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Online Marketing
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Tuesday, 19 February 2008 |
- Branding is not just a logo. It’s about building a relationship with your existing and potential customers and business partners. A blog can do just that.
- You can test new products and ideas without having to spend a dime. Simply ask your readers to give you feedback. It’s always exciting to see how many customers will read your blog and make suggestions. It removes the communication barrier by making things more personal and friendly.
- Search engines love blogs. A static site will put business on the map, but adding a blog increases your chances of getting good rankings on search engines because of the frequently updated content. Ranking high in the search engines will feed your site with more traffic, more exposure, and in turn, more clients and customers.
- Do not go for a free hosted blogging platform like Blogger or WordPress.com. Instead implement it into your website.
- Find someone who can do a custom design that stays with the theme of your site. Apart from your existing customers who might read your blog, many people will find it on search engines and directories. Consistency and appeal can entice a reader to stay, read, and respond.
- Oops! Proofread and spell-check your posts before you publish them. It isn’t very impressive if you have a beautiful profitable website, but your blog is full of typos and grammar mistakes.
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Websites
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Thursday, 31 January 2008 |
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There are several different spellings for this term. Although "website" and "web site" are commonly used (the former especially in British English), the Associated Press Stylebook, Reuters, Microsoft, academia, book publishing, The Chicago Manual of Style, and dictionaries such as Merriam-Webster use the two-word, initially capitalized spelling Web site. This is because "Web" is not a general term but a shortened form of World Wide Web. As with many newly created terms, it may take some time before a common spelling is finalized. (This controversy also applies to derivative terms such as "Web master"/"webmaster" and "Web cam"/"webcam").
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Online Marketing
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Saturday, 19 January 2008 |
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Exchanging links is important for search engine ranking. Don't let anyone tell you otherwise. The key is in how it's done. A link exchange is an agreement between two parties to place reciprocal links on their respective websites. It is not the same as a link farm, which is a website that consists primarily of indiscriminate links to other sites (sometimes called FFA, or free for all sites). |
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Graphic Design
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Saturday, 19 January 2008 |
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A logo (Greek λογότυπος = logotypos) is a graphical element, (ideogram, symbol, emblem, icon, sign) that, together with its logotype (a uniquely set and arranged typeface) form a trademark or commercial brand. Typically, a logo's design is for immediate recognition, inspiring trust, admiration, loyalty and an implied superiority. The logo is one aspect of a company's commercial brand, or economic entity, and its shapes, colors, fonts, and images usually are different from others in a similar market. Logos are also used to identify organizations and other non-commercial entities.
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Websites
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Saturday, 19 January 2008 |
If a SQL injection vulnerability exists on a website, the consequences can be very severe. Hackers can use this to gain administrator access, read and modify your database, and steal sensitive information. SQL injection works by using poorly coded SQL statements to do something they were not intended to do.
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Jobs
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Friday, 18 January 2008 |
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We are looking for an experienced web developer in PHP, Joomla, CSS to work as a part time in our office in Dallas off 635 and Josey Lane. You will need to submit your resume and list of projects you have developed. We also prefer someone who has knowledge in Joomla, Real Estate Applications, DHTML, Ajax. This might turn to be a full time job very soon. This is a perfect job for internship as well. We are looking for serious individuals with personals goals. |
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Web Design
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Friday, 18 January 2008 |
We get a lot of clients who come to us from a bad relationship with their previous web design firm. Whether their designer isn’t responsive or isn’t doing quality work or in many cases, simply disappeared from the face of the planet, a lot of website owners have been taken for a ride by fly-by-night web developers. (Word to the wise: check references and portfolios very carefully before picking a web designer! And if the person you found is way cheaper than most other firms, there is probably a reason why.)
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