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    Where's Your Business Going?
    Building a brand requires the same four questions necessary when planning a trip: When do I want to go? What do I want to do? Where do I want to go? How will I get there? It’s always a great time to plan a vacation, and it’s always a great time to build your brand.Consumers begin forming opinions of your product and organization as soon as you break into the marketplace.If you’re not controlling your image and message, it’s being controlled by others through their perceptions of you and your product. A successful brand strategy makes sure that a compelling message is delivered correctly to your target market. The time is now to start building your brand.A business owner who lacks a clear vision can never truly know how his business is performing.The best brand image and strategy can only be created when the owner clarifies and communicates the vision to the team who will create the brand identity.A solid brand strategy is like the magnetic North on a compass:It guides you, your business decisions, and your potential customers so you’re able to find each other. It lays out the best route for the business to take in order to communicate its core message and unique promise of value to the target market.The business must also take its current reality into consideration. How are you positioned in the marketplace? Do you know what differentiates you
    host with any one, check them out. Can you get them at 11.30 pm if you have a problem?

    Are they available via email contact only? (Not good. When your site is down you want to be able to phone someone straight away.)

    Where are the servers that they’re selling space on? Some countries are more reliable than others.

    Cheaper is not always better. If you are down 1% of the time you are with a bad host.

    Make sure that you have a good web designer.

    We recently did a site inspection and a redesign proposal for a business that wants a new site. The site had a few problems that the owners were aware of, and some that they weren’t. One of the things that we did was have a look in the source coding.

    The whole site was full of empty tables. Tables with nothing in them at all.

    They didn’t show up when you uploaded the regular page, but they were there in the source coding. They were messy, and they were the sign of a designer who was not very professional. They most likely would have been caused by the designer using drag and drop type programs (such as Dream Weaver).

    Dream Weaver etc are not bad if they are used as the first round of design, but it is best if your designer can also read html script and can clean up after themselves.

    This is especially important if you want to rank well in the search engines. Search engines dislike coding errors and so your designer needs to be able to recognise what a coding error is. Coding errors do not necessarily show up on the web page, but they are visible in the source code and search engines read your source code.

    Make sure that your site is easy to navigate.

    Your links need to work, you need a short path between customer entry point to order point. People do not want to read a page of text and then have to click through to another page to keep reading. Web sites are not books. Every time you give someone the option of clicking through to your next page you are actually giving them the option of clicking AWAY from your site completely.

    There is a lot more that can be said upon the importance

    Business Sellers - Avoid These Ten Mistakes
    Selling your business is the most important business transaction you will ever make. Mistakes in this process can greatly erode your transaction proceeds. Do not spend twenty years of your toil and skill building your business like a pro only to exit like an amateur. Below are ten common mistakes to avoid:1. Selling because of an unsolicited offer to buy – One of the most common reasons owners tell us they sold their business was they got an offer from a competitor. If they previously were not considering this business sale, the owner has probably not taken some important personal and business steps to exit on his terms. The business may have some easily correctable issues that could detract from its value. The owner may not have prepared for an identity and lifestyle to replace the void caused by his separation from his company. If you are prepared, you are more likely to exit on your own terms.2. Poor books and records – Business owners wear many hats. Sometimes they become so focused on running the business that they are lax in financial record keeping. A buyer is going to do a comprehensive look into your financial records. If they are done poorly, the buyer loses confidence in what he is buying and his perception of risk increases. If he finds some negative surprises late in the process, the purchase price adjustments can be harsh. The transaction va
    Is that a million dollar question? Or only a $50 question? For some people, it is a MULTI MILLION dollar question. If you set up a nice website on line, how much can you expect it to make?

    I was curious to see what internet marketers say about this, so I went to Google and typed in ‘How much should a website sell’.

    Well, the number one organic (not sponsored) response was this following link

    Bored.com - Fun Stuff To Do When You Are Bored

    Get Rich Online - Dozens of free tools you can use to create your own website. Sell stuff online or make a site and sell ads on it. … www.bored.com/ - 90k - 20 Sep 2006 - Cached - Similar pages

    So I clicked through.

    They are a pretty good site if you’re bored I guess, they have access to lots of on line games, word games, silly photos, funny lists – things like “Make George W Bush dance!” etc. And up on the top left hand corner of the page, (which is one of the most viewed points on a site) was this: “Earn cash online”

    So I clicked on it. And it was a page telling you lots of ways to earn cash online.

    According to them you can join up to fill in surveys (and get paid from .35 to $4) You can get paid 10 cents an email to read emails. You can play games on line and earn unlimited amounts of money. The page’s slogan was this: “When you’re a member of InboxDollars.com money really DOES grow on trees.”

    So, shall we all abandon our businesses and go and fill in surveys, or learn how to play Tetris at a professional level? Sometimes it can feel tempting, especially if you have just put up a site, or just redone one, and you feel it’s looking pretty good, your product is excellent . . . AND NO ONE IS BUYING FROM YOU. Maybe, you think, I will go and fill in surveys for . 50. At least it’s sure money.

    So what do you do? You feel like you need the internet equivalent of those wobble boards that Dominoes Pizza use on the side of the road at peak hour. You need to jump up and down, wave something and get people’s attention. But Dominoes has the advantage over us – they are free to go and stand on the side of a high way with their wobble board. You need search engines to direct traffic to you.

    Yes there are other ways that you can get known, you can put lots of articles on line, and there are some great sites to submit articles to that will get you published all over the web (if you’re good). You can have press releases, and you can buy advertising on all the major search engines, and on adsense sites as well. But, at the end of the day, you also want the search engines to like you, as they will send traffic to your site all the time if they do. (For free).

    So how do you woo Google and friends? There is a lot to it. One thing that can help is blogging on a blog attached to your site. In an earlier newsletter we talked about Blog Power! And blogs are a really good way to attract search engines.

    A lot of the things that make blogs attractive can be applied to your site in general.

    So let’s have a recap of what makes blogs search engine friendly:

    The content is updated regularly; the content tends to be specific to certain key words; blogs contain a lot of words – search engines like words A LOT (as opposed to images or white space!); Search engines are weighted in favour of blogs – thinking that intelligent people with relevant things to say write them.

    The last pro blog point is a bit difficult to adapt to your website, it is, after all, a website and not a blog. But the first three if applied to your site will help your rankings. Search engines like these three things because they equate them with relevant sites. At the end of the day search engines want to present their customers (the searchers, also your potential customers) with the sites that are most relevant to the searcher’s search.

    So they want to know what you’re talking about (you need to have words),

    they want you to add new relevant information regularly (a site last updated in 1996 is NOT going to rank well generally, unless it is from a government or a university),

    and you will do better if you specialise in a few key areas. For example - don’t sell cook books, Ferrari logos and wholesale baby nappies on the same site, because you will find it really hard to rank well for three such diverse areas.

    However, there is more to do to rank well in the search engines.

    You can get a quick indication of how important Google thinks you are by looking at your page rank or PR. You can find out a site’s page rank fairly easily.

    Download Google Toolbar

    If you go into what ever is your browser (Internet Explorer, mozilla etc) and do a search for “google toolbar” it will pop up with the google tools page and there is an upload button that you can hit to install the tool bar. There is also an illustration of google tool bar. On it is “PR”, this is the page rank number.

    The Alexa rating that the tool bar gives is also interesting. It is a measurement of how viewed the site is. 1 indicates the most viewed site and it was a wedding mall last time I looked. Alexa rankings descend down into the millions (the least viewed site). For various reasons Alexa is an indication rather than fully accurate. But it is good to see your Alexa rank improve.

    PR 1 is not great. Neither is PR 2. PR 3 means that you’re beginning to get somewhere, PR 5 and 6 are worth boasting about and to have a PR 8 or 9 is fantastic.

    To recap what PR is, it is an indication of how valuable Google thinks a particular page is in your site. Different pages within your site can and will have different PR. The more valuable a page is, the more likely it is to be turned up as a result for a search term. PR is good to use when looking at your competitors’ web pages. You can get a quick idea of how easy they will be to replace by looking at their PR.

    That being said, a good PR does not GUARANTEE that you will be no 1 on Google, the algorithm is complex, but PR is a good indication.

    So if you have an Alexa of 10 million a PR of zero and no customers, how to you go from woe to go?

    You need a plan. Just like a good business has a plan, a killer website is also (generally) a planned affair. There are people who get lucky and just have good marketing genes, but most of us have to work at it.

    You’ll be happy to know that good website marketing is not voodoo, or an art, it is a science. It is a fast changing very information heavy science, but it is a science, meaning that the laws of cause and affect apply.

    But bear in mind that website marketing laws can be as difficult to understand and change more quickly than taxation promises before an election. Google in particular tweaks its algorithms regularly, and staying fully on top of online marketing is a full time job, or a very exciting hobby! But there are things that are a pretty good foundation upon which to build your site plan, with regards to wooing the search engines.

    We use these basics when planning our sites:

    Search engines like stability, so plan for it:

    Search engines attach greater relevance to sites that have been around longer. Google won’t even look at you until you are past its “sandbox period” (a few months). So don’t put up pages, spend time and money getting them good PR and then, while redesigning your site, remove those pages. What a waste of effort. Plan your site well ahead.

    The same goes for domain names.

    Chose a good name from the start. Something keyword relevant, short and easy to remember is good. Try not to change your domain name. If you have one now that you know is a dead loss, then you may have to change it. But please try and register good domain names from now on! It is very sad to get a domain some PR and google recognition and then can it.

    Domains are like on line real estate. People sell domains, they watch for domains currently in use to come up for expiry so that they can buy them if the current owner doesn’t renew them. A domain is something of value and should be chosen carefully.

    Make sure that you have a good web host.

    What do you think when you click through a search result link on google and the site isn’t found? I tend to think that the site no longer exists. I definitely don’t return tomorrow and check again.

    But it could be that the site still exists and it just has a bad web host. Before putting your site to host with any one, check them out. Can you get them at 11.30 pm if you have a problem?

    Are they available via email contact only? (Not good. When your site is down you want to be able to phone someone straight away.)

    Where are the servers that they’re selling space on? Some countries are more reliable than others.

    Cheaper is not always better. If you are down 1% of the time you are with a bad host.

    Make sure that you have a good web designer.

    We recently did a site inspection and a redesign proposal for a business that wants a new site. The site had a few problems that the owners were aware of, and some that they weren’t. One of the things that we did was have a look in the source coding.

    The whole site was full of empty tables. Tables with nothing in them at all.

    They didn’t show up when you uploaded the regular page, but they were there in the source coding. They were messy, and they were the sign of a designer who was not very professional. They most likely would have been caused by the designer using drag and drop type programs (such as Dream Weaver).

    Dream Weaver etc are not bad if they are used as the first round of design, but it is best if your designer can also read html script and can clean up after themselves.

    This is especially important if you want to rank well in the search engines. Search engines dislike coding errors and so your designer needs to be able to recognise what a coding error is. Coding errors do not necessarily show up on the web page, but they are visible in the source code and search engines read your source code.

    Make sure that your site is easy to navigate.

    Your links need to work, you need a short path between customer entry point to order point. People do not want to read a page of text and then have to click through to another page to keep reading. Web sites are not books. Every time you give someone the option of clicking through to your next page you are actually giving them the option of clicking AWAY from your site completely.

    There is a lot more that can be said upon the importance o

    Spotlight on Productivity: How to Overcome E-Mail Overload
    Do you ever feel overwhelmed by e-mail? Have you ever spent more of your day wading through your e-mail than managing your work? Are you looking for ways to spend less time creating, managing and answering messages? Discover how to overcome e-mail overload and be more productive by writing more effective e-mail messages and reducing the volume of e-mail.Write Effective E-Mail MessagesStart improving your e-mail effectiveness by creating and formatting easy to follow content, and by using pre-written responses.Create Clear ContentConsider these strategies to upgrade your communications with understandable, e-mail messages:Help others prioritize how to act on your e-mail by including a clear, specific subject line and repeating important subject information in the body of the message.Define your expectations in the body of the message. Do you want your recipients to act, respond, read, or is the e-mail FYI only?Include only one topic per message. If that isn't possible, then describe and number multiple topics as in 5 items to add to the Wednesday meeting agenda.When you type the addresses for your message, check who is getting your e-mail. Many programs attempt to auto-fill an e-mail address which may not be your intended recipient.Be careful with your tone and l
    high way with their wobble board. You need search engines to direct traffic to you.

    Yes there are other ways that you can get known, you can put lots of articles on line, and there are some great sites to submit articles to that will get you published all over the web (if you’re good). You can have press releases, and you can buy advertising on all the major search engines, and on adsense sites as well. But, at the end of the day, you also want the search engines to like you, as they will send traffic to your site all the time if they do. (For free).

    So how do you woo Google and friends? There is a lot to it. One thing that can help is blogging on a blog attached to your site. In an earlier newsletter we talked about Blog Power! And blogs are a really good way to attract search engines.

    A lot of the things that make blogs attractive can be applied to your site in general.

    So let’s have a recap of what makes blogs search engine friendly:

    The content is updated regularly; the content tends to be specific to certain key words; blogs contain a lot of words – search engines like words A LOT (as opposed to images or white space!); Search engines are weighted in favour of blogs – thinking that intelligent people with relevant things to say write them.

    The last pro blog point is a bit difficult to adapt to your website, it is, after all, a website and not a blog. But the first three if applied to your site will help your rankings. Search engines like these three things because they equate them with relevant sites. At the end of the day search engines want to present their customers (the searchers, also your potential customers) with the sites that are most relevant to the searcher’s search.

    So they want to know what you’re talking about (you need to have words),

    they want you to add new relevant information regularly (a site last updated in 1996 is NOT going to rank well generally, unless it is from a government or a university),

    and you will do better if you specialise in a few key areas. For example - don’t sell cook books, Ferrari logos and wholesale baby nappies on the same site, because you will find it really hard to rank well for three such diverse areas.

    However, there is more to do to rank well in the search engines.

    You can get a quick indication of how important Google thinks you are by looking at your page rank or PR. You can find out a site’s page rank fairly easily.

    Download Google Toolbar

    If you go into what ever is your browser (Internet Explorer, mozilla etc) and do a search for “google toolbar” it will pop up with the google tools page and there is an upload button that you can hit to install the tool bar. There is also an illustration of google tool bar. On it is “PR”, this is the page rank number.

    The Alexa rating that the tool bar gives is also interesting. It is a measurement of how viewed the site is. 1 indicates the most viewed site and it was a wedding mall last time I looked. Alexa rankings descend down into the millions (the least viewed site). For various reasons Alexa is an indication rather than fully accurate. But it is good to see your Alexa rank improve.

    PR 1 is not great. Neither is PR 2. PR 3 means that you’re beginning to get somewhere, PR 5 and 6 are worth boasting about and to have a PR 8 or 9 is fantastic.

    To recap what PR is, it is an indication of how valuable Google thinks a particular page is in your site. Different pages within your site can and will have different PR. The more valuable a page is, the more likely it is to be turned up as a result for a search term. PR is good to use when looking at your competitors’ web pages. You can get a quick idea of how easy they will be to replace by looking at their PR.

    That being said, a good PR does not GUARANTEE that you will be no 1 on Google, the algorithm is complex, but PR is a good indication.

    So if you have an Alexa of 10 million a PR of zero and no customers, how to you go from woe to go?

    You need a plan. Just like a good business has a plan, a killer website is also (generally) a planned affair. There are people who get lucky and just have good marketing genes, but most of us have to work at it.

    You’ll be happy to know that good website marketing is not voodoo, or an art, it is a science. It is a fast changing very information heavy science, but it is a science, meaning that the laws of cause and affect apply.

    But bear in mind that website marketing laws can be as difficult to understand and change more quickly than taxation promises before an election. Google in particular tweaks its algorithms regularly, and staying fully on top of online marketing is a full time job, or a very exciting hobby! But there are things that are a pretty good foundation upon which to build your site plan, with regards to wooing the search engines.

    We use these basics when planning our sites:

    Search engines like stability, so plan for it:

    Search engines attach greater relevance to sites that have been around longer. Google won’t even look at you until you are past its “sandbox period” (a few months). So don’t put up pages, spend time and money getting them good PR and then, while redesigning your site, remove those pages. What a waste of effort. Plan your site well ahead.

    The same goes for domain names.

    Chose a good name from the start. Something keyword relevant, short and easy to remember is good. Try not to change your domain name. If you have one now that you know is a dead loss, then you may have to change it. But please try and register good domain names from now on! It is very sad to get a domain some PR and google recognition and then can it.

    Domains are like on line real estate. People sell domains, they watch for domains currently in use to come up for expiry so that they can buy them if the current owner doesn’t renew them. A domain is something of value and should be chosen carefully.

    Make sure that you have a good web host.

    What do you think when you click through a search result link on google and the site isn’t found? I tend to think that the site no longer exists. I definitely don’t return tomorrow and check again.

    But it could be that the site still exists and it just has a bad web host. Before putting your site to host with any one, check them out. Can you get them at 11.30 pm if you have a problem?

    Are they available via email contact only? (Not good. When your site is down you want to be able to phone someone straight away.)

    Where are the servers that they’re selling space on? Some countries are more reliable than others.

    Cheaper is not always better. If you are down 1% of the time you are with a bad host.

    Make sure that you have a good web designer.

    We recently did a site inspection and a redesign proposal for a business that wants a new site. The site had a few problems that the owners were aware of, and some that they weren’t. One of the things that we did was have a look in the source coding.

    The whole site was full of empty tables. Tables with nothing in them at all.

    They didn’t show up when you uploaded the regular page, but they were there in the source coding. They were messy, and they were the sign of a designer who was not very professional. They most likely would have been caused by the designer using drag and drop type programs (such as Dream Weaver).

    Dream Weaver etc are not bad if they are used as the first round of design, but it is best if your designer can also read html script and can clean up after themselves.

    This is especially important if you want to rank well in the search engines. Search engines dislike coding errors and so your designer needs to be able to recognise what a coding error is. Coding errors do not necessarily show up on the web page, but they are visible in the source code and search engines read your source code.

    Make sure that your site is easy to navigate.

    Your links need to work, you need a short path between customer entry point to order point. People do not want to read a page of text and then have to click through to another page to keep reading. Web sites are not books. Every time you give someone the option of clicking through to your next page you are actually giving them the option of clicking AWAY from your site completely.

    There is a lot more that can be said upon the importance

    Extra - Ordinary Prospecting - Get Referrals
    If you have been in sales for a little while, you would agree with me with saying, "There must be a better way to gain prospects long term". Well there is a way, by gaining referrals. After a while everyone gets tired of the constant calling on strangers. Getting referrals is the only way forward because word of mouth is always the best form of advertising.So here we go!Get Referrals Never miss an opportunity to ask for a referral. I have received referrals from the most bizarre places. Sometimes you have called a one man band company who may be unsuitable for your product or service. Don't waste this contact he probably has been in the industry for a good time and has left another established company down the road and has a lot of information on who to contact and even how to approach them. He could give you names and numbers of other companies and contact names. You then can use his name to get through to that person.When I worked in the financial services industry, we would not hire a new Insurance Agent unless he could bring 100 contacts with him that he could start on. Once they had started through some training I could get them to expand that list up to 1000 contacts.Yes you heard it right 1000! Have you ever heard of the term "6 Degrees of Separation"?The 'Wikipedia Encyclopaedia' says the term 'six degrees of separation', "ref
    sale baby nappies on the same site, because you will find it really hard to rank well for three such diverse areas.

    However, there is more to do to rank well in the search engines.

    You can get a quick indication of how important Google thinks you are by looking at your page rank or PR. You can find out a site’s page rank fairly easily.

    Download Google Toolbar

    If you go into what ever is your browser (Internet Explorer, mozilla etc) and do a search for “google toolbar” it will pop up with the google tools page and there is an upload button that you can hit to install the tool bar. There is also an illustration of google tool bar. On it is “PR”, this is the page rank number.

    The Alexa rating that the tool bar gives is also interesting. It is a measurement of how viewed the site is. 1 indicates the most viewed site and it was a wedding mall last time I looked. Alexa rankings descend down into the millions (the least viewed site). For various reasons Alexa is an indication rather than fully accurate. But it is good to see your Alexa rank improve.

    PR 1 is not great. Neither is PR 2. PR 3 means that you’re beginning to get somewhere, PR 5 and 6 are worth boasting about and to have a PR 8 or 9 is fantastic.

    To recap what PR is, it is an indication of how valuable Google thinks a particular page is in your site. Different pages within your site can and will have different PR. The more valuable a page is, the more likely it is to be turned up as a result for a search term. PR is good to use when looking at your competitors’ web pages. You can get a quick idea of how easy they will be to replace by looking at their PR.

    That being said, a good PR does not GUARANTEE that you will be no 1 on Google, the algorithm is complex, but PR is a good indication.

    So if you have an Alexa of 10 million a PR of zero and no customers, how to you go from woe to go?

    You need a plan. Just like a good business has a plan, a killer website is also (generally) a planned affair. There are people who get lucky and just have good marketing genes, but most of us have to work at it.

    You’ll be happy to know that good website marketing is not voodoo, or an art, it is a science. It is a fast changing very information heavy science, but it is a science, meaning that the laws of cause and affect apply.

    But bear in mind that website marketing laws can be as difficult to understand and change more quickly than taxation promises before an election. Google in particular tweaks its algorithms regularly, and staying fully on top of online marketing is a full time job, or a very exciting hobby! But there are things that are a pretty good foundation upon which to build your site plan, with regards to wooing the search engines.

    We use these basics when planning our sites:

    Search engines like stability, so plan for it:

    Search engines attach greater relevance to sites that have been around longer. Google won’t even look at you until you are past its “sandbox period” (a few months). So don’t put up pages, spend time and money getting them good PR and then, while redesigning your site, remove those pages. What a waste of effort. Plan your site well ahead.

    The same goes for domain names.

    Chose a good name from the start. Something keyword relevant, short and easy to remember is good. Try not to change your domain name. If you have one now that you know is a dead loss, then you may have to change it. But please try and register good domain names from now on! It is very sad to get a domain some PR and google recognition and then can it.

    Domains are like on line real estate. People sell domains, they watch for domains currently in use to come up for expiry so that they can buy them if the current owner doesn’t renew them. A domain is something of value and should be chosen carefully.

    Make sure that you have a good web host.

    What do you think when you click through a search result link on google and the site isn’t found? I tend to think that the site no longer exists. I definitely don’t return tomorrow and check again.

    But it could be that the site still exists and it just has a bad web host. Before putting your site to host with any one, check them out. Can you get them at 11.30 pm if you have a problem?

    Are they available via email contact only? (Not good. When your site is down you want to be able to phone someone straight away.)

    Where are the servers that they’re selling space on? Some countries are more reliable than others.

    Cheaper is not always better. If you are down 1% of the time you are with a bad host.

    Make sure that you have a good web designer.

    We recently did a site inspection and a redesign proposal for a business that wants a new site. The site had a few problems that the owners were aware of, and some that they weren’t. One of the things that we did was have a look in the source coding.

    The whole site was full of empty tables. Tables with nothing in them at all.

    They didn’t show up when you uploaded the regular page, but they were there in the source coding. They were messy, and they were the sign of a designer who was not very professional. They most likely would have been caused by the designer using drag and drop type programs (such as Dream Weaver).

    Dream Weaver etc are not bad if they are used as the first round of design, but it is best if your designer can also read html script and can clean up after themselves.

    This is especially important if you want to rank well in the search engines. Search engines dislike coding errors and so your designer needs to be able to recognise what a coding error is. Coding errors do not necessarily show up on the web page, but they are visible in the source code and search engines read your source code.

    Make sure that your site is easy to navigate.

    Your links need to work, you need a short path between customer entry point to order point. People do not want to read a page of text and then have to click through to another page to keep reading. Web sites are not books. Every time you give someone the option of clicking through to your next page you are actually giving them the option of clicking AWAY from your site completely.

    There is a lot more that can be said upon the importance

    Creative Ideas for Rewarding Employees
    Often when I facilitate management workshops on the subject of employee motivation, managers complain that they have too few ways to reward their employees. Many of them say that without an extra budget, they have no way to reward employees. However, as the workshop progresses, participants become aware and come up with a long list of ideas for rewarding their team members.In case you find youself in need for a creative idea to boost employee motivation without making a 50% pay raise - here is a selected list:Share the employee's success with their family: I can safely say that too many great efforts and achievements on the part of employees do not receive due positive feedback. Even more rarely do the family members of employees get to hear of their good work. The positive results of sharing the success of an employee with their family are numerous. To name a few: The employee would feel proud and appreciated. Family members will understand the importance and support the employee's efforts and investment at work. The organization will develop stronger relations with the community and will improve its employer image.Here are a few ways you can make this happen: Write a periodic letter of com
    ork at it.

    You’ll be happy to know that good website marketing is not voodoo, or an art, it is a science. It is a fast changing very information heavy science, but it is a science, meaning that the laws of cause and affect apply.

    But bear in mind that website marketing laws can be as difficult to understand and change more quickly than taxation promises before an election. Google in particular tweaks its algorithms regularly, and staying fully on top of online marketing is a full time job, or a very exciting hobby! But there are things that are a pretty good foundation upon which to build your site plan, with regards to wooing the search engines.

    We use these basics when planning our sites:

    Search engines like stability, so plan for it:

    Search engines attach greater relevance to sites that have been around longer. Google won’t even look at you until you are past its “sandbox period” (a few months). So don’t put up pages, spend time and money getting them good PR and then, while redesigning your site, remove those pages. What a waste of effort. Plan your site well ahead.

    The same goes for domain names.

    Chose a good name from the start. Something keyword relevant, short and easy to remember is good. Try not to change your domain name. If you have one now that you know is a dead loss, then you may have to change it. But please try and register good domain names from now on! It is very sad to get a domain some PR and google recognition and then can it.

    Domains are like on line real estate. People sell domains, they watch for domains currently in use to come up for expiry so that they can buy them if the current owner doesn’t renew them. A domain is something of value and should be chosen carefully.

    Make sure that you have a good web host.

    What do you think when you click through a search result link on google and the site isn’t found? I tend to think that the site no longer exists. I definitely don’t return tomorrow and check again.

    But it could be that the site still exists and it just has a bad web host. Before putting your site to host with any one, check them out. Can you get them at 11.30 pm if you have a problem?

    Are they available via email contact only? (Not good. When your site is down you want to be able to phone someone straight away.)

    Where are the servers that they’re selling space on? Some countries are more reliable than others.

    Cheaper is not always better. If you are down 1% of the time you are with a bad host.

    Make sure that you have a good web designer.

    We recently did a site inspection and a redesign proposal for a business that wants a new site. The site had a few problems that the owners were aware of, and some that they weren’t. One of the things that we did was have a look in the source coding.

    The whole site was full of empty tables. Tables with nothing in them at all.

    They didn’t show up when you uploaded the regular page, but they were there in the source coding. They were messy, and they were the sign of a designer who was not very professional. They most likely would have been caused by the designer using drag and drop type programs (such as Dream Weaver).

    Dream Weaver etc are not bad if they are used as the first round of design, but it is best if your designer can also read html script and can clean up after themselves.

    This is especially important if you want to rank well in the search engines. Search engines dislike coding errors and so your designer needs to be able to recognise what a coding error is. Coding errors do not necessarily show up on the web page, but they are visible in the source code and search engines read your source code.

    Make sure that your site is easy to navigate.

    Your links need to work, you need a short path between customer entry point to order point. People do not want to read a page of text and then have to click through to another page to keep reading. Web sites are not books. Every time you give someone the option of clicking through to your next page you are actually giving them the option of clicking AWAY from your site completely.

    There is a lot more that can be said upon the importance

    What You Don't Know About Affiliate Marketing is Costing You a Fortune
    The majority of affiliates are frustrated in their attempt to make any real money online. You've no doubt heard that the affiliate route is the easiest way to get started... AND it is! But, you haven't been told the whole truth. AND it's not your fault.Affiliate marketing is relatively painless and involves little or no cost because...You don't need a product of your own You don't need to build a complicated website You have no shipping or inventory costs You don't handle credit cards or refundsThen you're told all you have to do is promote your affiliate link and refer people to a merchant site. You are rewarded by getting a percentage of the profits. TRUE...But, promoting your affiliate link is only the beginning!What you need to understand is that the critical element for long-term success is to build an opt-in list of prospects. Yes, prospects, they are not customers yet! It is these "potential buyers" that you must form a relationship with over time and who will purchase the products you recommend. They will come to trust your recommendations as you routinely follow up with your personal experience with those products.Avoid the mistake that 95% of affiliates make... assume people will buy from you.First, people do not give up their hard earned cash easily or the first time they see a
    host with any one, check them out. Can you get them at 11.30 pm if you have a problem?

    Are they available via email contact only? (Not good. When your site is down you want to be able to phone someone straight away.)

    Where are the servers that they’re selling space on? Some countries are more reliable than others.

    Cheaper is not always better. If you are down 1% of the time you are with a bad host.

    Make sure that you have a good web designer.

    We recently did a site inspection and a redesign proposal for a business that wants a new site. The site had a few problems that the owners were aware of, and some that they weren’t. One of the things that we did was have a look in the source coding.

    The whole site was full of empty tables. Tables with nothing in them at all.

    They didn’t show up when you uploaded the regular page, but they were there in the source coding. They were messy, and they were the sign of a designer who was not very professional. They most likely would have been caused by the designer using drag and drop type programs (such as Dream Weaver).

    Dream Weaver etc are not bad if they are used as the first round of design, but it is best if your designer can also read html script and can clean up after themselves.

    This is especially important if you want to rank well in the search engines. Search engines dislike coding errors and so your designer needs to be able to recognise what a coding error is. Coding errors do not necessarily show up on the web page, but they are visible in the source code and search engines read your source code.

    Make sure that your site is easy to navigate.

    Your links need to work, you need a short path between customer entry point to order point. People do not want to read a page of text and then have to click through to another page to keep reading. Web sites are not books. Every time you give someone the option of clicking through to your next page you are actually giving them the option of clicking AWAY from your site completely.

    There is a lot more that can be said upon the importance of having a website plan, and it will have to be said another day.

    I hope this has got you thinking and made you aware of what you might need to do to get your site to sell well!

    Oh, and to answer my initial question, how much should a website sell?

    According to Derek (ceo of a $50 000 000 on line business) that depends upon your product price, but if your product is priced at $50 US then two out of every hundred visitors to your site MINIMUM should be buying.

    Cheers

    Katie

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