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Aspiring_webmasters_want_to_know_What_makes_a_website_grow
| Aspiring webmasters want to know, What makes a website grow?
It appears that most webmasters have come from the world of
advertising. Their website content emphasizes "marketing and
promotion". Just to prove my point, do a Google search on
"marketing promotion". As I write, Google comes up with "about
5,910,000" entries. Gosh imagine the good fortune of a listing
on page one! Of course, the number of entries for "marketing
promotion" gets shadowed by "sex" which provides you with "about
192,000,000". It's not money and sex; it's sex and money.
Prominent webmasters like Jim Daniels, Cory Rudll,and Kevin
Bidwell(one of my favorites) et.al teach you Internet success
strategies. Of course, they all started way back in '96 (that's
1996) or so when teaching such concepts made them successful
because aspiring webmasters wanted the information. Someone
asked me recently if Cory Rudll's two volume manual collects
dust on my desk. Chagrined, I acknowledge, "sitting just to the
right of my keyboard" (been there for two years). Then I think
of all the other manuals, ebooks purchased to vault my Internet
marketing skills.
What then gets you the income so many claim to make? You've read
the ads, "so and so made $55,000 in one month" and this was
their slowest month. Or, affiliate maven makes $463,000 a year
marketing affiliate programs. Each of these testimonials appear
attached to some alluring ebook which you must have to succeed.
Well, hold off. Maybe you just don't need to enter that credit
card number.
Here are 5 considerations to ponder before thinking about income
from your website.
Purpose: Never gave much credence to business plans; however,
you can't get from my house to Boston without a map. Whether you
write it down (which is best) or create pictures in your mind,
there must be a map. A strategy which defines what steps you
take. Strategies begin with brainstorming. Sit down, put a blank
paper on your desk, grasp your pen, and write. Write anything
that comes to mind relevant to your purpose. Write the not so
relevant ideas too; who knows they might turn out to be the most
important expression of your brainstorming. A number of routes
will get you to Boston from my house: some direct and boring,
some scenic and slow. Who cares what way you get there. Herman
Drost's article, http://www.echievements.com/articles/2507, "8
Steps to Creating a Simple Business Plan...." provides a "how
to" outline.
Persistence: No matter what the hype reads, this takes
persistence. Perhaps the only emotion that separates the
successful from the no so successful comes down to persistence.
Calvin Coolidge's (1872 - 1933) viewpoint may be worth
memorizing. "Nothing in the world can take the place of
Persistence. Talent will not; nothing is more common than
unsuccessful men with talent. Genius will not; unrewarded genius
is almost a proverb. Education will not; the world is full of
educated derelicts. Persistence and determination alone are
omnipotent. The slogan 'Press On' has solved and always will
solve the problems of the human race. Kevin Sinclair's article,
http://www.echievements.com/articles/2508, "Persistence - The
Magic Key To Success" inspires you to continue. Also, if you've
never read Russell Conwell's "Acres of Diamonds", it's a classic
worth reading.
Preparation: "There are no secrets to success. It is the result
of preparation, hard work, and learning from failure," says
Colin Powell. Well, historians will assess the current
geopolitical "learning from failure". However, every endeavor
requires preparation. Ever watch a chef work? Every summer I
work a weekend at a camp which serves 250 men seven meals.
Doesn't sound like much until I observed the chef arrives to
work at 3AM. I would get there at 4:15AM in order to dice, chop,
stir, and pour in preparation for the next meal. When meals get
served, few understand the amount of "prep work" that preceded
the meal. No one sees you doing it; it just has to be done. Judy
Collins provides clear guidelines on "Ten Steps To Prepare
Yourself for Online Marketing"
http://www.echievements.com/articles/2509.
Probabilities: As this article is written, the banter of
presidential poll interpretation continues. Everyone has an
opinion, and every pole a changing nuance. However, reading
polls provides some lessons on reading the probabilities of
website traffic. Most of us read the primary poll results rather
than referring to the "internal tracking polls". Same may hold
true when reading website traffic: we look at the number of
visits without reading the "internal tracking". Travis Reeder
provides detailed explanations and reasons for digging deeper
into the numbers in his article,
http://entrepreneurs.about.com/cs/marketing/a/visitortracking.htm
"How (and Why) to Read Your Web Statistics and Analytics" If
you do not track visitors, I recommend
http://awstats.sourceforge.net/ AWstats. "AWStats is a free
powerful and featureful (sic) tool that generates advanced web,
ftp or mail server statistics, graphically." "A reasonable
probability is the only certainty," writes E.W. Howe. So what
probabilities do you have for succeeding and how do you measure
them?
Personality: Ever converse with someone knowing that person was
not "there"? Many websites give the same impression. What does
this webmaster think? What matters to them? What message do they
want conveyed? One source of information for news and other
resources is Yahoo. Yahoo allows you to personalize your page
using my.yahoo.com. I think it takes more effort to insert your
personality into your work, to evidence your opinions and world
view on a website. Every website page represents you implicitly
or explicitly. What matters to you should be evident on your
website, and your website should represent your values. Little
seems to be written about this subject. Terri Seymour's article,
http://www.echievements.com/articles/1296 "The Power of
Personality" provides some further insights. Bob Baker's book,
Poor Richard's Branding Yourself Online provides substantive
help. Oscar Wilde's observation that "Most people are other
people. Their thoughts are someone else's opinions, their lives
a mimicry, their passions a quotation" deserves a webmaster's
attention.
As with all enterprise, Internet endeavors involve you with
something that does not happen overnight. As with all worthy
efforts, it requires a purpose clearly defined, a persistence
resolutely affirmed, and a daily preparation involving your
complete personality. You must remain passionately focused on
the belief that you add value to this incredible enterprise
known as the Internet.
About the author:
Ray Randall is a registered investment advisor with Ethos
Advisory Services, http://www.ethosadvisory.com and coordinates
Echievements . Ray holds a Masters
Degree from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. You may email
him or call (877-895-3756).
Ray has used the products of this recommended company for 30
years.
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