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A talk on Drug Addiction Rehabilitation

Drug addiction and Alcoholism are the dangerous situation if someone felt down against these. World’s largest population is addicted with drugs and Alcohol.  A person who individually talks on his experience on drugs [Heroin ]addiction]. I am submitting his conversation with me over here.

But before that its important to know the difference between Alcoholism and Alcohol abuse.

Alcoholism is an act of addiction in which a person never cares on its adverse effects on his body nevertheless into his social life i.e. signs of physical addiction to alcohol and continues to drink, despite problems with physical health, mental health, and social, family, or job responsibilities.

While Alcohol abuse is when your drinking leads to problems such as personal, social etc, but not physical addiction.

Now the question arises what are the root causes of falling down with these? Well, as per my experience and discussion with many people, reading online is its a transverse effect of depression and anxiety. Drug addiction is a term for the processes of medical or psycho therapeutic treatment, for dependency on psychoactive substances such as alcohol, prescription drugs, and so-called street drugs such as cocaine, heroin etc. Many organization conducts drug rehab programs. Some of them are free while others are paid.

 

 
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Posted by on May 8, 2012 in Uncategorized

 

Know more on Credit Cards, Find Credit Card Types

A card issued by a financial company giving the holder an option to borrow funds, usually at point of sale. Credit cards charge interest and are primarily used for short-term financing. Interest usually begins one month after a purchase is made and borrowing limits are pre-set according to the individual’s credit rating.

Credit cards have higher interest rates (around 15-20% per year) than most consumer loans or lines of credit. Almost every store allows for payment of goods and services through credit cards. Because of their wide spread acceptance, credit cards are one of the most popular forms of payment for consumer goods and services in the U.S however in India,International Debit Cards are more popular as it’s hold by a large number of bankers. You can even find these related terms on a financial portal!!

FIND A CREDIT CARD

To be qualified for a credit card, one must only need to have a source of income. As it is an non-collateralize form of loan, it is important for credit card issuers to have some sense of security by only allowing customers with the financial capability to make use of their benefits. Please see the choices below and view the best credit card offers suited to your lifestyle and preference.

DentedEgo.com, LLC

444 S Cedros Ave Solana Beach, CA 92075
Solana Beach, CA
92075

 
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Posted by on November 17, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Lets Know What is Drift Marketing

I got an email from Craig at Pinnacle Cart about their new “Drift Marketing” feature in Pinnacle Cart 3.7.5. While I’m familiar with the concept, I have to admit the term drift marketing is a new one to me.

The concept is that if a customer gets part way through the checkout purchase and abandons, drift marketing allows you to target them in various ways to encourage them to complete the purchase. In the words of Pinnacle:

(Drift Marketing) Provides incentives to customers who abandon their checkout process at selected time intervals. This system is designed to remarket to customers who become distracted or leave your store with items in their cart. Set up as many campaigns as you want and get your customers to return to the store and complete their order.

This feature, if setup well, will almost certainly increase your conversion rate, putting money straight to your bottom line. There’s a few other nice features in the latest version as well, but this was the standout for me. Check out the website more on Drift Marketing via Pinnacle Cart

ETScareers

8141 Madrillon Court Vienna VA
Vienna, VA
22182

 
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Posted by on November 4, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

In depth look at Pinnacle Cart

An In Depth Look at Pinnacle Cart

//

Pinnacle Cart is a PHP shopping cart made by Desert Dog
Software in the USA. A while ago, I had a chance to have a good look at Pinnacle
Cart in version 3.30. Pinnacle Cart have released a few versions and I had
another look at their latest version, 3.6.0. Some of the new features in the
last few versions include:

  • One page checkout
  • Product zoom/magnify
  • Gift certificates
  • Layered navigation
  • Wish list
  • Plug-in system allowing developers to create plug-ins without affecting upgrades (a problem that plagues many competitive products)
  • New easier templating system
  • “Customers who bought “x” also bought these
    products”

Pinnacle provide a more
detailed list on their site
.

The overall focus of the product is on running the business.
The saying “run your shop, not your shopping cart” is very true, and Pinnacle
Cart make it easy to do this.

Initial Impressions

Logging into
the admin screen for the first time was a good experience. As a shop owner you
are going to be spending a lot of time here, and it’s nice to look clean. All
functions are clearly accessibly and labelled, and there is a nice summary
screen of month sales statistics, recent orders and recent users in your face.
I could see some of those functions become very addictive to see update.

Admininstration home page

The default skin on the public facing shopping cart is
functional and clean. While it won’t win any design awards (and a default skin
probably shouldn’t), it is well thought out. Updating the skin is impressively
easy to do as we’ll see later. The default settings as to which modules are
shown are sensible.

Setting up & Managing Products

Let’s put some stock in our shop. First thing we want to do
is create some categories. Creating categories & sub categories is very
straight forward & intuitive, and has nice touches such as when a category
is created it takes you to a screen with a list of the tasks you are likely to
want to do next. Attention to detail like this does make it nice to use, and
saves a lot of on going frustration when you are creating the 20th
category that day. By default, the categories are created as a tree view menu.

Creating a product is a nice experience. While there are a
large number of options for the categories, it’s set up so that the main
options (price, category, name, description, etc) are immediately accessible
while other less common options such as quantity discounts are easy to get to
but not right in your face. Sensible promotional features such as “Show
Product on Homepage” are easily accessible. While this is far from a
unique feature, it is sensibly laid out, easy to find and to understand.

A particularly impressive feature is the ability to manage
inventory at an attribute level. This is one of these features that tends to
frustrate people no end. Most shopping carts manage inventory at a product
level – you have an item, and you have a stock level. Most shopping carts also
allow attributes, e.g., you can define whether you want your jeans in blue or
green, large or small, etc. However, with most carts, there is only one lot of
inventory. You have 10 pairs of jeans in stock, but the shopping cart has no
awareness that you have 5 small and 5 large. This is one of those things that
non-techies often assume, as from a business perspective it seems obvious.
Technically it’s relatively challenging. Kudos to Pinnacle for including this.

Product
attributes have additional flexibility. For example you could easily create a
drop down box which allows the user to choose between red and green, where the
green option is $5 cheaper and only half as heavy as the red. It’s also
possible to automatically assign a particular attribute across an entire
category, a big time saver for some people.

You can turn on a product navigation feature. As well as the more normal
“click on this image to show full size”, the user can move their mouse over the
image and see a section magnified. Nice!

Image magnify function

There is also the ability to support digital products.
There’s more about advanced product features in the marketing tools section
below.

Payment, Shipping & Taxes

Out of the box, Pinnacle has a good range of payment
gateways. I enabled a few gateways I have accounts with, and integration
seemed to be very good & appropriately customized to suit each gateway.

The shipping supports a range of options. As well as having great support for
real time shipping calculations for UPS, USPS, FedEx and Canada post, it allows
you to create custom shipping options. These can be based on price, weight,
quantity, flat rate, or pretty much any combination of the above. I wanted to
be able to create flat rate shipping with the customer able to choose a
“regular” or “express” price, and had it up and running in
under a minute.

Taxes allows you to define taxes per country, or for the
USA, per state. There didn’t appear to be a way to include taxes into the item
cost, which is the practice in most countries outside of the USA, so some of
those visitors who are accustomed to tax being included might get a shock at
the checkout.

Layered navigation

There is a new feature called layered navigation. This
allows you to define price points that users can limit their searches by. For
example, a user could look at a category, and have the option to restrict the display
to items at $0 – $19.99, $20 – $49.99 or $50 – $100.

Layered navigation

Checking Out

An important
part of a shopping cart is the check out process. Some studies have shown that
out of people who want to buy, and for who money is no object can have a
70% failure rate simply because they can’t work out how to buy.

Pinnacle Cart has two options. One is a fairly conventional multi-step
checkout. The exact steps will vary depending on shipping methods and payment
gateways selected, but will be similar for most combinations. I would like to
see a clear indication of what steps are remaining. If this is step 2 of 4,
tell the customer that, don’t keep them guessing how much longer they have. The
ability to be able to checkout without registering is a great feature as well.

The other checkout option, at the choice of the
administrator, is their new “one page checkout” which is exactly what the name
says. It does use some AJAX techniques to keep things moving along, but it
basically is as simple as it sounds – the checkout really is one page. I’d love
to know the experiences of people using the standard checkout who then switched
to one page checkout, and how it impacted their conversions, but I’d suspect at
worst it would be break even, and may well improve conversions.

Skinning

Pinnacle Cart
has an impressive collection of tools to edit the skin without having to dive
into code. If you want to simply change the colors of the default skin, there
are several color combinations built in. Changing these default colors is easy
and requires no coding. As an example of the flexibility, I was looking at the
product page thinking I didn’t especially like the layout and how I would have
to customize it. Then I thought to check the backend, and found an option to
choose between several product page layouts, one of which was almost exactly
what I wanted. What a joy!

Default skin

In direct contrast to most software out there, Pinnacle Cart
actively avoids getting you to make HTML templates, CSS, and so on to make
skins. Almost everything is available via the admin interface. While it might
not be infinitely flexible, it’s pretty good. For the pragmatic shop owner,
there’s no reason they couldn’t have a good looking shop up and running in a
short amount of time with some minimal input from a skilled graphic designer
(for color schemes, images, etc). The fussy purist will probably still need to
dive into some code (which can be done). Their demo store shows there is a fair
degree of flexibility.

Marketing Tools

As you would expect for a cart whose focus is marketers,
Pinnacle Cart has a wide range of marketing tools.

Product Features

There are some marketing tools which are product centric. I
was impressed with the “product promotions” feature. It allows you
very simply to set up rules such as “if a customer buys 2 or more of
product X, they get product Y for free”. There is also very flexible
quantity discount rules & product recommendations. The product
recommendations are interesting as they operate on groups of products. You associate
a few products you wish to recommend to a group, and then associate the group
to the product. This is great if you want to promote the same products in
several locations, but a slight nuisance if you want to choose different cross
sell products for each product.

Discounts

There is a feature to create a promotional code. This allows you to create rules such as ”when a customer enters this code, they get $5 off the order if it’s over
$20 and before December 24th”. There doesn’t seem to be an ability to limit the code to a certain numbers of uses, e.g., only available for the first 100 customers. Other features such as percentage off, free shipping offers, etc, would have been nice.

There’s also a report allowing you to see which promo codes
have been used, the order size, discounts, etc. I’d love to see a way of
telling how many were new customers, but that’s being a little fussy.

There is also a sale mode which allows you to set a sale
across all products.

Emails

Pinnacle Cart distinguishes between two types of email
communications. One is a “newsletter” and the other is a
“product update”. Customers can choose to sign up to either one or
both of them. The newsletter is pretty much what you’d expect – simply a
newsletter containing freeform HTML (or text).

The product update is a nice feature I haven’t seen before.
It allows you to send an email containing all products updated in a particular
date range (eg. the last month). For people with a very passionate customer
base this is a great way to keep them in touch with the latest products.

There’s a good range of email management tools – import
subscribers, export subscribers, styles, etc. It should suit the needs of any
small business and many medium businesses well.

Search Engines

For many online shops, search engines are their life blood. Good search engine support is critical to the success of many online shops. While the default URLs of Pinnacle aren’t very search engine friendly, it can easily be switched into friendly mode which is have “nice” looking URLs such as:

http://yourshop.com/review/catalog/Mac-2-1.html

The support for meta data and sensible title tags (which most search engines
love) was reasonably good. There was also nice touches such as product names on their pages appearing in <h1> tags (which some search engines see as a
vote for that text being more important). These small things add up and can
bump you up a place or two in Google.

Other Marketing Tools

Pinnacle cart will create files for you in an appropriate
format for Froogle or Altura. It also supports a 3rd party affiliates program.
However, there are no built in affiliates features.

Reporting

I confess: I’m a reporting addict. I spend hours pouring
over reports, I think there’s gold (almost literally in the case of e-commerce)
in getting & acting on quality reports. I’ll let Pinnacle Cart speak for
itself on the reports it has:

  • Top Viewed Products – List the top viewed products.
  • Top Viewed Categories – List the top viewed categories.
  • Orders by Products – Lists the top products purchased.
    Includes number of items sold and subtotal amounts for each product
  • Users Activity Report – Lists over number of pages viewed
    by registered users.
  • Top Referring Sites – Lists the top refering URLs to the
    site
  • Sales by Customer – This report shows overall purchase
    statistics by customer.
  • Payment Types – Shows purchase statistics by payment type.
  • Consolidated Orders By Date – This report shows overall
    statistics by dates from selected period. It includes subtotal, tax, shipping,
    discount, and total amounts for each day.
  • Individual Orders By Date – This report shows overall
    statistics by completed orders with received payment. It includes
    subtotal, tax, shipping, discount, and total amounts for orders.
  • Promo Codes Usage
  • Total Tax

All reports are available by any date range, and are as
advertised. Combined with a decent web analytics package (or the free Google Analytics) it should be
enough to keep the most reports addicts happy.

Extensibility

There is a plug-in architecture, it includes a “product feed” plug-in pre-installed which allows you to import product information from selected wholesalers or drop shippers. One nice feature is an included Google sitemap generator. It would be nice to see this dynamically generated so that you didn’t need to redo the sitemap every time you added products.

Support

The software comes with an extensive manual. The manual is
well written, but like most software manuals focuses on each individual
feature. This is more a critique of the software industry in general rather
than Pinnacle Cart, but I’d like to see more documentation focused on how
to do things. Feature based documentation generally assumes you know what
feature to use to accomplish a particular task, you just aren’t sure how that
feature works. However, as far as feature based help goes, it’s thorough and
clear.

In addition to the manual, there is free 30 day phone and 12 months email support, as well as a support ticketing system and a knowledge base with
a few dozen items in it. There is a support forum which seems to be
fairly active and developing a great community. I did encounter several minor
bugs during my tests, but none were show stoppers. There are also options for
upgraded paid support.

Other Features

There are many feature I haven’t touched on. There is a database management page, order management features and a little touch I really liked, a function which allows you to export your orders to Quick Books format for record keeping. Touches like this make life simpler for the small business person.

There is also a very simple content management function which allows you to create an unlimited number of pages. Optionally, those pages can be automatically be linked to in the header and/or footer – great for privacy policies, etc.

Conclusion

Pinnacle Cart is definitely has a great balance between
power and ease of use. While I wouldn’t ask my mother to set up an online shop
using this software, I think any reasonably computer proficient non-programmer
could set up a shop without too many problems. There’s a real attention to
detail in a lot of the features which really impressed me. There are a few
features missing (such as product reviews), but most major functions are there.
While it’s not the cheapest shopping cart software on the market, I would be
pretty confident you could set this software up faster than most other packages
available, and using some of its more advanced marketing features a competent
marketer could produce higher sales. I didn’t get a chance to dive deep into the
code to see how customizable it is, but they do have a good developer network in
place to do custom upgrades if required. Overall, a great product to get your
online business off to a good start.

Please note: a detailed review like this takes
substantial amounts of time. As a result, the cost of time was partially offset
by a payment from the makers of Pinnacle. At no time did they put any pressure
on me, there was no incentives of future work or other kick backs, and payment
was received before they saw the review. They thoroughly respect and value the
independent nature of this site.

Article courtesy of Shopping Cart Reviews.

 
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Posted by on May 24, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Pinnacle cart, a leading Ecommerce option!!!

Pinnacle Cart software was developed by a group of Internet entrepreneurs with over 20 years combined experience in the Internet industry. The Partners bring their expertise in marketing and business development together to provide the online business owner an entry to Internet sales that gives them the chance to capture the online market effectively without becoming experts in the field of Internet web site development, online marketing and efficient web delivery.

The shopping cart software specializes in E-marketing solutions to enable businesses to reach into the global Internet audience to effectively and efficiently reach new customers.

Their People
Pinnacle Cart employs a group of highly skilled, experienced employees and consultants that can help your business get to the web in a cost-effective manner. We look at customer service as a badge of honor and allow customers to reach us and get questions answered in many different ways from live chat to phone calls. A significant factor in our overall sales is the quality of the customer support we provide.

Pinnacle Cart is SEO friendly because—>

  • SEO friendly URL’s
  • Custom URL’s (for sites that are already indexed)
  • SEO friendly hyperlinks
  • Site maps
  • Custom alt image tag
  • Compliant header tags
  • Complete meta tag control on product, categories, brands, home and additional pages
  • Product-based keywords
  • Strict CSS/XHTML/tableless coding
  • WC3 compliant pages
  • Robots.txt file

Their Clients
Pinnacle Cart dedicated to partnering with their clients and third party developers to understand their needs, providing powerful marketing tools that let them do what they do best, sell. Many satisfied online businesses trust and depend on the integrity of the Pinnacle Cart platform as well as Their customer service to deliver the business solutions they need to move their online activity forward with confidence. It does not matter if you are just beginning to devise your e-business strategy or already have an established model, they can help you reach your goals.

E-commerce Solutions
At Pinnacle Cart, they have designed an easy to setup and use, customized PHP online shopping cart solution to meet your needs and budget. Their turnkey e-commerce solution is geared for the marketing-minded online business owner and will carry your business into future online success

 
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Posted by on April 4, 2011 in Uncategorized

 

Social Media is not an Event, Its a Process

Hi Friends…Social Media Marketing has taken the biggest part on the web and you could realize that in every aspect, measures and collective gain for a corporate brand. Yes, its been long ago when a targeted group was followed by a bunch of newspaper or radio telecasts. Now the scenario has been completely changed as you could analyze the competitive market and the niche in which you are trying to find out some interests may be in your business or popularity.

Its very easy for a celebrity to be in picture and coverage but for your actual reputation, you need to perform. The performance is measured by todays world with classical as well as current marketing P’s.  My apology if I am going to confuse you but I am pretty sure about the marketing terminology as everyone is not master in business but every one can be proficient enough in identifying the business logic and their needs.

I would put a dot and will start with a new business making theme that has been popular among the social media lovers. Yes, I am talking about the Social Media Marketing Machine which offers really appreciated great features.

I would like to ask you, just go here and register yourself to learn the explored gist of Internet Marketing via Social Medias along with structured bonuses.

Many Thanks

 
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Posted by on December 9, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

Top high PR Inbound Article Directories

Here you go:

URL
Pagerank
http://Prnewswire.com
7
http://Allbusiness.com
7
http://Prweb.com
7
http://Ryze.com
7
http://www.Bpubs.com
7
http://www.hooverwebdesign.com/
7
http://www.marketwire.com/
7
http://www.sitepoint.com/
7
http://Advisor.com
6
http://contentdig.com/
6
http://ezinearticles.com/
6
http://isnare.com/
6
http://Sbinformation.about.com
6
http://thewhir.com/
6
http://www.goarticles.com/
6
http://www.isnare.com/
6
http://www.prlog.org/
6
http://www.PromotionWorld.com
6
http://resources.powweb.com/
6
http://www.articlesbase.com/
6
http://www.pr.com/
6
http://www.24-7pressrelease.com/
6
http://news.thomasnet.com/submitpr.html
6
http://www.nanotech-now.com/submit-press.cgi
6
http://www.newswiretoday.com/
6
http://www.pr-inside.com/
6
http://www.articlebiz.com/
5
http://www.new-list.com/
5
http://Activeauthors.com
5
http://E-zinez.com
5
http://new-list.com/
5
http://Pressbox.co.uk
5
http://webdesign.ittoolbox.com/
5
http://Webreference.com
5
http://Weeno.com
5
http://www.1888pressrelease.com/
5
http://www.a1articles.com/
5
http://www.articlealley.com/
5
http://www.articlecity.com/
5
http://www.articledashboard.com/
5
http://www.Bharatbhasha.com
5
http://www.brint.com/write.html
5
http://www.Buzzle.com
5
http://www.Constant-Content.com
5
http://www.FreeSticky.com
5
http://www.PowerHomeBiz.com
5
http://www.prleap.com/
5
http://www.prolinkdirectory.com/
5
http://www.SearchWarp.com
5
http://www.Site-Reference.com
5
http://www.webproworld.com/
5
http://www.work911.com/
5
http://presszoom.com/
5
http://www.pressreleasepoint.com/
5
http://www.bignews.biz/
5
http://www.openpr.com/
5
http://bestezines.com/
4
http://Ezinefinder.com
4
http://free-press-release.com/
4
http://guidemegreen.com/
4
http://www.articleclick.com/
4
http://www.bestezines.com/
4
http://www.free-press-release.com/
4
http://Article-emporium.com
4
http://www.prfocus.com/
4
http://www.prurgent.com/
4
http://www.pressexposure.com/
4
http://www.pr9.net/
4
http://ecommwire.com/
4
http://express-press-release.net/
4
http://www.pressmethod.com/
4
http://www.i-newswire.com/
3
http://www.freepressindex.com/
3
http://www.pressabout.com/
3
 
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Posted by on November 30, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

Is It Wrong or An Opportunity Waiting to Happen?

I was chatting with a client recently about how hard it is sometimes to recover and move forward after something has gone wrong. Getting over the sensation of having been ‘wronged’ or of being the party who’s committed the ‘wrongful act’ is a process all by itself that, in business, can slow progress to a screeching halt while everyone tries to avoid the pointing fingers.  My client said something powerful: ‘people would rather admit things are imperfect than admit to being wrong’. In business, however, the political nature of participants who are competing for attention, recognition or limited pats on the back, is often to either assign or avoid blame.  The  result of either of these efforts is to ignore the more important focus which is the one from which all could gain: what didn’t work, how can it be avoided going forward, and what can we learn as a result?

In the meantime, real resolution to the problem is still waiting; slowed or avoided because no one wants to admit to being wrong. If you, the motivator-in-chief, can recognize that in imperfection is the opportunity to improve there may be a key to moving things along, avoid the need to accuse and speed improvements. Not so easy to do yet it sure beats the alternative poisoned environment.  While you’re wondering if this is how things are done at your place of business, consider these questions:

1. Is your business environment one in which people are rewarded for an  innovative attempt or only some recognizable success after the attempt? While the latter may have some immediate, quantifiable whooppee impact, the former will net you an employee who’ll keep trying to make things better for you and your business.

2. Is assigning blame for what went wrong more powerful than seeking process improvements? The former may puff up an ego while the latter may continue to build a business (and may puff multiple egos, if that’s meaningful for you.)

3. Do your employees compete with each other instead of other companies in your category of provider? While this might be useful in a strictly sales environment, in every other way it diminishes the greater growth and productivity that can come from shared resources and support.

4. Do you have a file of mis-steps taken by employees that you’ll dust off during the ‘someday-in-the-future’ annual review? If you’d like to learn just how much you might be missing on the power of well-designed performance reviews, just shoot me an email with ‘performance’ in the subject line.

I wonder which of these environmental norms will lead beyond ‘imperfect and getting better’ and which will keep you in the ‘wronged’ sensibility?  For a more expansive conversation on any of these situations and a workbook to experiment and expand the value you get from them, check out Win with Your Hidden Assets.

 
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Posted by on August 27, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

Web designer Gold Coast | Best web design Tips |Web designer Sydney

Have you ever noticed that your website may be annoying? When it comes to website design, knowing what visitors hate most is a must, unless you don’t want them to visit you again. This article messages what you should exclude from your site. If you know about an irritating website, feel free to send this post to its webmaster.

I would like to share a story from my colleague as a few weeks ago I got an email from a colleague asking me to check one of the website he developed. He is a web designer Sydney and his client wanted a nice attractive flash header. The flash header was elegant. You can’t miss it at all. Some nice graphics elements were flying in while sound effects created just the right atmosphere. However, after starting to explore the website, the header became very annoying because every time you clicked on the website the header was restarted. What was amusing initially became very frustrating very quickly, disturbing your concentration and making it difficult to read what was on the page.

He is not the first to create what I like to call, I asked him to implement and redesign that banner with exploring my ideas and infect he got me and thus delivered me top class design for checking purpose. Many webmasters, especially new webmasters are totally “in love” with their ideas and tend to go overboard with their design in one way or another. It’s nice to have an attractive header, but is it really necessary to assault the visitor’s mind with it? In my opinion, absolutely not!

Webmasters sometimes forget that their website design should send a message to the visitor that should reflect the website topic and not the programmer’s skill level.
Here I know abundance skilled web designer gold coast and hence would refer him to all. You just have to have believe in his skills, rest of all will be taken care himself as he has applaud team working exclusively on this era from the past years.
Is Your Website Design Annoying?

Well…. It’s not that hard to be annoying. However, some webmasters are much better than others at annoying their visitors. Check my top 5 list and decide for yourself whether you have been annoying your visitors.
1. Background music – Unless you are operating an online internet radio station or sell music CDs, why play a midi/wav file in the background continuously on every page?
2. Huge font size – If you are designing a website for people with a disability then you are doing the right thing, but if not then you are shouting. People don’t like it when someone shouts at them.
3. Small font size – Do you want to be heard? Keep a normal tone, don’t shout but “speak” in a reasonable volume.
4. Overlapping layers – Layers can be very useful up to the point. But not when they are being used to put an annoying message in the visitor’s face. Don’t try to force your visitor to read your messages. Try persuasion instead of brute force.
5. Popup windows – Even though popup windows are now blocked by many add on tools, webmasters keep using them. The annoying part of popups is sometimes we actually miss important information because of those anti popup tools. Haven’t you heard the old phrase “if you can’t beat him, join him”? Don’t use pop up windows. Put your important messages in a central place on your website.

Most likely each one of us has our own private top five lists. You probably have many more annoying design cases in mind. Well, you’re right, the list is much longer then that. I just wanted to describe some of the highlights in order to bring this important subject to your attention.

a few of you are probably reading those lines and smiling while some others have a feeling a deja-vu. Keep in your mind that as a webmaster the last thing you want to do is put lots of effort into your website and then find out that your visitors hate it. It’s not a matter of taste; it’s more about being the same polite person we all try to be when we go to a party.
I wish you all the best to have an elegant web design.

 
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Posted by on August 17, 2010 in Uncategorized

 

Got Culture in your org?

I was chatting today with a client about corporate culture and the ways it can affect business success. He gave me a bit of a blank stare and said ‘culture?’

We all work and live in an environment of some kind – light, temperature, furnishings and equipment may create a sense of our physical environment. In our workplace, we create a corporate culture with every decision and policy that’s created; these convey what it might be like to do business with us, to work for us, to partner with us.  Here are just two ways corporate culture affect our business success.

When engaging potential employees, so often employers neglect to look at the soft skills (behavioral style, attitude, values, interests) in favor of the hard (training, experience, education, references).  Of course, the repercussions can be felt when 6 months along the line, it becomes obvious that the employee is not fitting in. What they’re not fitting into is the company culture.  Interestingly,  the ‘culture’ itself is its own element worth acknowledging yet too many take it for granted as simply ‘the way we do things around here’ and don’t recognize that what’s intuitive to an ‘old timer’ is not at all to a new recruit. A new employee may have done ‘things’ very differently in the past or may prefer a very different environment/culture in which to thrive and be productive.  For example, some companies are rigid and formal, maintaining strict protocols, paper trails, chain of command to keep things moving (or not) and all who work there have to work within this structure.  If an employee is accustomed or more responsive to a flexible, free wheeling, creative, brain storming environment, it’s very likely that person will either fail completely or, at best,  diminish her/his ability to be productive, innovative and collaborative.

Another way in which corporate culture presents itself is with the owner or company principal. As an example: s/he may have developed a pattern of being completely responsible to her/his business’ needs and has subjugated the importance of other life arenas: family, health,  social responsibility, personal growth, fun, travel, spiritual community, etc.  Since employees will naturally take their cues on appropriate behavior from the leader, they’ll assume similar behavior is what’s sought if they want to succeed on the job.  In fact, this may cause resentment, diminished productivity and absenteeism among those employees who would otherwise thrive in an environment that respects them as whole people and not just a bundle of skills that sits at a desk 8 hours a day.

Understanding the impact of corporate culture and nurturing one that meets your business goals will ensure that employees who are hired in your business will have environmental needs consistent with what will make them effective members of that company. These are just 2 ways corporate culture is critical.  It pervades the general ‘reputation of a firm’ and is therefore part of its reputation with vendors, customers and partners.  It can be part of its marketing campaign or crafted to be consistent with the reputation and qualities of its products.  Regardless of how it’s used and cultivated, as in all things, awareness is the first step to success.

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Posted by on August 11, 2010 in Uncategorized

 
 
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