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| MEMBERS: | Do You Want To Create A Website Or A Business Online?
This is a question you will have to address. Many folks just a build a website but do not think out why they are really doing it. As a result they don't take it seriously and therefore they do not get serious results. This makes logical sense right? A website in and of itself means nothing unless it has visitors and achieves a certain objective. So you have to be clear what you want to achieve as this will help you focus on your research and build a site that can achieve your objective. Quality research will help you build a quality website. To build a business online you are going to have to build a relationship with your site visitors. You will need to show them how to connect the dots and you can only do this by providing valuable content that is benefit driven. Furthermore you are going to have to show them solid evidence of how your product or service can help them achieve results. Connecting the dots means moving them closer to their outcome. Once they can follow this and see how it will work for them you will naturally build credibility which will result in you having a profitable website. As mentioned when you build your site you want to clearly have your visitor's objectives in mind so that you can address their concerns and overcome their objections. If you can help them achieve their goals it will be a win win situation for all parties concerned.
Does Your Web Site Need a Workout?
Here's an analogy for you. Yesterday, I was working my butt off in the gym on the cardio machines, panting wildly with sweat dripping off me and my face as red as a beet. Not the most attractive sight, but I figure, you're at the gym to work out right? I might as well "go hard" or "go home", as they say. As I looked around me, I could see all these people simply going through the motions. There they were, minus perspiration in their shiny new lycra and expensive gym shoes, casually walking on the treadmill or lazily turning the wheels on a bike while reading a book or glued to the TV screens in front of them. Only a few seemed to be there for the actual purpose of working out. The rest seemed to be there to check out the talent or to simply keep up the appearance of fitness, while doing the bare minimum. Huh? I don't get it. Why have these gym bimbos paid so much money for a gym membership and all the related gear if they aren't going to take full advantage of their investment? Then it struck me - these gymbos were just like those companies who spend thousands of dollars on a shiny new website with all the bells and whistles like graphic design, blogs, shopping carts, web analytics, the lot and then fail to take advantage of it. I see it so often, regardless of company size. Web sites that could easily be bringing in loads of traffic and revenue simply wasting away because nobody can be bothered tracking visitor activity, analyzing trends or checking for search engine compatibility and usability. These companies are simply keeping up appearances, investing heavily in Internet technology because their competitors are doing the same. But no thought has gone into the search engine compatibility of the site, how usable it is for visitors or whether it meets accessibility guidelines. They don't look at their site statistics, they don't check for broken links and they sure as heck don't investigate why their sites aren't converting traffic into customers. What a waste! Is your web site working hard enough for you? Run it through the following 20 point fitness assessment to find out: - Is your site fully search engine compatible? Are all your pages being indexed by the major search engines? - Do you track your visitor statistics on a regular basis? Do you use the information provided by your visitor statistics to improve your site? - Is your web site accessible to visually-impaired visitors? Does it meet the international standards set down by the Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI)? - Do you know which sites and search engines provide you with the most traffic? Do you use this information to increase your traffic further? - Do you track the source of all reported errors in your site statistics and fix them promptly? - Do you know which keywords your site was found for in the search engines? Have you conducted keyword research to determine what search terms your target markets are looking for so you can optimize for them? - Does your web site HTML code validate to W3 standards? Do you check for validation regularly? - Does your site contain zero broken links? Do you check for and fix broken links regularly? - Has your site been fully search engine optimized to integrate your target search terms into your Page Titles, META Tags and visible page text? - Have you created and submitted an XML sitemap to Google Sitemaps? - Have you created and submitted a sitemap to Yahoo Site Explorer? - Have you checked to see if your site meets Google's Webmaster Guidelines? - Do you measure your visitor sign-ups and conversions on a regular basis? Do you tweak your landing page copy to increase the conversion rates? - Is your site navigation intuitive and are your visitors following the navigation paths you intended? - Do you encourage feedback from your site visitors and provide an obvious way for them to provide such feedback? - Are there at least 250 words of text on your home page to satisfy search engines? - Does your site contain a visible, text-based site map to aid user navigation? - Do you have an ongoing link building campaign running to secure more incoming links to your site and improve your site's link popularity score? - Does your site have a high percentage of repeat visitors? Are the majority of your visitors staying on your site for more than a minute? - Do your search engine referrals and site traffic figures grow each month? Unless you can answer yes to all the questions in the above checklist, your web site is not working hard enough for you and needs a workout. Get to it!
Beta - A Programming Language
BETA is a pure object oriented programming language developed by Scandinavian School in System Development, Nordic Universities. This was released after a series of enhancements of their first object oriented language SimulaI which was a simulation language. Soon it was generalized into Simula67 which had the object oriented framework, and worked on the concepts of class, sub-class, virtual functions etc. This was enhanced by another object oriented language Delta that worked for system description; this meant it could express predicate logic and state changes. This was a non-executable effort and thus did not qualify as a language. So it was decided to design a programming language Gamma that works as Delta but is executable. Eventually, Gamma was never made, rather Beta was made. While Beta was being made, it was realized that Beta was much more powerful than what Gamma would be or ever could be. Beta is a programming language like C++. Currently, BETA is available on UNIX workstations, on PowerPC Macintosh and on Intel-based PCs. BETA has an optimum balance between compile time checking and run time checking. The type cast checking is done at compile time, however, for the entire set of type check and type conversion to be done at compile time requires a lot of time and thus increases the complexity of a program. Thus, an optimum balance has been made. BETA is a logical description of the language. It works on the concepts of class, sub-class, virtual functions etc. It also contains transient variables, ones whose scope is program execution, and persistent variables, those whose values are retained in the disk space and are available at the time of next execution.
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