Vol 8 #19

Paradigm Web Design Home Web Sm@rts header

Welcome! to all new subscribers this week. I hope you enjoy this publication and find it an integral part of your weekly reading!

This E-zine may have been forwarded to you by a friend or colleague.
If you would like to subscribe, please point your browser to paradigmwebdesign.net/subscribe.html

In This Issue

Please visit our sponsors. They offer some great products and services and they keep this publication coming to you for free.

Imagine your ad above! For rates click HERE

My 2¢ Worth


 always suspected life was just big joke. Now I'm sure of it. It says here that the average person laughs 15-20 times per day.

hy would you laugh, unless something was funny? So I guess that proves my point.

ctually I don't know if I or anybody I've ever known has laughed 15 or more times per day. I've never counted.

ut I can say that I think of myself as a happy person. There's not much that gets me down in the dumps and I quit having bad days a long time ago.

here is no such thing as a bad days anymore. Bad moments within some days... Yes. Nothing is ever as perfect as we might wish it to be.

t any rate, if you haven't laughed today, go ahead and do so now. You don't want to prove that statistic wrong, do you?

ad box #1

Want a money-making website without all the work? Just read the sales stats from one site last quarter...

  • 24 Affiliate checks totaling $2,047.20 in commissions.
  • 25 direct sales for $3,725.00 more in profit.
  • 240 new sub-affiliates, and multiplying DAILY.

You can get a pre-designed site just like the one generating those stats, if you act quickly...

Click Now!

Imagine your ad above! For rates click HERE

Feature Article

Beyond the SEM Bells and Whistles


by: Rohit Bhargava
Ogilvy Public Relations

There’s a lot more to search engine marketing than examining the pros and cons of all the hot new Google AdWords services.

True, that’s often the most fun and interesting part, which explains why that’s what you read about if you follow online marketing news and blogs. But just as every trial lawyer has a support team of associates and paralegals burning the midnight oil, every successful SEM campaign must a team of experienced production specialists and coordinators that make it happen.

Theoretically, this should be the easy part.Usually, one finds that understanding something is difficult, but once they reach understanding, implementing is easy.In SEM, there’s a bizarre reversal of the norm.Due to the proliferation of seminars, speeches, and articles, not to mention the barrage of sales calls from SEM agencies, many marketers understand the most high-level, advanced segmentation and cross-channel integration tactics.However, when it comes to implementing these tactics, most of these same marketers fall short.

When it comes to implementation, agencies have a huge advantage over in-house marketers.An agency has probably implemented hundreds of SEM campaigns.An in-house marketer has maybe implemented five or six, and that’s a high estimate.An agency will have the infrastructure to implement new initiatives quickly and efficiently. Lacking that infrastructure, an in-house marketer will have to implement it himself, and juggle it with his other marketing channels.

ad box #2

Create 100 Killer Headlines in 17 Seconds — Guaranteed!

Amazing software lets you answer 4 simple questions and push 1 button to get 100 top notch headlines in 17 seconds or less. We guarantee increased ad response. Check this out:

Click Here!

Imagine your ad above! For rates click HERE

Article continues.

For example, suppose two competing marketers discover, at the same time, that there are certain regions in the country that convert better on a certain group of keywords.To capitalize on this, both marketers decide to create three hundred new, geo-targeted AdWords campaigns, each one tailored to those specific DMAs.One marketer manages his SEM in house, and the other outsources his to an agency.The in-house marketer may take months to get this done, but the agency should be able to get it done within a week.

By the time the in-house marketer has implemented his geo-targeted campaign, the outsourcer has already optimized his bids and his copy.His ads have a better quality score because of his more extensive click history, and the in-house marketer faces a daunting uphill battle.

Not only that, but in the meantime, Google has come up with some additional features of AdWords.The outsourcer’s agency has been busy incorporating those new features into their API.Once that’s done, the outsourcer will have the same advantage over the in-house marketer.He will be optimized faster, and ready for the next feature while the in-house marketer is still busy segmenting his audience by geography.

Over time, the outsourcer has, quite literally, crushed the in-house marketer.He has beaten him to the punch on every initiative, and gobbled up the market share in their vertical.The in-house marketer has two choices, he can either throw his hands up and accept defeat, or he can ramp up his spending and hire an external agency to compete with the outsourcer.

Do you have an article for Web Sm@rts?
Send to


Placing your article in Web Sm@rts is a great way to gain exposure for you and/or your business!
Each article is published with your name and web site, plus a short 'resource box' at the end of the article.

Article continues.

This is why you see so many marketers complaining about how difficult search is.They often groan about their despair in the blogosphere, complaining that search is too difficult, or it didn’t work for them, or click-fraud rates are too high.What really happened is not that search doesn’t work, it’s that they didn’t know how to use it properly.It isn’t because it’s hard to understand all of Google’s new bells and whistles, it’s because it’s hard to act on that understanding.All too often, marketers make the penny wise but pound foolish decision to keep search in-house rather than hire a reputable agency and pay its fee.

In the end, they often find that there’s a high price to pay for that decision.The engines themselves are partially to blame for this.They often tout how simple and user-friendly their interfaces are.Another factor that brought about this disastrous state has been the proliferation of educational materials about search.All of these materials explain how search works.

Since many marketers understand search, they foolishly assume they can do it.Plus the very idea of cost-per-click seems low risk to advertisers.After all, they only pay when a user visits their site, so why not give Google money to drive that traffic?There’s nothing to lose.

The reality is there is something to lose by doing search halfheartedly: market share.In-house marketers will lose it to those competitors who were smart enough to realize that they needed to do more than understand search, they needed to pay someone who had the infrastructure and experience to do it right.

**************

Rohit Bhargava is the Vice President for Interactive Marketing with Ogilvy Public Relations Worldwide.

**************

Rate This Article

As part of our ongoing commitment to provide quality content, we
would like you to take a moment to rate this article on a five point scale.
Not useful 1.   2.   3.    4.   5. Very useful
Too short 1.   2.   3.    4.   5. Too long
Additional comments:


ad box #3

ATTN: Webmasters

The Most Important Book Ever Written about staying out of trouble with your Internet business. Bulletproof Your Website In 60 Minutes Or Less. Fully licensed forms included! Authored by Shawn Casey, J.D. — one of the web’s most successful businessmen.

Click here

Imagine your ad above! For rates click HERE

This weeks Tip

Displaying HTML Code

At times you may want to display some HTML code on your page. Maybe you have a remote image or logo that you would like others to show on their sites. The best way to display code in HTML format is to use a <textarea> tag.

To display HTML code for copying and pasting, simply place the code inside your textarea tag. Like so:

<form method="post" action="null">
<textarea name="text" cols="50" rows="3" wrap="virtual">
Your HTML code here.
</textarea>
</form>

Note the "wrap" attribute, this causes the text inside the box to wrap and not flow along one line.

Customize the fields in red to make the textarea box whatever size you wish it to be.

ad box #4

Tips for Today's Woman

Recipes, fundraising tips and opportunities, child safety, tips on health and beauty, business opportunities, shopping and finance, home and family, food storage tips, women's devotional.

www.todaysmodernwoman.com/

Imagine your ad above! For rates click HERE

Second Article

Building an Image with a Logo


by: Sharon Housley
FeedForAll

bsite design can be elusive to even creative individuals. Sadly some webmasters do not realize their incompetence and they post websites that have grainy graphics and turgid colors. If you are one of these webmasters and have seen the error of your ways, consider this. Your website is a sales tool. A professional layout and design can significantly increase sales and conversion rates, gaining you customers. Businesses can greatly benefit from a professional and unforgettable logo that sets them apart from their competition. Logos are not just fancy graphics that adorn websites or letterhead, logos are a representation of a businesses' philosophy. Logos are a critical component of brand development.

Many webmasters do not realize that all images on the web are copy written and it is in many cases illegal to use an image that you find on the web without properly licensing it. Fortunately, for the graphically challenged websmasters there are a whole host of resources available to assist with web and graphic design. There are logo websites where you can purchase a single logo for a fixed fee, or subscription websites that allow you to purchase a subscription and download multiple logos. The logo is often the starting point for web design. Many webmasters use the companies logo to develop the website, the rest of the design evolves around the logo.

Custom logo design can cost from $ 100 to over $ 1000 depending on the logos complexity and the number of revisions required. As a result, buying a stock logo can offers substantial savings, for a small business starting out.

Fortunately for graphically challenged webmasters there are a number of websites through which webmasters can purchase a logo:

Logo Search
On Logo Search, website visitors can navigate through the logos using categories. The Logo Search website also has a search function allowing visitors to use keywords to locate specific color logos or logo styles. Visitors can purchase a single logo or they can purchase a subscription allowing them to download an unlimited number of logos for a specified length of time. Each download contains the image in a variety of format allowing webmasters flexibility. Webmasters can subscribe to an RSS feed so they are notified when new logos are posted and available for download. http://www.logo-search.com

LogoStick
Logo Stick is a web based tool that allows webmasters to use logo templates and design software, to create custom individualized logos. After the logo is completed it can be downloaded from the website. The online logo design software lets website visitors select from a variety of symbols, fonts and colors, so that webmasters can create a unique look. Unfortunately if your issue is a lack of creative talent, this solution may not be a good one. http://www.logostick.com

LogoMaid
LogoMaid contains a selection of more than 3300 unique and non-unique logos. Logos are sold individually and vary in price from $ 25.00 for a non-unique logo to $ 200 for a unique logo. Subscriptions to the LogoMaid website are not available. http://www.logomaid.com/home.php

Check the Rules!
If you purchase a logo be sure that you completely read the licensing agreement. Some agreements may restrict resale of the logo and you want to be aware of that if you are a webmaster reselling your services.

Image matters by using an eye catching logo you will retain your website visitor's interest and instill confidence that you are a professional organization.

**************

Sharon Housley manages marketing for FeedForAll software for creating, editing, publishing RSS feeds and podcasts. In addition Sharon manages marketing for RecordForAll audio recording and editing software.

**************

Download of the Week

XNView is a freeware graphics editor that supports 400 file formats!

With XNView you can resize images, crop images, adjust brightness/contrast, apply filters, create thumbnails, batch-convert and more!

Download XNView


Web Sm@rts is a publication of Paradigm Web Design.
All rights reserved.   ©2007