| Digg it UP |
Hubs | Hubbers | Topics | Request |
| #1 in Business | Subscribe Email Print |
|
You are here: Home > Internet and Businesses Online > Web Development > You Do Websites? An Example of Technology Focus at the Peril of Business Results |
|
Digg it UP - You Do Websites? An Example of Technology Focus at the Peril of Business Results
Blogging Part 2: Blog Content rs can switch off or visit a competitor faster than you can say HTML. The novelty of the medium has worn thin, and while the existence of a website was enough of an asset to gain favor with customers five years ago, now they actually want some value from that website in addition to the basic expectations of a modern and well-designed site. Once you pass a minimum threshold of good design principles and basic functionality, the content and presentation of your products or message are what will win a customer, not that snappy soundtToday, we’re going to discuss the type of content that is suitable for your blog in order to make it profitable. First off, I want you to understand that there is no fixed scope that your blog should have, which means you can write about whatever you’re interested in.However, the difference between a profitable blog and a non-profitable blog is the way the blog is written. Just imagine, would you prefer to read your university professo Building Your Own Goldmine - The Golds In The List My father was an auditor at a large global accounting firm, helping innovative biotech and high-tech companies go public, about as far from your neighborhood “tax guy” as possible. Yet, whenever he told people he was in the accounting profession, they would smile knowingly and say something like “You must hate April 15th” (which is the day US income taxes are due). After a few years of trying to explain what he really did, he now merely smiles and nods, having given up on trying to elucidate the differences between tax and audit work.The best way to make money on the Internet is to build an opt-in email list and then promote one product after another to your list.The purpose of your web site is to build a list. If you're doing anything else first then you could be missing out on long term success.Focus on building your list...and then selling the products once the people get to know, respect and trust you. Give great content to your list first, so they are r Being associated with technology, I find myself in a similar set of circumstances. While I deal with CIO-level businesspeople and am concerned primarily with the strategic underpinnings of a corporate IT organization, as soon as I mention technology people light up and say “Do you do websites?” While I find this as distasteful as Da Vinci might if you had asked “Hey Lenny, can you paint my bathroom?” there is a redeeming element by way of example in this story. Nearly everyone knows the web, and it is one of the few endearing technologies that have survived the heady days of the 1990’s with its reputation and luster intact. What is dangerous about the aura of wonder surrounding the web is that generally sensible businesspeople occasionally forget all the rules surrounding marketing, effective copy writing and customer targeting that instantly come to mind with any other communication medium. From the amateur blogger who opens a blog with great excitement, posting dry accounts of the mundane with poor spelling and atrocious grammar and then wondering why no one visits, to the CIO who writes a large check for a revamp of the corporate website applying novel technologies rather than investigating customer value, subsequently watching page views drop, the technology of the web alone will never rule the day with customers. One of the great benefits of the expansion of the internet is the increasing level of access to information it provides, but on the other side of the coin is a great peril. Your message must now compete against thousands of others, and your customers can switch off or visit a competitor faster than you can say HTML. The novelty of the medium has worn thin, and while the existence of a website was enough of an asset to gain favor with customers five years ago, now they actually want some value from that website in addition to the basic expectations of a modern and well-designed site. Once you pass a minimum threshold of good design principles and basic functionality, the content and presentation of your products or message are what will win a customer, not that snappy soundtr Low Cost Full Color Printing ork.On a growing business, there can always be a need for advertisement, full color printing can be a viable option to get the best color reproduction possible. But with a little disadvantage of full color printing to be a little more expensive compared to its digital counterpart, there are also ways to get them at cheaper prices.Full color printing has been very widely used for a long time now. Along these times, often there are printers Being associated with technology, I find myself in a similar set of circumstances. While I deal with CIO-level businesspeople and am concerned primarily with the strategic underpinnings of a corporate IT organization, as soon as I mention technology people light up and say “Do you do websites?” While I find this as distasteful as Da Vinci might if you had asked “Hey Lenny, can you paint my bathroom?” there is a redeeming element by way of example in this story. Nearly everyone knows the web, and it is one of the few endearing technologies that have survived the heady days of the 1990’s with its reputation and luster intact. What is dangerous about the aura of wonder surrounding the web is that generally sensible businesspeople occasionally forget all the rules surrounding marketing, effective copy writing and customer targeting that instantly come to mind with any other communication medium. From the amateur blogger who opens a blog with great excitement, posting dry accounts of the mundane with poor spelling and atrocious grammar and then wondering why no one visits, to the CIO who writes a large check for a revamp of the corporate website applying novel technologies rather than investigating customer value, subsequently watching page views drop, the technology of the web alone will never rule the day with customers. One of the great benefits of the expansion of the internet is the increasing level of access to information it provides, but on the other side of the coin is a great peril. Your message must now compete against thousands of others, and your customers can switch off or visit a competitor faster than you can say HTML. The novelty of the medium has worn thin, and while the existence of a website was enough of an asset to gain favor with customers five years ago, now they actually want some value from that website in addition to the basic expectations of a modern and well-designed site. Once you pass a minimum threshold of good design principles and basic functionality, the content and presentation of your products or message are what will win a customer, not that snappy soundt The Ultimate Internet Marketing Strategy Every One Should Practice w endearing technologies that have survived the heady days of the 1990’s with its reputation and luster intact. What is dangerous about the aura of wonder surrounding the web is that generally sensible businesspeople occasionally forget all the rules surrounding marketing, effective copy writing and customer targeting that instantly come to mind with any other communication medium. From the amateur blogger who opens a blog with great excitement, posting dry accounts of the mundane with poor spelling and atrocious grammar and then wondering why no one visits, to the CIO who writes a large check for a revamp of the corporate website applying novel technologies rather than investigating customer value, subsequently watching page views drop, the technology of the web alone will never rule the day with customers.Every successful online marketer says this is the bar-none, top-of-the-list, number one way to guaranteed success for any online venture.What Is it?Any marketer knows that nothing beats word of mouth advertising. It is simply the most powerful and cost effective advertising ever known. Even before the days of the Internet. Word of mouth advertising got every business where it is today.Many entrepreneurs never have and nev One of the great benefits of the expansion of the internet is the increasing level of access to information it provides, but on the other side of the coin is a great peril. Your message must now compete against thousands of others, and your customers can switch off or visit a competitor faster than you can say HTML. The novelty of the medium has worn thin, and while the existence of a website was enough of an asset to gain favor with customers five years ago, now they actually want some value from that website in addition to the basic expectations of a modern and well-designed site. Once you pass a minimum threshold of good design principles and basic functionality, the content and presentation of your products or message are what will win a customer, not that snappy soundt Video Streaming - New Products Webinar ondering why no one visits, to the CIO who writes a large check for a revamp of the corporate website applying novel technologies rather than investigating customer value, subsequently watching page views drop, the technology of the web alone will never rule the day with customers.If you are a vendor of goods that are routinely sold through online stores you may be an especially good candidate for video streaming.You may use a phone conferencing system where multiple clients can converse with you about a new product. These types of services continue to be useful. However, a new generation of savvy vendors are finding a greater value in video streaming webinars.Imagine a growing company with several hundre One of the great benefits of the expansion of the internet is the increasing level of access to information it provides, but on the other side of the coin is a great peril. Your message must now compete against thousands of others, and your customers can switch off or visit a competitor faster than you can say HTML. The novelty of the medium has worn thin, and while the existence of a website was enough of an asset to gain favor with customers five years ago, now they actually want some value from that website in addition to the basic expectations of a modern and well-designed site. Once you pass a minimum threshold of good design principles and basic functionality, the content and presentation of your products or message are what will win a customer, not that snappy soundt Net Branding Trends - Part II rs can switch off or visit a competitor faster than you can say HTML. The novelty of the medium has worn thin, and while the existence of a website was enough of an asset to gain favor with customers five years ago, now they actually want some value from that website in addition to the basic expectations of a modern and well-designed site. Once you pass a minimum threshold of good design principles and basic functionality, the content and presentation of your products or message are what will win a customer, not that snappy soundtrack and snazzy graphic flying about the screen.So how does one survive the ever changing and evolving branding trends especially in the Internet Age? First up, an increasingly winning strategy will definitely require information about conditions inside and outside your chosen industry (non-customers, technologies besides those currently being used by your firm, present competitors, markets not currently served, and so on). It is to the advantage of a good business person to keep up-to-dat Whether it is a website or a highly advanced enterprise software package costing hundreds of millions of dollars, the business that forgets technology is merely a means to an end puts itself at great peril. If you hear an employee or advisor instantly recommend a technology to fix a business problem, or find yourself doing the same, table the technology discussion and look to the root of the problem at hand, in a self-imposed “tech free zone.” If customers are complaining about your website, look first at the content and value provided to your customer from their perspective, and follow the rules you would with any product, online or physical. Only when you have a solid business solution to a problem and roadmap to its implementation should you begin a technology discussion on how to most effectively implement that solution.
HTTP = HTML link (for blogs, profiles,phorums):
Related Articles:Advertising Splash/Squeeze Pages vs. Websites Killer Tips For Landing That Cruise Ship Job Shooting High Definition Video Footage in Italy
|