Web Site Design Online - Your Own Web Site,
Patient Friend or Darkest Nightmare?
Most everyone will agree, if you are going to do business
online, you need your own web site. It can be
a mini-site or a full blown multi-page mega-monster. These
days, maybe you just need a blog. There arethose who have
written entire books about how they made X amount of dollars
with no web site, and no product of their own. That's entirely
possible.
Having your own site may open up many
possibilities that you could never have imagined. For many who
embark upon their own web site adventure, it becomes a learning
experience with no equal.
Your site will take on a personality of its own. You may see it
as a very patient friend, waiting calmly for you to discover
some little hidden function, which opens up a whole range of
entirely new possibilities, and starts your thoughts racing -
thinking about how to capitalize on that particular
feature.
You may get a little careless, or too relaxed with it, then
bam! Right between the eyes. Oh, no, you've just wiped out your
index page by mistake. Happily, you're not just enthusiastic,
but also careful. You have a copy on your hard drive, so that's
easy to fix.
Anyway, it's fun, can be profitable, and most certainly could
feed that creative flair in all of us. Others may look at it as
a nightmare. I guess it depends on your frame of mind.
To prevent your experience from becoming a nightmare there are
a few basic things that will help.
1. Research domain names carefully. Don't just pick one you
like. You want it to be something a lot of people are searching
for, but hopefully has low to medium competition.
Use Wordtracker's FREE trial: Wordtracker
http://www.google.com search will give you
an idea about competition for any particular keyword.
Use Overture's search box to find how many times your keyword
was searched on last month:
http://inventory.overture.com/d/searchinventory/suggestion
2. Don't get fooled into paying too much for a domain name,
unless it's really a special one that fits your purpose and
your niche like a glove. Domain names can be had, starting at
around $9 or $10 at:
http://www.godaddy.com
or
http://www.teknondomains.com
3. Research again when you go to get your actual domain, the
space for you to tack your sign (your domain name) on to.
Especially check storage and bandwidth allowed, and of course
price.
4. My advice is to use a template to build your actual web
pages. You can find them all over the 'Net FREE!
http://www.ibdprince.com - has all kinds
of webmaster goodies, including really great looking CSS
templates.
http://www.diyminisite.com - templates and
videos about mini site creation - click the "not yet a
member" link to join. It's FREE. Then go to the download
area. No strings.
5. When you actually start creating your web pages, take care
that the HTML you use is in line with what the search engine
web spiders require.
Get a FREE copy of "7 days to Massive Web Site
Traffic." It outlines the steps to a web page that can
rank high in the search engines, and even goes beyond just your
web pages, to tell you "the rest of the story." I thoroughly
enjoyed it.
"7 Days" popin appears here on this site. It sounds like a lot
of trouble, but believe me, it's worth it.
6. Don't load your site down with slow loading banners and
images. Use interlaced low-res images that have been optimized
for the web.
7. Write your copy, then play editor: write, hack, rewrite,
rewrite, rewrite, until it is crisp, clear, to the point, and
utterly understandable.
Repeat your strongest point or benefit a number of times (at
least three). Some people just don't get it the first time or
two.
Spread your text out a bit. Don't double space, but use very
short paragraphs, and lots of headings with some space between
the heading and the paragraph.
Target your audience. Don't talk about network marketing to
golfers. They may be interested in network marketing, but they
probably got to your site via a search for a golf product and
that's what they're looking for.
Did you advertise a network marketing opportunity in a golfing
ezine? That's acceptable in the "paper and ink" world, but
could be spam online.
Keep your fonts constant throughout your site. Variety may be
the "spice of life" but can really look lousy on a web page.
You can vary the size a bit, and throw in a little color, but
stay conservative with the type style.
Know your target audience, and be sure not to speak (write)
above their heads. Use words they will understand without
Webster's help. You may get by with writing a little below
their level, but never above it.
Highlight important selling words and phrases with bolding,
italics, underlining, and color. Just don't overdo it.
Don't forget, purchases are never made on logic, but on
emotion. Use copy that is designed to trigger an emotional
response, such as a sense of loss, one of the strongest: "If
you wait, this offer may no longer be available at this price.
Get it now at this ridiculously low price, and it's yours
forever."
8. The most important point, that will probably do more to
promote your online success than any other is this:
Pick a niche! Do not get sucked into selling
network marketing programs and how-to information, ebooks and
such, about online marketing. That's what EVERYBODY is doing.
The competition will KILL you.
Find something you are interested in, research it, and if
necessary learn it. You are so much better off starting out by
learning a niche like "19th Century Knitting" or "17th Century
Scrimshaw" than you are jumping into the cauldron of poor souls
caught up in the nightmare of selling ebooks that are being
given away FREE all over the internet.
Why do so many do it? There was no one to tell them "don't
touch that, it will burn you." There's about a million or more
marketers out there telling you, "Come on in, the water's
fine." So you do, only to find they just wanted to sell you
something.
Don't fall for it! It's hard to change direction once you get
up momentum, so start out right.
Trond Kristiansen is a Computer Engineer and
have been working with Computer Systems in more than 20 years
and managed major network installations, built
Internet/Intranet platforms and Software for several large
companies. http://www.items4you.biz
(The article above may be republished on
websites or distributed in electronic newsletters, or used in
print media as long as it is left intact and the author
paragraph and recource box at the end is published attached to
the article)
Web Site Design
Online
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