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Showing posts with label social networking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label social networking. Show all posts

Friday, December 17, 2010

Below you will find frequently asked questions and answers about web design and Internet marketing.

For more information please visit NJ Computer Doctors online at: http://www.computerdoctorswebsitedesign.com/

How much do your services cost?
The cost of our products and services vary greatly and depend on several factors; the size and scope of the project, the length of time necessary to complete the project and any additional expenses. We will give you a complete estimate before starting your site.

How long will it take to build my website?
We can usually deliver most website design jobs in 15 - 30 days depending on the number of pages. Smaller jobs such as updates or banner ad designs can be delivered within 24-48 hours.

How can I improve my ranking in the Search Engines and Directories?
The best way to improve your ranking is by incorporating good design with high quality and unique content into your pages. People who visit your website are looking for information and the best sites are those with the best information. If you have good text and tell a compelling story, you will rank higher. Another important factor to good rankings is the number of high quality, topic related websites that link to your website.

What are your payment terms?
We require a ½ down payment prior to beginning any project.

What is a domain name?
A domain name is your web address such as www.YourCompanyName.com.

What is web hosting?
Web hosting is a monthly fee that you pay to have your site accessible on the Internet.

How many pages will I need?
Every business has different needs. We will determine how many pages you need after learning more about your company and your goals. We have clients with sites consisting of a single page and others whose sites have over 100 pages.

Will everyone see my websites design the same?
Users will see some things differently depending on their browser and screen resolution settings. We design sites with that in mind and preview them on different machines along with several browser types (Internet Explorer, Firefox & Google Chrome) and resolution settings before publishing a website.

Who actually owns my website?
When we register your domain, the person you designate will be listed as the registrant administrative and billing contact. You are the owner of your website. When you hire Operation Web to build your website, you own the site when it is done.

Can I maintain my website myself?
Most sites need regular maintenance to check for broken links, to make sure that the code is keeping up with new technology and browsers, to update products and services or other content or feature updates. NJ Computer Doctors can maintain your site for you. We also offer a custom content management system that lets you do your own updates to your website with an easy editor that is as easy to use as Microsoft Word. You can add photos and change text with bold fonts, etc.

Why can't I find my website in the search engines?
Ninety percent of your search engine traffic is going to come from the following search engines and indexes: Google, Yahoo and Bing. Your website may take several weeks or even months to show up in the main search engines if you don't take the steps needed to get them listed. How fast your site is listed depends on each individual Search Engines' database update schedule. We use the latest techniques and strategies that will get your site indexed and listed much faster.

What is Search Engine Optimization?
Search Engine Optimization is the process of making your website Search Engine-friendly, helping you to rank higher in the results.

What is Pay-Per-Click
Pay-Per-Click programs such as Google's Adwords or Bing's Ad Center will rank your website's listing and then charge you each time a visitor clicks on your website's listing.

Monday, December 13, 2010

StumbleUpon Poised to Launch Pro Accounts Early Next Year

For more information please visit NJ Computer Doctors online at: http://www.computerdoctorswebsitedesign.com/

At the start of next year, businesses, publications and brands will be able to join StumbleUpon as “Pro” users, curating both their own content and suggested content in order to reach a larger audience.

The StumbleUpon team — founder & CEO Garrett Camp, Director of Communications Mike Mayzel and Senior Product Manager Jeff Eddings — dropped by Mashable() HQ today to chat a bit about the project, which is tentatively called “StumbleUpon Pro.”

The idea is that businesses and publications can sign up for the discovery service as something between a regular user and a paid content provider. A pro account would essentially work the same way a verified account on Twitter() does, giving the publication/company/business a level of legitimacy and authority that will entice regular StumbleUpon() denizens to follow it.

Naturally, accounts like this won’t contain merely a stream of a company’s own content — that would be boring — but that content will more effectively reach interested users given the likely boost in following. The team wasn’t exactly sure how the pro accounts would be denoted on the site — perhaps with a badge or some other indication.

Right now, it looks as though this service will be free, but businesses and publications can also pay to have their content featured more prominently using StumbleUpon’s existing ad platform.

According to Eddings, this move aims to answer one question: “Who are the people who are here to discover stuff, and who are the people who are here to get discovered?”

YouTube Tops 2010’s Most Buzzed-About Social Network List

For more information please visit NJ Computer Doctors online at: http://www.computerdoctorswebsitedesign.com/

YouTube has come out on top in a ranking of 2010’s most buzzed-about websites and social media services.

This year was the year of video- and photo-sharing; 2010 saw the rise — in volume and positive mentions — of YouTube and Flickr and the fall of some of the first social networking sites.

The Zeta 2010 Buzz Awards measures the mentions of 125 of the top social media sites to determine not just popularity but how people feel about those sites, too.

“We held a mirror up to the social media world and try to get an understanding of what people are saying about the various social networking sites,” said Al DiGuido, CEO of Zeta Interactive, a digital marketing agency in New York City.

People seem to be saying good things about YouTube() and Flickr(). The blogosphere spoke positively about YouTube 91% of the time and about Flickr 98% of the time. Those positive mentions, along with the sites’ volume of mentions, landed them in the top two spots on the list.

“Flickr was very, very strong in terms of volume ranking but even stronger in terms of tone. That’s the highest number we’ve ever seen in terms of positive ranking in this category,” DiGuido said.


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Craigslist, Friendster, MySpace Drop From the Top 10

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Some of the first sites for networking online have fallen from the most buzzed-about list. Craigslist(), which was ranked fifth in 2009, and Friendster() and MySpace(), at the ninth and tenth spots respectively last year, didn’t make this year’s cut.

“If you look year over year, sites that have had problems with security, like Craigslist, Friendster and Myspace, these sites have kind of all dropped off from 2009. It shows the rising stars in terms of social networking sites and those that are on the wane… in the number of people at least speaking about them,” DiGuido said. “If you’ve got issues with security and privacy, you’ll deal with it pretty directly with how people are talking about it. People want to feel their information being exchanged is secure. Big mistakes will be aired in the marketplace.”

Although Facebook() still made its way onto the list, security concerns dominated the buzz about the world’s largest social networking site. “Security,” as well as “information” and “safety,” were some of the words most often used in association with Facebook, which ranks sixth on the list.

Facebook’s mentions were just 68% positive.


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Groupon, StumbleUpon, Google Buzz Make the Cut

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Newcomers to the list include Groupon, StumbleUpon and Google Buzz().

It’s been said before that 2010 has also been the year of the daily deals, and Zeta’s data seems to support that statement.

“Groupon’s coming on real strong,” DiGuido said. “We’ve been watching a lot of different verticals, brands, commercials in the last couple years, and this year is the year that deals — sites focused on deals, value, saving money — are going incredibly strong. Groupon has totally captured the social networking world.”

Google Buzz() rounded out the list at the number-ten spot, but it had the second lowest tonal rating with just 68% positive.

Newbie StumbleUpon(), on the other hand, had a whopping 94% positive mentions. Words most often used in association with the site include “advice,” “recommend,” “web/site,” “new,” and “original.”

Here’s the complete list of this year’s top 10 most buzzed about sites. Were you surprised by any of the findings? What changes do you predict for 2011? Share your thoughts in the comments.

Saturday, December 4, 2010

Web 2.0 tools can foster growth in hard times

Zappos.com Inc. credits its novel Web 2.0-based sales philosophy for much of its significant sales growth -- and continuing profitability -- during the current hard times.
The online shoe and clothing store doesn't spend massive sums creating and implementing online or offline marketing and advertising campaigns, yet it still generates significant buzz among its current and potential customers.
How? Mostly through its heavy use of Twitter Inc.'s eponymous social network and, to a lesser extent, its use of tools from Web 2.0 providers like Facebook Inc.
Of Zappos.com's 1,400 employees, 450 actively use Twitter to promote the company. In fact, CEO Tony Hsieh is the 20th most popular Twitterer, with more than 186,000 followers on the social network, according to Twitterholic.com.
Instead of sending online shoppers coupons or information about sales, executives and employees at Henderson, Nev.-based Zappos.com regularly tweet about what happens to them at the airport, the fact that they eat marshmallows in between phone calls and the state of the economy.
The goal is to respond to customer comments and form personal connections with their Twitter followers, as well as with friends on Facebook, where employees post blogs and videos.
The tweets and posts are a way to give customers and other curious social network members a way to get a glimpse at the inside workings of the company.
"Today, consumers have access to so much information," said Aaron Magness, director of business development at Zappos.com. "You can buy the same shirts at Zappos as at somewhere else. The product almost becomes less important; it becomes about the business."
The privately held retailer claimed more than $1 billion in sales last year, up from $840 million in 2007. In blog posts, Hsieh said the company did cut 8% of its workforce late last year because of the declining economy, but it continues to be profitable nonetheless.
Zappos.com isn't alone in its use of social networks. Companies large and small are increasingly investigating how to best use Web 2.0 tools from the likes of Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and YouTube. Analysts note that there's increasing pressure from customers and employees on companies to use social networks.
Potential Risks
Analysts say that, as in the case of Zappos.com, using Web 2.0 tools to boost visibility can be a good thing, but the strategy can also pose risks, especially in a time of layoffs, benefit cutbacks and salary reductions.
For example, an employee, whether she's a CEO or a researcher, could create an online maelstrom with an unintentional slip of the keyboard. And readers of a company's online posts, bolstered by anonymity, could respond to them in a particularly vicious manner.
"It's two-way communication, and you have to be able to take the heat that may come your way," said Dan Olds, an analyst at Gabriel Consulting Group Inc. in Beaverton, Ore. "It isn't for everyone. Some companies will have a hard time dealing with it, while others will thrive."
Olds said that any company using Web 2.0 tools will inevitably face strong, and potentially embarrassing, criticism. "No company is perfect, and some customers will complain about anything," he said. "That's why some companies are still cautious about engaging with social networks."
Olds also noted that it's important for businesses to find the right voice or tone for their social networking personas. For example, Dell Inc. uses sites like Twitter to blast out information about sales and coupons, while Zappos.com is all about letting customers get to know its employees, he said.
"You have to make sure that you're presenting the right image for your company and doing it in the right way," he said. "A whimsical and funny approach will work for Apple and many other companies, but not so well for, say, Dow Chemical. It takes a lot of thought and careful consideration."
Olds also suggested that companies establish a clear goal for their social networking strategies -- and he said they shouldn't expect users to automatically embrace them. "A bank that focuses on its interest-bearing checking accounts will be less interesting than a bank CEO who provides straight talk on the economy. The critical thing is to understand your goals and present an image consistent with your company," he said.
"I see this whole social networking phenomenon not as truly a purely technical phenomenon, but as a change in the values of the organization," said Soumitra Dutta, the Roland Berger Chaired Professor of Business and Technology at INSEAD, an international business school in Fontainebleau, France.
"CEOs are becoming more open to new ideas from employees and customers they haven't normally interacted with," Dutta said. "Traditionally, companies have looked at customer relationship management as a one-to-one issue. Today, we're seeing that customers talk to each other and not just directly to the company."
Thus, businesses must move in to try to actively manage their relationships with these communities and respond to positive and negative feedback, he added.
A growing number of businesses are creating such communities to bring together groups of people who all love the same thing, whether it's a certain pair of sneakers, a car model or a mainframe computer.
For example, just over a year ago, IBM created a Facebook page for people interested in news and information about its System z mainframe computer offerings. Launched in December 2007, the page now counts more than 700 friends. And, IBM notes, that's a lot of friends for a computer that isn't the newest or sexiest around today.
IBM spokesman Kevin Acocella acknowledged that the company's use of what many see as kids' technology to gather people interested in big-iron machines used by the Facebook generation's fathers and grandfathers is somewhat ironic.
IBM is looking to use the technology to get young people interested in mainframe technology by offering links to articles, comment strings, YouTube videos and the like. The Facebook page has become particularly important in this economy, since many IT professionals and students can't afford to go to conferences or seminars, Acocella added.
Despite its status as one of the earliest computer companies, IBM is no Johnny-come-lately to the social networking scene. IBMers have been blogging and collaborating with wikis for several years.
The company has even created a social networking site, dubbed The Greater IBM Connection, for IBM employees and alumni. The site, which was created about two years ago, attracted some 24,000 members in the first 14 months. Membership has since tripled to 73,000 in more than 110 countries, Acocella said.
Also, IBM has created a social media team to help its current employees learn how to use social networks, record and edit podcasts, and be successful bloggers.
"Over the years, we've learned that what the decision-makers cite as one of the most, if not the most, important driver of their perception of IBM is their personal interaction with IBMers," noted Acocella.
And while IBM requires its employees to follow Web 2.0 guidelines it has established -- such as banning the use of obscenities or slurs, or the posting of confidential company data or personal information about fellow employees -- others, like Zappos.com, give their employees free rein.
Want to find out more about Web 2.0 for business? SeeHow and why to launch a business presence on TwitterandBest Buy getting results from social network .
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For more information please visit NJ Computer Doctors Online at: http://www.njcomputerdoctors.com/