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Discussion Boards! They Help You Learn As You Go!
I get a lot of questions from subscribers and visitors to our web site. Some I can answer outright, others I need to do a little research to find out for myself. We have been online now for about three years and started with little knowledge of some...

Does Your Website Need a Wiki ?
What is a "wiki" (pronounced wee-kee)? A wiki is content management system that can allow for community input. This is in the spirit of the "wiki way" where the community members can add to or even edit existing web pages. In this sense, a...

Instant Traffic Using Expired Domains
Every day thousands of domains 'expire' and are put back into the pool of available domains that anyone can register. They can be very valuable if you are looking for a quality domain for your online business, or if you want to re-sell them for...

Learning HTML & HTML Editors
Learning HTML & HTML Editors by Kalina of Affordable Web Design I hold a firm belief that all webmasters should practice validating their code, so all advice I give in this site will be centered around that belief. If you'd like to...

Pop-Under Windows - The Latest Pop-Window Trend
Although there has been a great deal of controversy over the use of pop-up windows, the fact remains; pop-up windows are highly effective. The latest pop-window trend to hit the Internet is the pop-under window. Pop-under windows are less...

 
Creating Sites That Work For You

Let me preface this article by saying that I am not an Internet millionaire,
but I have learned enough about the Internet to make a living doing what I
like to do, that is creating and running successful web sites. There are a
few principles that all successful web sites have in common.

An Effective Interface

There are whole books written on this subject so I won't even attempt to
cover everything in this short article. Suffice to say every successful web
site has an integrated design approach that works.

Integrated, in that all of the graphics, text, etc. look like they belong
together, that they work together to create a whole. That being said, the
most important aspect of web design may very well be speed. Pull up Yahoo
in you browser, how fast did it load? By some estimates you only have 30
seconds to grab your visitors interest. Load time - the speed that a site
is displayed in a browser is critical. The most successful sites combine
graphics optimized for the web with text and ( more and more often ) nested
tables with background colors to create pleasing interfaces that load
quickly.

Back-End Driven Content

All successful web sites have content - articles, free services, inventory
for sale, etc. Most of this content is managed by some sort of database/CGI
type program. These days there are many alternative ways to implement
online programs such as the classic CGI/Perl solutions to ASP, PHP, and C;
and data base solutions as diverse as MySQL to Oracle. My advice is to
choose the simplest solution available for you project, however you should
make sure that it will be able to scale to accommodate your site's
anticipated success. Further, make sure that there is not a ready made,
free version solution to your programming problem before you hire a
programmer or buy a commercial version. There are many excellent resources
that list hundreds of quality, free scripts available for download.

One note about the content itself, it needs to not only be of high quality
( there is a lot of competition out there! ) but it needs to be constantly
updated. If not daily, weekly updates are a must so that repeat visitors
feel as if there is a reason to return. Repeat visitors are a very big key
to continual growth. This makes a very good


Six Years Of Change
<em>Day to Day</em> premiered on NPR on July 28, 2003. As you can imagine, quite a few things have changed since then, including our military presence in Iraq, housing prices, gas prices ... and the list goes on.

Behind The Scenes At 'Day To Day'
There's a lot of behind-the-scenes stuff that goes into making a daily radio program. A lot of it is not pretty, but sometimes it's pretty funny. Senior producer Steve Proffitt put together a little mash-up that reveals a lot of things we do that listeners don't get to hear.


argument to use a programmable
solution to manage your content, as the scripts allow you to update content
more effectively than you can manually.

They Get Noticed

Nothing else really matters if nobody ever sees your site. Thankfully if
you have a site with a good interface and good, timely, content you can
build an audience for it.

Unless you are a Big Corporation with thousands to spend on advertising, the
first step is to get your site listed in the largest search engines and
directories. This sounds simple, but doing it correctly takes quite a bit
of info and time. First of all, you have to know the difference between a
search engine and a directory.

A search engine has a database of web pages - a user visits it, asks it a
question and it returns relative web pages. AltaVista is an example.
A directory is a categorized collection of web sites - a user visits and
chooses a category they are interested in and "drills down" to find what
they are looking for. Yahoo! is the best known directory.

Many search sites blend the line between search engines and directories, but
when promoting a site, you need to treat them a little differently. With
search engines, you don't stop with your index page. Make sure every single
page of your web site gets indexed by all the large search engines. With
directories the most important thing is to make sure your site is listed in
the correct category.

We believe that the most important place to be listed is in Yahoo! Next we
suggest getting all your pages listed in the Inktomi database that handles
the spill over search results for Yahoo! and also powers HotBot, Direct Hit,
Canada, Anzwers, and others. Finally we suggest getting all pages listed in
The Open Directory Project, AltaVista, Infoseek, Lycos, Excite in that order
and then concentrating on the smaller search engines.

While these tips will not by themselves guarantee you a successful web site,
they will point you in the right direction. Take an hour and surf the web
checking out web sites that work - do they employ these three principals?
Does your web site?

About the Author

James T Kendall is the Chairman and CEO of eWeb-Corp. He puts these
promotional principles into practice for TurboPromo -
http://www.turbopromo.com