There are so many work at home based businesses out there to choose from right now how do I know which one to go with? Every work at home based business opportunity that I have found seems to have a great plan and equally good products or services as well. So it is very difficult to decide which one to invest in. I suppose that I should do some research on the ones that I really like and then go from there. I know that all of them will take investment and time, but that I have, I just want to invest in the right one.
I have been looking for a good home business opportunity for awhile now and I think that I have finally found the one. With all of the different work at home based business opportunity programs available right now it isn’t that easy picking which one to go with. Every one of them takes time and financial investments, this I know and accept, but I don’t want to make these investments into the wrong program. I have seen several of these home opportunities that I like and they all have great products so I will have to flip a coin or something to make my final decision.
September 10th, 2008 by admin
Posted in House Of Websters, Your Business | Comments Off
Currently there are around 60 million domain names registered
globally. Industry experts are predicting that in the next ten
years, more than 500 MILLION web sites will be active annually.
Any single area that experiences that level of growth should
cause you to sit up and take note.
Imagine owning an automated online business that earns you money
24 hours a day - 7 days a week, without you even lifting a
finger. Set it up once, feed it occasionally and watch in
amazement as it grows. If you had a chance to stand if front of
10 million people with something to sell, would it be worth it?
I think so.
How do you stand in front of 10 Million?
If you have a shop in your local center you may get exposure to
100 - 200 people per day. If you are in a major center this
number could be higher, but you will have trouble exceeding 1000
visitors a day, would you agree?
With a web presence you can reach astounding numbers of people,
and it can be any time day or night.
So that is reason 1. and it is a big one!
Now I am happy to stop there, the argument is clear for me, but
lets continue with some other resons.
If you don’t have a website, then you might not realise all the
great things they can do for you. Maybe you think there wouldn’t
be any point, because your business is too small - or maybe you
don’t even have a business! Perhaps you think it’d be a lot of
work for little reward. Or maybe you paid big buck*s for a site
back during the dot-com ‘boom’ days, only to get nothing but
trouble out of it and shut it down a year later.
Whatever your situation is, though, you need a website, and I’m
here to tell you why.
2. People Will Look for You Online.
Sooner or later, someone’s going to type your name into a search
engine. What do you want them to find? Nothing? These are people
who want to find you, and if you don’t have a website then
you’re letting them down - they expect you to be online. For
many people, you might as well not exist if you can’t be found
with a search engine. Not having a website is like not bothering
to get listed in the phone book. Whether it’s customers or old
school friends you’re hoping for, very few people are going to
find you if you aren’t online.
3. Websites Cost Next to Nothing.
Once, it cost a lot to run a website - but those days are long
gone. There are ‘pay as you go’ services out there now charging
as little as $1 per gigabyte of bandwidth. If you’re sensible
about the size of your pages, that dollar could last you a whole
month, or even longer! If you don’t want to pay for design, it’s
never been simpler to do it yourself, or find FRE*E software to
do it for you. Really, it’s never been cheaper to have a website
than it is today.
4. Websites are Great Advertising.
Whatever you’re advertising - your services, your products, or
just yourself - a website is a great way to do it. Every other
kind of advertising going costs a premium, especially if you
want to target a specific kind of person, and there’s no
guarante*e that they’re paying attention. Websites are like
brochures that are FRE*E to reproduce, interactive, and quickly
distributed to people who are already looking for them. No
advertising medium even comes close to the ease-of-use and
effectiveness of a website.
5. A Website is a Worldwide Presence.
On the web, it doesn’t matter whether someone is next door to
you or on the other side of the world - they can see your
website just the same as anyone else can, at no extra cost to
you or to them. Phone and post both cost enormous amounts
long-distance, but a website lets you send information anywhere
without any extra effort or expense. You can make friends and
contacts in places you’ve never been and will never go -
suddenly, working globally is no more effort than working
locally.
6. Your Website Can Make You Money.
There’s a lot of money on the web, and it’s not hard to get some
- the longer you’re online for, the bigger your share can get.
If you have something to sell, you can sell it worldwide, thanks
to credit cards. Doing business online eliminates almost every
overhead there is: all you need to do is have the goods. If
you’ve written something useful, you can put it out there with a
few ads. You won’t get rich overnight, but you can set up a
steady trickle of income… and there’s no limit to the number
of trickles you can set up.
7. Your Website Can Save You Time.
Giving out information takes time, whether it’s on the phone, or
in brochures, or even if it’s just emailing your family.
Websites are designed to save you time. All your family and
friends can read your online diary (known as a weblog), but you
only had to write it once. Customers can see your whole product
catalogue without ever needing to talk to you or visit you. This
is the power of the web: things on it are written only once, but
can be downloaded endlessly - a good website runs itself, and
keeps being useful to people for much longer than you’d expect.
May 7th, 2008 by admin
Posted in House Of Websters | Comments Off
I have reviewed hundreds of websites in past few months. Some good, some bad. I have learnt the hard way by doing my own research and applying logic as to what are the good website design practices.
So I thought best is to write an article on ‘good website design practices’ that you can use to make sure that your website is useful to the visitors.
(1) Navigability Navigation should be easy. Visitors must always know which page they are on. Don’t confuse visitors; this is the last thing they want.
(2) Fast loading time In a recent survey, if your web site does not load in 12 seconds or less on a 56k connection, statistics show that 43% of visitors will leave the site. There are two main parts of website- images/graphics and content.
(a) Images Keep number of images to minimum. If you think they are necessary, keep them small. There are still some internet users out there using 56K dial up connection!
(b) Web pages Keep them short and readable. Never use fix font on WebPages. Let visitors have the privilege of adjusting the font size to suit their needs.
(3) Cross browser platforms Check your website on as many browsers and systems as possible. It should display properly on most internet browsers and systems.
(4) Avoid JavaScript This is the last thing you would want. Scripts do crash computer systems. So keep them to minimum.
(5) Flash Intros Simply get rid of them. There is still a big percentage of internet users who don’t have Flash players installed on their computers. Take mine, for instance, I don’t have it either!
(6) Use of CSS (Cascading style sheets) This helps both in SEO and website loading time. External CSS is mostly preferred.
(7) Website content: Content is the key to any website. With it comes the importance of categorizing the content in an ordered way. Visitors should be able to easily navigate between related category pages.
Article by: Primrose Gandhi
Visit homepage: http://www.koogra.com
Professional website designer and SEO.
April 1st, 2008 by admin
Posted in House Of Websters | Comments Off
In order to master the art of web design, designers must follow the subsequent pointers:
1. Web designers are marketers per se. Web sites are all about advertising products, ideas and services. Thus, a web designer has to understand the mindset of marketers in order to create a design that sell.
2. Read, read and read. We do not experience everything. Thus, our tendency is to learn from others. Reading web design books, newsletters and tips are pretty valuable since they can save you time and effort. Basically, books are more conclusive than newsletters and tips however, they are for free and mostly updated.
3. Narrow down your target market. You cannot please everybody same thing that you cannot be good at everything. Thus, this fact calls for the narrowing of your target market. Even in the interface of the so-called web design, a designer cannot claim that he is an expert at anything or everything about the needs of a website. It is better to pick a certain audience and try to be good at catching their attention, preference and choice. This practice allows you to be best at a given area thus developing expertise.
4. Answer your target audience’s needs. In order to answer the visitor’s needs, web designers must know what kind of visitors his site is welcoming. Do they belong to the younger generation or otherwise? What do they want from your site? Are these information, details and pleasures in your site in order to get their undivided attention and loyalty? Bear in mind that colors, font size, style of graphics, contents and the entirety of the site affects viewer’s decision and choice.
5. Know the basics of SEO and copywriting. Though Search Engine Optimization and copywriting are not directly related to designing, still, designers must have basic knowledge about them. This is because web designing is intertwined with marketing, use of keywords and visibility.
Aside from that, designers must also have knowledge of the programming basics. If not, the tendency is waste time or to create a mediocre or unsatisfactory design to the detriment of the sites.
6. The primacy of functionality. If ever you are faced to make a decision between a web site’s aesthetic form and its functionality, you have to be firm in upholding the latter. Not everything that is pretty is ’saleable’. Besides, you don’t create web sites for the sake of making it nice-looking.
Above anything else, the site must be functional so as to cater to every visitor’s wants and needs. Appearance is a means to catch visitor’s attention nevertheless, it is not the end. If a designer prioritizes appearance alone without considering its primary consideration the web site’s marketability will suffer.
7. Know when to break the rules. Rules are only guidelines, if you feel that the rules are inappropriate for a certain creation follow your heart’s desire and venture on an experimental adventure.
Please visit Web Development Services Pros site at www.webdevelopmentpros.com for comments and inquiries regarding this article.
March 30th, 2008 by admin
Posted in House Of Websters | Comments Off