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Web Development Articles

Entries for August, 2006

Why do I Need a Website?

  • Cost Effective Advertising.
  • Online selling.
  • Increased geopgraphic range.
  • Wider customer base.
  • Efficient marketing.
  • Improved customer support.
  • Succesful market research.
  • Customer feedback.

Just a few of the reasons why your business or organisation, however small, can benefit from having a professional web presence.

Your web site can be viewed 24 hours a day, 365 days a year by anyone with a connection to the internet, anywhere in the World. With more and more people using the internet as their main method of researching and obtaining goods and services this is a potential market you can’t afford to ignore. In fact, many people obtain nearly all of the goods and services they need almost exclusively from the internet. This means that if you don’t have a web site, you are losing business to those forward thinking companies that do.

Your Future Profit Is In The Stars

You don’t believe in astrology but you check your horoscope in the newspaper just for fun. Me too. But millions of people do believe in astrology and are willing to pay to know the future. This creates an opportunity for you to profit from an astrology web site.

Because the earth and other planets orbit around the Sun in the same plane, the planets appear to move through a belt in the sky called the “zodiac”. The zodiac is divided into twelve parts called “houses”.

Give Your Website A Chance

I often wonder how serious people are when it comes to their websites. I thought that most everyone knew that the phrase “Build it and they will come” no longer applies on the internet but I’m not sure how many people really believe it.

I look at sites everyday as part of my sales strategy and I can’t tell you how many of them violate the obvious elements of good website design and submission.

What even amazes me more is that they can’t figure out why they don’t get sales or visitors.

Your Site is all Direct Marketing

This may not be a popular view, but I think writing a web site is very similar to writing a piece of direct mail. I’m not talking about smash-and-grab fliers. I’m talking about those large mailings with brochures, a four or eight-page letter and a reply card.

And no, I’m not saying that the experience or the approach is identical. There are numerous differences too. But the similarities are significant, and can guide us in how we write for the web.

Here are some similarities: