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FrontPage 2003 Made Me a Happy Webmaster

Let's begin with a little history. Many years ago, when the web was up and coming and you needed to be on it, I paid someone to build a site for me. Afterwards, I could say, "Yeah, I have a site, go to -" and then I would name my site a feel a hit of pride. I'd also get satisfaction when my webmaster (if you could call him that; I don't know that I would in retrospect, but that's another story) occasionally forwarded me an email of an interested visitor. My satisfaction was short-lived, as you might imagine. I soon began to understand the power of the web and found the sad reality that my "webmaster" was getting all my emails from my website visitors to be annoying. I had him change this so that the emails came to me. He charged me a one-time fee for getting him to do this.

Okay, so these days it is not quite that bad, is it? Your webmaster or whoever is doing the "web thing" for you isn't charging you for every little service? Excuse me. I'll reserve my rant for another article, or possibly a blog entry.

So anyway, I fired my webmaster. I built my own webpage. I did this - of all things - with Microsoft Publisher. Yeah, well, it worked - in that I was able to build a site and, with some effort, get it on the web. I won't go into why you shouldn't try this, kids, at home. I was at home when I tried it, sure. But I don't suggest building a site with Publisher. It can be done, but don't do it.

One thing that happens - talk about annoying: The site crams all against the left side of the page. There's nothing you can do to change that. You might as well type out onto the web page "Look, Ma, I can create a website using Publisher." Don't do it.

Well, I knew at the time I shouldn't be messing around with Publisher. It's great for putting together a book or something for print. It's not good for websites. I had just been so excited because I had created a downloadable book for lulu.com. Publisher was great for laying out a book. I had so much momentum...

I put the Publisher site up, and thought I had done a pretty good job, considering that everything was crammed up to the left of the screen. I had yet to become a blogger, and I had yet to realize the importance of tagging and so on. All that important "extra" stuff. I'm joking. Writing tags is not extra. It's essential. So is the blog - on the website.

Then I bought FrontPage and a book and... That's all she wrote. I learned FrontPage and I haven't tried anything else out since. Why not? So far I don't need to use the fantastic Dreamweaver that everyone talks about. Oh, I can't do Flash on FrontPage? Uh - yes you can. Easily.

I continue to believe that content is all-important. Not bells. Not whistles. Content. I don't care what kind of a site you are putting up. Well, okay, I wouldn't necessarily use FrontPage for every circumstance. But for you and me, the individual or small company that wants to be up and shining on the web, FrontPage is the clear answer. At least it was for me. As I say, I haven't looked back since.

One needn't learn the bells and whistles. One certainly needn't incorporate dhtml or whatever that code is that will make letters pop and fly about. Old browsers can't see it, and new browsers - mine, at least - don't want to see it.

I have affiliated with companies. That is, I've tried to turn a dollar by putting them up on my site, a link or banner or what have you. Let me say that what I don't like are the banners that flicker and blink and all that junk. If I want the Las Vegas experience, I'll go there.

Just give me content. FrontPage can handle that and handle it well. You want to be able to upload Flash, for sure. FrontPage can do it. You want to be able to get as much information on your website with as few bytes as possible. FrontPage can do this as well as any program. So, I'm happy. Are you happy - yet?

Beau Smith is an artist, writer, and webmaster. Through screen capture tutorials, Beau Smith's website, http://www.TutorialJoe.com will teach you right now for free how to use FrontPage 2003.

Beau Smith - EzineArticles Expert Author

 


SEO and Web Site Building

If you are considering building a web site for your business, then you will more than likely like it to rank in the search engines There are many factors that influence website rankings and many of these factors can be implemented while you are creating your website. Optimizing your website properly for your business will ensure a more successful site.

Have you heard the concept "Content is King"? The search engines are becoming more selective at who ranks highly and want to provide the best content for each search term. They are looking for high quality content that is continually updated and provides a quality experience for their searchers. It makes no difference whether you have a content site or a physical product site. Content is "King" as far as the search engines are concerned. By providing quality content and/or good descriptive descriptions of products you sell you will be helping your customers and you may just help yourself at ranking.

One mistake many new webmasters make is to over optimize their web page by using too many keywords. If you are excessive with your keywords, your web page will not read well and the search engines my penalize you. It is considered spamming when your techniques are questionable even if that wasn't your intention. There are other techniques that are considered unethical including hiding text, and redirects. Just write for your visitor and don't try to over optimize your web page.

Another thing to keep in mind that may cause you problems is the use of frames. Make sure you know how to use frames correctly before using them on your website. If the proper frame context is established, then the search engines can send visitors to your site. However if you use frames incorrectly the spiders for them will not be able to crawl your web page and or website.

During web site building, you should also consider the depth of your site. Search engines have spiders that crawl through the web pages and find the necessary keywords. If you do not setup the correct linking structure throughout your website the spiders may not be able to crawl your entire site. One of the best practices when setting up your websites' structure is to include a sitemap that lists all the web pages that make up your website and then link your sitemap to your homepage. This will help ensure that the search engines can crawl your site.

With proper planning and a little research you will be able to build a professional site that the search engines love.

There are many things to consider when building a website. When you choose XSitePro to build your website, onpage SEO as well as many other functions become very easy. Stop by today and let me show you why you should consider this website builder.

 


Web Analytics

I've done quite a bit of research into web analytics lately, and I have found a couple of things. Google analytics Is a great tool, but it cannot be the only tool an organization relies on. Because it is a purely JavaScript based, it is unable to catch browsers that do not have JavaScript enabled, this includes the search engine robots, some hand held devices, as well as a percent of users that manually turn this off. That being said we need a tool to parse the log files from the server and to give us information about these users, as well as providing us with "on demand" stats where as Google's stats are next day. The server logs also contain a wealth of other information that we are collecting automatically, so we might as well take advantage of it.

I have come to the conclusion that we need to use Google Analytics but we also need a tool that reads the server logs. There are quite a variety of tools that would fill this need. Google recently purchased Urchin who's web analysis product runs Google analytics, costs about $3k and will work with the Google Mini, Urchin also gives the ability to read logs from server software other than IIS (like apache, the software used for open source applications) .

Urchin will be releasing another version shortly, and this will be the first release since the Google buyout. Another option is WebTrends Analytics it costs about $4k. It Like Urchin will read both IIS and Apache logs, and has a web interface for users. The last product is NetTracker, it runs about $4k for the software, and another grand for support. it was recently bought out by Unica. The administration of netTracker is not the smoothest, and the support seems to have declined on quality since the buy out.

 


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