Home Wednesday, 10 March 2010
Main Menu
Home
Search
Contact Info & Site Disclaimer
Periodic Newsletter
The newsletter for this site is published periodically and no more than once a month. We respect your privacy and do not share, rent or sell any personal details to any third-party.

Subscribe now to be updated periodically!



Search This Site!
Popular
Interesting Articles
Why Dot-Coms Fail - a Webmaster's Perspective Print E-mail
Article Index
Why Dot-Coms Fail - a Webmaster's Perspective
Page 2
Page 3
Page 4
Why Dot-Coms Fail - a Webmaster's Perspective
-----------------------------------------------------

(c) Copyright 2002, Daniel Bazac

Everyday we hear that another company goes out of business.

When and why does a dot-com become a dot-bomb?

After checking few dozen defunct companies,
I think the main reasons for dot-coms failure are:

* Poor business plan. In the last years, a lot of investment
capital was spent on poorly planned companies that clearly
couldn't reach profitability.

* Poor company promotion. This applies both offline and
online. Two newspaper ads and word of mouth are not enough.

* Poor financial management.
Fancy offices, free food, does it ring a bell?

* Poor Human Resources management. With lots of cash in
their hands, many start-up companies hired too many people
or, even worse, hired unqualified staff. The hiring of friends
and relatives often returned no value on investments.

* Errors in the company's Web site. Sometimes hundreds
of errors could be found in one Web page.
Yes, those Web site builders should go back to school-
if they ever went to school for HTML at all.

I'll focus my comments on the last reason:

How Errors in the Web Site Can Affect the Company's Health
-------------------------------------------------------------------

It's clear that you can make money on the Web if you have
customers. You have customers if you have viewers-
"traffic" in the geek's language. And you get traffic if
your site is easy to find -- near the top -- in the
Search Engine Results Pages (SERPs).
That's not so easy to achieve.

First of all your site has to be indexed by the search tools:
Search Engines and Web Directories.

Although some Search Engines will eventually find your site
by themselves, most of the time this only happens if
somebody links to your site. In the case of a NEW site,
having existing links is almost impossible. Rather than wait
for links to be made, start a submission campaign.

A big no-no is submitting a Web site using submission
software. Using software of this type may be quick and
easy, but some Web Directories and Search Engines do
NOT accept automated submissions.

It's true that manual submission is a time consuming
process -- you'll have to read AND follow each
Search Engines' submission guidelines, to effectively
perform the submission – but it's a necessary step.


Please have a look at these related links :

No related links yet.


 
< Prev   Next >
Google
© WebmasterInfoVault.com.All Rights Reserved.