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You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > Web Development > In The Beginning - For Webmasters - Things To Consider When Developing A Website (Part1) |
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Member You - In The Beginning - For Webmasters - Things To Consider When Developing A Website (Part1)
The Email Trap s?If you sit at a computer for most of the day, it's tempting to constantly check your email to see what's new. But that's a time management disaster if you're trying to make progress in your business. Resist the temptation. Here are some tips to help you get that time eating monster under control.- Turn off email notification (like the beep or pop up screen). It's just like a ringing phone that demands to be answered. Even in the instant world that exists today, emai Let's look at each of these questions individually. 1. What is the one overall message that the customer should take away with them when they leave your website? Another way of considering the question is to ask yourself what your website is about. For instance, do you sell travel packages? Then your website is about vacationing or recreation. Do you sell pet products? Then your website is about helping pet owners to keep their four-footed companions healthy and in the best of care. Does your websit Pay Per Click - What It Is And What It Is Not Once you've made the decision to create an online business, or to create a website for your existing business, there are a lot of things to do and consider. Name selection, domain registration, hosting, and website design are all a part of your decision-making.PPC has emerged as one of the most effective ways to attain the highest search engine rankings. The concept is simple: Advertisers pay, or bid, for the placement of each keyword or search phrase. PPC advertisements are often listed above typical free search results and are entitled as “Sponsored Sites”.The cost of PPC depends on the product or service being offered. The more popular the keyword or keyword phrase, the higher the price. Advertisers pay only when their Today though, I want you to consider your website development relative to one important factor: the customer experience. Getting potential customers to visit your website is one thing. Getting them to stay long enough to look around your website, view your information and purchase your product or service is another matter entirely. As you begin setting up your website, it's imperative to your success that you consider the site's development relative to its relationship to your potential customers. From the very start, you must view your website from the customer's perspective. If you were your customer, why would you visit the website? What would you be looking for? What information would you consider beneficial? What problems, needs or desires would you have that the website helps you to solve? Get it? Webmasters, especially beginners, can get so caught up in the selling of their product or service, marketing of the website, search engine optimization, keywords and the like that they completely forget that real people are visiting their sites. Potential customers are first and foremost individuals who are looking for information or searching for a product or service to satisfy a desire or to fulfill a need. When you begin the process of setting up a website, here are some questions that you should consider:
Let's look at each of these questions individually. 1. What is the one overall message that the customer should take away with them when they leave your website? Another way of considering the question is to ask yourself what your website is about. For instance, do you sell travel packages? Then your website is about vacationing or recreation. Do you sell pet products? Then your website is about helping pet owners to keep their four-footed companions healthy and in the best of care. Does your website Business to Business Direct Mail Sales Letters Need an Offer (and Here's Why) nd purchase your product or service is another matter entirely.In direct mail, the offer is the incentive or reward that you dangle in front of your prospects to motivate them to respond to your mailing. In business-to-consumer direct mail, for example, a magazine publisher will offer a yearly subscription to its magazine at 60% off the newsstand price. The discount is the offer. It motivates prospects to subscribe now and save 60%.Offers are vital to the success of your business-to-business (B2B) direct mail campaigns as well. As you begin setting up your website, it's imperative to your success that you consider the site's development relative to its relationship to your potential customers. From the very start, you must view your website from the customer's perspective. If you were your customer, why would you visit the website? What would you be looking for? What information would you consider beneficial? What problems, needs or desires would you have that the website helps you to solve? Get it? Webmasters, especially beginners, can get so caught up in the selling of their product or service, marketing of the website, search engine optimization, keywords and the like that they completely forget that real people are visiting their sites. Potential customers are first and foremost individuals who are looking for information or searching for a product or service to satisfy a desire or to fulfill a need. When you begin the process of setting up a website, here are some questions that you should consider:
Let's look at each of these questions individually. 1. What is the one overall message that the customer should take away with them when they leave your website? Another way of considering the question is to ask yourself what your website is about. For instance, do you sell travel packages? Then your website is about vacationing or recreation. Do you sell pet products? Then your website is about helping pet owners to keep their four-footed companions healthy and in the best of care. Does your websit Outsourced Chiropractic Office Billing Service Performance Benchmark - December 2006 that the website helps you to solve? Get it?December Billing Performance Index (BPI) outperformed November value by 4%, replacing two participants in the list of top ten performers and raising the index from 13.7 up to 13.1. This article describes a 7-th iteration of a prototype for a rule-based chiropractic billing index, including its coverage definition, update cycle, volume weighting, and provided information.BPI = 13.1 means that the average of ten top performing payers working with BillingPrecision. Webmasters, especially beginners, can get so caught up in the selling of their product or service, marketing of the website, search engine optimization, keywords and the like that they completely forget that real people are visiting their sites. Potential customers are first and foremost individuals who are looking for information or searching for a product or service to satisfy a desire or to fulfill a need. When you begin the process of setting up a website, here are some questions that you should consider:
Let's look at each of these questions individually. 1. What is the one overall message that the customer should take away with them when they leave your website? Another way of considering the question is to ask yourself what your website is about. For instance, do you sell travel packages? Then your website is about vacationing or recreation. Do you sell pet products? Then your website is about helping pet owners to keep their four-footed companions healthy and in the best of care. Does your websit Interactive Media: Good or Bad? are some questions that you should consider:Interactive media is emerging as a prominent feature of websites these days. From AJAX to Flash to streaming movies, they all provide a rich user experience that having text and images alone cannot match. When applied correctly, these types of media can be invaluable in terms of engaging users; however, media files do to take up valuable page real-estate and aren’t exactly at the top of any search marketing company’s recommendations list.Search Marketing<
Let's look at each of these questions individually. 1. What is the one overall message that the customer should take away with them when they leave your website? Another way of considering the question is to ask yourself what your website is about. For instance, do you sell travel packages? Then your website is about vacationing or recreation. Do you sell pet products? Then your website is about helping pet owners to keep their four-footed companions healthy and in the best of care. Does your websit Business Start Up Funding Silver Bullet s?Business Start Up FundingStartup companies often get frustrated when they can’t find investors willing to fund their new idea. What they don’t realize is that in order to get an investment, they need more than just a good idea and the promise of future profits. What investors are looking for is a “silver bullet” in the business that ensures their small investment will yield a huge return.Business Start Up Funding - You Need a Silver BulletThe silver Let's look at each of these questions individually. 1. What is the one overall message that the customer should take away with them when they leave your website? Another way of considering the question is to ask yourself what your website is about. For instance, do you sell travel packages? Then your website is about vacationing or recreation. Do you sell pet products? Then your website is about helping pet owners to keep their four-footed companions healthy and in the best of care. Does your website promote your services as a housing contractor? Then your site is about helping homeowners or potential homeowners to bring their home design visions to reality. In other words, the purpose of your website is not the product or service itself, but the reason you offer the product or service to the public. That said, then the overall theme of your website and consequently the impression that the customer takes away from the site, should be all about one thing, the reason behind their search. Your customer can't remember fifty different products or five different services that you offer, but they can remember the one reason that your site exists; it solves X problem, or serves as a resource of information regarding Y. Got it? In the next installment we'll look at question #2: How does your website make your customers feel? See you soon! For additional information and insights for online wealth building, visit GetMyWealthNow.com.
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