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"For by him all things were created: things in
heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers
or rulers or authorities; all things were created by him and for him."
Colossians 15:16
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Domain Registered? Now What?
Author: George M Ewing
Article:
I own a company that, among other things, develops web sites, and I've had my
own business and personal sites since the early 1990's. While each web site
project has its own challenges and rewards, there are some common elements to
all of them.
First, make sure that the ISP or web development firm registered the domain name
in your or your client's name, and not their own. Even today, outsourcers will
often register domains in their own names, leaving you out in the cold if the
site becomes popular, unless you already had the domain name trademarked. If you
are the web developer, register the domain in your client's name so that your
ethics won't be questioned later.
Second, help your client (or yourself) by developing a master plan from which
elements can be added to the sites as time and money allows. A lot of businesses
think they have to have a web site to stay current in today's business
environment, but haven't given much thought about what that means. Some of the
questions I ask are:
1. Is it for public consumption, or are you providing information to clients,
suppliers, or business partners?
2. Is your intended audience local, regional, national, or global?
3. What repetitive information are your customers, suppliers, or partners
calling you about that could be presented on a web site?
4. Does your product or service catalog change often enough that reflecting
those changes on your web site might garner more sales?
5. What information can you present that prospective customers will find
useful?
6. Do you use a sales strategy (a presentation, or a decision tree) that can
be translated to a web site?
7. Can you use your site as an Extranet as well as an Internet site?
8. What graphical elements (logos, pictures, etc.) will you want to have on
the site, and where?
9. Will the site contain advertising and how will the design accommodate
that?
10. Practically every web site will have a slightly different focus depending
on for whom it is developed. The answers to these and similar questions will
help define the purpose of the site, its scope, how it will be organized, and
what kind of information will be presented on it. It also helps compile a list
of things that may have to be developed separately, thus affecting the project
schedule (e.g., a paragraph describing the company in 50 words or less, a new
logo, gathering a list of product data, etc.).
I have an insurance and investments broker client who, from very the start, was
particular about how he wanted the site to
"look", but he hadn't given any thought about what the site would accomplish. It
took several months and many hours of
conversation to develop a site plan. His site allows his clients to submit
claims information, prospects to request more
information about specific products, casual browsers to learn about his
services, and his clients' employees to look up
medical providers from various HMO and PPO plans. Without some planning, he
could have ended up with a fancy "business card" and never gotten lots of leads
from people who have visited his site.
Third, check whether the web hosting company is providing Front Page extensions.
Microsoft's Front Page(and other high-end web page editors), is a huge timesaver
and gives you access to a wide selection of advanced functionality for your site
(automatic form creation, marquees, java scripts, tables, etc.). Of course, you
can always be a purist and learn HTML coding in your spare time.
Fourth, think long and hard about using affiliate advertising. My most
successful web clients waited a year or more to gain any significant site
traffic, and that was only as a result of a concerted marketing plan that
publicized the site to existing
customers. Too many people, with no background in page layout and design, plop
ads all over their sites and wait for the
referral checks to roll in. The only thing they actually achieve is making their
sites look like shoddy billboards for other
sites. Affiliate ads "can" help drive traffic, but map out a plan and be very
picky about who you sign up with. If your site
is a local or regional site, look for ads from local and regional businesses
that you (or your prospects) may already
have a relationship with in the brick and mortar world.
Finally, the best web sites are "works in progress". The web is an evolving
collection of styles and technologies, and your
presence on it can be as well. Keep tweaking.
About the author:
George M Ewing, Help Desk Services, Inc., Malvern, PA, Tel.
610-408-0300
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