature. Segmentation allows you to customize your messages and this in turn improves your conversion rate.

What does segmentation mean?

Suppose you have 5000 subscribers in your mailing list. The first message that you send out goes to all these 5000 subscribers (if you are not using A/B testing for the time being).

Then, for the next email marketing campaign, create different segments such as

  • Those who didn’t open your message.
  • Those who opened your message.
  • Those who opened and clicked your link.
  • Those who bought from you.

… And so on.

This way you will be targeting people according to the way they have reacted to your previous campaign.

Why send the same message to all when you can increase your conversion rate by writing content based on how they react to your previous message?

9. Ask them to act when writing content

Tell them what you want them to do in the email

Tell them what you want them to do in the email.

This actually works. If you ask people to do something, many do it. For example, if you want people to buy something from you, ask them to buy it from you. This is hard to believe, but it really works.

It’s called call-to-action, CTA. Every email message must have a call-to-action.

Sometimes, you want to inform people of the good offer that you have but you don’t tell them to buy. You either tell them to get in touch with you or you ask them to click a link for more information. This is often not very convincing.

When you ask people to buy this renders a sense of authority and confidence. You have provided the information, and now you’re asking people to buy your product or service.

10. Use a convincing headline

Use a convincing headline

Use a convincing headline.

After your subject line, the most important component of your email message is your headline: the first highlighted line of text that appears in your email message.

The sole purpose of your headline is to make people read your email message.

Write it very strategically. Again, don’t mislead people. Don’t promise something you cannot deliver. You can be creative. You can be humorous. You can even be cynical.

Just make sure that your headline makes people read your remaining message. Your headline is so powerful that sometimes people immediately leave your message, without reading it, simply because they are put off by your headline.

11. Maintain a consistent flow in the body text

Maintain a consistent flow in the body text of your email

Maintain a consistent flow in the body text of your email

The crux of your entire email campaign rests in the body text.

As mentioned above, keep your sentences short and to the point. Write as if you’re talking to a single person. Show concerns for his or her requirements and worries. Offer solutions succinctly. Since most of the people will be accessing your message from their mobile phones, keep it short and simple.

Should you use HTML messages or text messages? Depends on your audience. Here we are simply talking about content writing for your email marketing campaigns. Be personal without being creepy.

Follow the simple copywriting rule: the purpose of your current sentence is to make the reader read the next sentence, and so is the purpose of the next sentence.

12. Have a singular goal when writing content for your email marketing campaign

Focus on a single goal when writing copy for your email campaign

Focus on a single goal when writing copy for your email campaign.

This is something I have observed with many clients. They want to pack multiple business offers in a single email message. They want to save money. Separate messages mean they will have to pay for them separately.

Just like your landing page, your email message too must be focused. You can offer multiple products if they fall under the same category (accessories, for example, or earplugs). But too many products or too many offers will end up confusing people and even if initially they wanted to buy something, they will end up buying nothing.

13. Avoid industry jargon if possible

Avoid using industry jargon when writing emails

Avoid using industry jargon when writing emails.

I’m not particularly against using jargon. Every industry has its own set of words and people like to use them, sometimes even without understanding them.

Use jargon when it solves purpose. I have seen many people using terms like “leveraging, metrics, synergy, cutting-edge, derivatives, acquisition” and so on. Being someone who constantly uses words, I’m not put off by these words, but many people are.

Personally, I follow this rule of thumb: use jargon if you really feel that you should be using it. If you are using it just to sound smart and intimidate the reader, don’t use it – it is counter-productive.

14. More of “you” and less of “we” and “I”

Focus more on the recipients and less on yourself

Focus more on the recipients and less on yourself.

This is such an important point that despite having discussed it above, I’m discussing it in another manner. Use lots of “you” in your writing.

Use expressions like “you are going to gain this”, “you are never going to regret buying this” or “this is something you have been looking for, for quite some time”.

A person opens your email message because he or she is expecting to receive something.

This expectation can be some sort of gratification, an emotion (something funny or mysterious), some great offer in the form of a discount, or the latest news that is very important to him or her.

The complete purpose of your message must be representing the interest of the recipient.

15. Condense everything in the conclusion

Sum up everything in the conclusion

Sum up everything in the conclusion.

The concluding part of your email message is as important as the beginning, if not more. In fact, after reading the conclusion, the person must be left with a strong desire to click your link and buy from you.

In the concluding part, you can sum up everything. You can invoke a sense of urgency. You can get creative and paint a gloomy picture if a person fails to carry out the call-to-action. Short of misleading someone, you can use all your persuasive power in the concluding part.

Conclusion

In the end, it is all about trial and error. Even seasoned content writers and copywriters perform A/B testing. For example, no matter how great a subject line is, it may not work with certain audience. No matter how awesome the headline is, it may fail to inspire certain readers.

No matter how big or small your mailing list is, you can perform A/B testing. Even if you have got 50 subscribers, you can send one message to 25 subscribers and an alternative to the other 25 subscribers. Then you observe the response and make tweaks in your writing accordingly.

How to write the vision and mission statements of your company

Writing effective mission and vision statements

Writing effective mission and vision statements

These days I’m working on a project where I’m writing vision and mission statements not just for the main company, but also for individual departments.

This gave me the idea of writing this blog post on how to write effective vision and mission statements for your company.

Over the years I have written countless vision and mission statements for different businesses and I can remember just 2-3 instances when the client was passionate about what was to be written for vision and mission statements. Otherwise, most of the clients just ask me to go through other websites and come up with my own (“but highly unique” – quote/unquote intended) versions.

Yes, it reflects on what sort of clients I attract, but that’s another story.

They don’t even know the difference. Just because everybody seems to have vision and mission statements, and without these statements, the “About us” page seems incomplete, they want to have them.

On second thought, why blame them? While trying to research for the topic, I came across many blog posts, even from the so-called reputed websites, that ended up mixing up vision and mission statements. I mean, the topic says something like “20 best vision statements” and they then go on to quoting mission statements from famous companies.

But first,

What is the difference between your vision and mission statement?

Sometime back I read a very good statement on the Internet about vision and mission statements:

Your mission statement is about what you are doing today, and your vision statement is what you are going to do in near future.

You must have come across the phrase “man with a mission” (or for the sake of feminists, “woman with a mission”). Or something like “we are on a mission”.

It means, you are doing something right now.

A mission statement answers the following questions:

  1. What you do?
  2. For whom do you do it?
  3. How do you do it?

Mission statement answers the following questions

This is what I have written as my mission statement:

My mission at Credible Content is to provide business writing services that actually help my clients grow their businesses.

Vision statement is about the future. What are your hopes and dreams? What bigger changes do you want to bring about in the world? What do you inspire to be?

Your vision gives your clients and customers an idea of what are your bigger goals. Remember that your bigger goals define the direction of your smaller goals.

Why is it important to have mission and vision statements?

Above I have written that very few clients take their mission and vision statements seriously. But there are some individuals and organizations, that do take your mission and vision statements seriously.

Your mission statement tells them your current focus. It tells them what problems you are currently solving. It tells them who your customers and clients are. It basically informs them of the nature of your current activities and whether the profile of these activities makes you suitable for them or not.

Your vision statement tells them where you are heading. Serious businesses want to associate with serious businesses. If you are not serious enough to even focus on your vision statement, then you are not reliable.

Hence, if you feel that your website is turning away good customers and clients, maybe you need to work on your mission and vision statements.

How to write a great mission statement

I will say it again: most of the people don’t know the difference between mission statement and vision statement and they tend to mix them up. Even reputed company sometimes end up mixing up vision and mission statements.

Your mission statement is about today. It must answer the following questions:

  1. What do you do?
  2. Who are your customers and clients?
  3. What processes and procedures do you follow?

Providing answers to these questions may seem like a long affair, but it doesn’t have to be. Restrict your mission statement to just 2 sentences and if possible, just a single sentence. But, no matter how many sentences you write, answer the questions listed above.

Here is Google’s mission statement: To organize the world’s information and make it universally accessible and useful.

Here is Tesla’s: To accelerate the world’s transition to sustainable energy.

You may say that these mission statements don’t answer all the 3 questions above, but if you read them carefully you will notice that, they do.

Take for example Tesla’s mission statement. Sustainable energy means they want to shift the focus away from the current ways of energy consumption. Pretty much everybody consumes energy in the form of fuel, gas and power. So, pretty much everybody is their customer.

What do they want to do? They want to accelerate the process. They want to go beyond simply researching, and provide viable products.

What is Google doing? It is organizing world’s information and making it universally accessible and useful. By merely reading the statement, you can make out what they do, for whom they do it, and how they do it.

Keep the following points in mind when creating your mission statement:

  1. Keep it as concise as possible.
  2. Provide answers to questions such as what you do, what are your customers and clients, and how you serve them.

How to write a great vision statement

Your vision statement gives your customers and clients the bigger picture. The give them a peek into your future.

What do you stand for? How do you plan to grow? What impact do you want to make?

This tells them about your work culture. It tells them what moves you and what keeps you going.

This was Microsoft’s vision when it was founded: A computer on every desk and in every home.

It is amazing how this vision came to be true. This was written when computers were a rarity.

LinkedIn vision statement: Create economic opportunity for every member of the global workforce.

As is clear from these statements, the vision statement is about your overall goal. This is what you eventually want to achieve. When you are writing your vision statement, talk about the next 5 years.

Something like, if you are writing your vision statement in 2020, tell your visitors what you are going to achieve by 2025.

Again, keep it as concise as possible.