Archive for February, 2011

Getting Online

Monday, February 28th, 2011

I am sure that my experience is shared by many of you business owners out there. You are thinking that a great way to increase your sales is to have an online presence. Or if you are even more ambitious, you might want to actually sell your products on your No Problem
Well, not really. My webstore has taken well over a year and a half just to go online, and not I can finally concentrate on the business of my business.

Making a quality website that people will trust and actually want to purchase from is definitely not as easy as it seemed. I knew that this is the direction that I wanted to take my business; but was not sure exactly how to go about it. I started out with a do-it-yourself shopping cart site through Yahoo. It actually turned out pretty good; but I soon realized that it just did not have the features that I knew that I desired. That I needed. So, I bit the bullet and shopped around for a company to make the website of my dreams. I figured it would be better to go with the middle quote, and they promised the features that I really needed.

They wanted to charge me nearly eight thousand dollars to make the site, and within an agreed upon time frame. I paid the first third up front, and they did the bare minimum to get me to pay the second third, then they became unreachable. I am sure that the people actually working on the site were somewhere in a third wold country, this made it hard to follow through with them. They stopped taking my calls, did not respond to my messages. When I found out that they were using freeware and maybe had only invested a few hours into my project over I knew it was time to move on.

My next designer was recommended by a friend, and I got to meet him and liked him personally. What I did not know, was that I would have to suffer through his learning curve. Things took much longer that I wanted; I was paying for hosting, credit card processing fees, etc. Not to mention hundreds and hundreds of hours that I put in to the databases.

To make a long story short, I finally found an expert to complete the final portion of the site. After nearly a year and a half from conceiving this crazy idea, I finally have a web-store that I am proud to promote. There is no simple answer to success in making a site; but my advice would be to find a local designer, with a good portfolio, and only pay as certain benchmarks are met.

People who are searching through the web for more information about the niche of internet marketing, make sure to check out the website which is quoted right in this passage.

More Info About Choosing A Domain Name

Sunday, February 20th, 2011

Choosing a domain name

choosing a domain name plays a big part in getting people interested to your site.

Naming your site after your domain may seem obvious to some people, but you’ll be surprised to learn that not every website is named after the domain name even when the web owner owns that domain name.

Naming a site after its domain name is important, for the simple reason that when people think of your website, they’ll think of it by name. If your name is also your URL, they’ll automatically know where to go. Eg., when people think of mypast.co.uk, they don’t have to wonder what URL to type into their browser to get there. The name of the site is also the URL.

Long or short domain names ?

Domain names can be of any length up to 67 characters. You don’t have to settle for an obscure domain name like avab.com when what you mean is AcmeVideosAndBooks.com.
Having said that, there appears to be some disagreement about whether a long or short domain name is better.
Some argue that shorter domain names are easier to remember, easier to type and far less susceptible to mistakes: for example, “getit.com” is easier to remember and less prone to typos than “connecttomywebsiteandobtainit.com”.

Others argue that a longer domain name is usually easier on the human memory – for example, “gaepw.com” is a sequence of unrelated letters that is difficult to remember and type correctly, whereas if we expand it to its long form, “GetAnEconomicallyPricedWebsite.com”, we are more likely to remember the domain name.
Which would I go for? I’d go for the shorter name if I can get a meaningful one, but I’m not averse to longer names. However, I would probably avoid extremely long names verging on 67 characters. Aside from the obvious problem that people might not be able to remember such a long name, it would also be a chore typing it and trying to fit it as a title on your web page.

Registering a website using iweb

Registering a domain name is easy. Once you thought of a good domain name following the advice in step 1 you need to choose a registrar, such as Godaddy, Namecheap and 123-reg.. It?s up to you which one you choose. I use Godaddy as my domain registrar and is the one I recommend, Godaddy also gives you an option to pay via paypal which is always good. After You register a domain name you have to link your registrar with mobile/iWeb,I will show you how on another page. Domain names usually range in price from approx. £1.20 to £10.00. It normally depends not what the name of the domain name is but suffixes which are the .com, .co.uk part of the domain name. Read here to see what some of them mean.You may want to chose one on popularity, the price or because of what they mean. If using Godaddy the follow the steps at my website.

To find more info about this matter and loads more info about tips on creating a website using iweb, publishing your website and how to earn money on your site, the please visit my site at www.iweb-master.info

Readers who are looking for info about the niche of free traffic, then make sure to check out the link which is quoted in this paragraph.

Ideas On Selecting A Good WWW Name

Thursday, February 17th, 2011

One common question I come across is from people who can’t get the “.com” domain of their picking, but find the “.net”, “.org” or other country-specific top level domains (TLDs) obtainable (like .de, .nu, .sg, etc). Should they try for these?

The answer is not as clear-cut as you might think. If your site or business caters to the local community, such as a pizza delivery business or recruitment agency or the like, then it makes sense to get a country-specific web name. You really benefit from having such a local domain because the folks in your country know that they’re dealing with a local entity, which is what they want. After all, if they stay in the United Kingdom, they’re unlikely to want to try to order pizza from pizzaparlour.com, which suggests an international site. You’ll have better luck calling it pizzaparlour.co.uk, ie, with a UK domain.

What if yours is a site or business that can profit from an international audience? There are actually many schools of thought on this. I’ll just mention a few general ones.

The first school of thought goes on the premise that it is better to have a domain name of your choice “myperfectdomain” even if it has a TLD of “.net”, “.org” or some other country specific extension, than to end up deciding on an obscure domain name for the simple reason you can’t get your first choice. Thus they would settle for domain names like “myperfectdomain.de” or “myperfectdomain.net” etc. Contrary to this is the argument that if you get a country specific domain, people might think that your business only caters to that country.

Another school of thought finds that “.net” and “.org” extensions are actually very satisfactory domain names. For some, the “.org” extension actually describes the non-profit nature of their organisation. So, for example, the famous Apache web server can be found at “apache.org”.

Others settle for the “.com” extension and no less. As basis for their arguments, they cite the browser algorithms used to locate a website when a user simply types a name like “acme” into the browser. Apparently, the browser searches for a domain name “acme.com” before attempting “acme.net”, etc. As such, people who do that will be delivered to your competitor’s site if you do not also own the “.com” extension. Indeed, even if people do not rely on their browser to complete their typing, many simply think a “.com” extension when they type a domain name, so if your business is “Acme”, they’ll just assume your domain name is “acme.com” rather than “acme.net” or some other such name.

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