Tips for improving your website

Tips for improving your website by HARVEY SCHACHTER; Special to The Globe and Mail.  Available from <http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/careers/management/tips-for-improving-your-website/article32350082/> [Published Last updated 

It’s easy to take your website for granted. The site works, after all. You paid special attention and invested heavily while developing it in the past. But in a digital world, your website keeps increasing in importance. And it may need updating.

Copywriter Tom Trush lists six signs it’s time to act:

– You need a designer just to make simple website updates: Search engines are focused on high-quality, consistently updated material, so it’s vital you can make regular changes. Ideally you want a content management system that makes such improvements easy.

– You don’t have a clear sales-lead funnel: Your website should not just be an online brochure, providing information about your company. “It should prompt action from your visitors in a way that grows and maintains relationships. If your website isn’t part of this process, it’s probably not doing much good for you,” he says.

– Your website looks outdated and isn’t mobile-friendly: Your website needs to compare favourably to competitors – it’s your storefront, and should be modern, accentuating your brand. And it must be mobile-friendly, something on which many sites get a failing grade. Ironically, some firms are failing by trying to be mobile-friendly: A Nielsen-Norman Group study found that the attempt to hide navigation behind a hamburger menu (the three-line button, often to the side of a page) because of smaller mobile screens, only makes reading sites more difficult. It found a 20 per cent drop in discoverability on both mobiles and desktops for sites with hidden navigation, hampering people from completing their tasks.

– Your bounce rate is high: If 70 per cent (or more) of visitors to your site only view one page, Mr. Trush says your content may not be delivering enough value to people. But he adds that landing pages can skew your bounce rate, making it seem worse than it is because users were directed to the page they needed from elsewhere.

– Your organization has made changes: If you have added employees, moved locations, or adjusted your marketing approach, the website should reflect those changes.

– You haven’t made updates in a year: Search engines love fresh content and you should love being of high appeal to search engines (and through them, potential prospects). Fresh content shows you’re active and improving. “If you’ve neglected your website, what message does this send about how you handle other areas of your business?” Mr. Trush concludes.

If you decided on an update, digital marketing consultant Monika Beck offers three tips to make it exceptional:

– Don’t make your website a brochure: Echoing Mr. Trush, she stresses the best sites are interactive, a dynamic source of information. Brochure sites tend to be static, and don’t grow in scale easily. “Brochure websites are about your business. The best websites should be about your target market. … Your website must be able to educate, inform, and even entertain your visitors,” she writes in WomenOnBusiness.

– Create a powerful first impression: Most people will land on your home page and the first few seconds there are critical. If poorly designed, it will drive people away from your company – and products. You want an effective call to action that indicates what you want folks to do now that they are on your home page. Give them a hint – and incentive – for what’s next. Include customer testimonials (at least one on the home page with links to a testimonials page) and write about how you are helping your customers (instead of focusing, as too often is the case, on your company). Add impactful images that tell your firm’s story, avoiding stock photos, and offer contact information, preferably with a phone number at the top of the page and physical address at the bottom. “Showing your contact information is an instant credibility builder,” Ms. Beck says.

– Optimize for search engines: This will include making a list of the target keywords you want to rank for – she recommends having 100 – creating at least one page for each keyword, and making sure that keyword is in the first paragraph and also found three to five times throughout the content. “Don’t stuff the keyword. Having your keyword in the content 25 times will not help. Use related keywords,” she warns.

There’s much more, of course. But those hints should help you evaluate your site and what can come next.

2. Finding honourable closure

Sometimes things go on and on. Your team is drifting, and needs somebody to provide an escape hatch – but one that honours your effort. On her blog, consultant Jesse Lyn Stoner cites these four instances for such closure.

– Is the meeting over?: The end of each team meeting is an important moment. You need to indicate what comes next and get people prepared to follow through on commitments. “Honorable closure creates focus and clarity. It can be as simple as taking a few minutes to recap decisions, next steps, appreciate what was accomplished and to thank team members,” she writes.

– Has the original goal been met by the team? If you don’t formally close a project that is completed, team members may continue to meet without a sense of what they are doing and why. Call a special meeting to acknowledge and celebrate what was accomplished. If other items seem worth attacking, define it as a new project. “Perhaps the same people will continue, but don’t assume it. Look at the project goals, the skills required, the interest of current members, and whether additional members are needed,” Ms. Stoner says.

– Is the purpose still relevant?: There may be more work to be done but times have changed and the issue is no longer significant enough to justify the effort. Refocus your purpose, or honourably call a halt.

– Have the members outgrown the group?: A support group can meet for a number of years but is no longer needed because the members have matured. But nobody wants to quit as that would seem disloyal and the group might well have moved from providing crucial support to each other to just becoming a social gathering, leaving some satisfied and some dissatisfied. Acknowledge what has happened and seek honourable closure.

3. Surviving the blade years

Entrepreneurs celebrate hockey stick growth, times when their sales and profitability grow rapidly at an angle that resembles a hockey stick’s handle. But before that cheerful time can come a period when growth is as flat as the stick’s blade.

Entrepreneur and angel investor Bobby Martin says almost every business has to endure what he calls “The Blade Years” to get to a point where it thrives. That phase usually lasts three to four years during which revenue is low if not nonexistent. “The stress of inadequate funds, feeling burned out, and experiencing extreme highs and lows leaves many founders overwhelmed and in a place of wanting to give up and wondering if they should keep going,” he writes on Thoughtleadersllc.com.

That’s a period to bootstrap, taking on as many projects as possible yourself to save money on staff and also seeking an outside source of income to free you from the emotional burden of not having revenue from the company. Don’t overspend in this period on marketing, which unfortunately too often is the case. Instead, spend time researching your market and improving your offering.

Finally, avoid sudden changes. “When the going gets tough, it is easy to want to make big changes and quickly. Knee-jerk reactions like these, especially during The Blade Years, may be catastrophic to the business,” Mr. Martin observes. Weigh your options, considering whether tweaks will beat lurches.

4. Quick hits

Etsy, the global online marketplace, encourages employees to document their mistakes and how they happened in public e-mails. “It’s called a PSA and people will send out an e-mail to the company or a list of people saying I made this mistake, here’s how I made that mistake, don’t you make this mistake,” CEO Chad Dickerson explains.

– Venture capitalist Fred Wilson recently looked through the iOS and Android app stores looking for non-game apps that had broken into the top 100 and stayed there for months. He couldn’t find any and that suggests launching a consumer-focused mobile app and getting sustained traction is almost impossible right now. Sure, somebody might manage it but the odds are stacked against such businesses these days.

– Boards dominated by conservatives pay their CEOs more than boards with a preponderance of liberals, research shows.

– The value for an in-store shopping trip comes from discovery, trial, and instant gratification, says marketing consultant Bryan Eisenberg. Apple stores understand that, with their test drives and passionate employees helping you discover the gadget’s features and making the sale if you’re dutifully enchanted. Rethink your store’s shopping carts and checkout lines. Eliminate friction – things that slow down customers – and give them discovery, trial and instant gratification.

– Consultant Jurgen Appelo advises redesigning your checklist of travel items so each has a preferred spot: Personal items, carried on your body; shoulder bag; carry-on luggage; check-in luggage. This provides smaller individual lists, is easier to oversee, and helps you know where chargers and other items are.

Tips for improving your website by HARVEY SCHACHTER; Special to The Globe and Mail.  Available from <http://www.theglobeandmail.com/report-on-business/careers/management/tips-for-improving-your-website/article32350082/> [Published Last updated 

How to stay safe on the internet

How to stay safe on the internet Published: 

With much of our lives centered around computers, technology and the internet, the Oconee County Sheriff’s Office is offering these tips to help keep you and your family safe.

“The Sheriff’s Office has committed itself to providing helpful information to help you and your family from becoming a victim,” according to Oconee County Sheriff’s Office Public Information Officer Jimmy Watt. “This includes updates periodically on various types of scams but also information, such as is contained in this press release, on how you protect yourself while you enjoy visiting the internet and your favorite sites and staying in touch with family and friends.”

The Sheriff’s Office is offering the following internet safety tips:

• If anyone calls claiming to be from a technology company and you did not initiate the call and they say that your computer contains viruses or malware or has some type of problem and if you pay money they will repair your computer or remove the harmful items, it is a scam and if you allow those individual(s) remote access to your computer, then your computer could be compromised and any personal or financial information could be compromised and other information could be erased or held for ransom. If someone from the outside gains remote access to your computer in this way, contact your local law enforcement agency immediately and do not pay any ransom, as this could further embolden the scammers. Also, make sure you have your files backed up in a virtual cloud environment and/or on some type of thumb drive.

• Change you passwords on a frequent basis and use different passwords for each internet account you have. The more unique you make them and the more difficult to guess, the better the chance you have from becoming a victim.

• You may also want to consider using two-factor authentication, which provides an additional layer of security by using a second known device. For example, when you change something on your account, such as a password, a text can be sent to you phone advising you of the change.

• Set your internet and social media accounts on the highest security level possible and post as little personal information as you can. Anything could be potentially used by individuals looking to scam and/or steal personal and financial information.

• If someone sends you an e-mail with an attachment and/or a link to another site and you do not know that person, do not open the attachment and/or click on the link as this is a way for viruses, malware or Trojans to be downloaded on your computer or allow someone to gain remote access to your computer.

• Be careful in regards to the sites you log into while in public places that offer Wi-Fi service as those hotspots may not provide enough security.

• Make sure you have your computer’s firewall turned on at all times and keep your antivirus software updated and current. Also make sure that the critical updates on your operating system for your computer are current.

• Look out for social media scams that offer gifts cards, for example, as a prize for taking a survey or for online shopping scams that offer merchandise at discounted prices. If an offer sounds too good to be true, more often than not it is and it could be used to steal personal or financial information.

How to stay safe on the internet Published: 

5 Tips to Keep Your Marketing Emails Out of the Trash Folder

5 Tips to Keep Your Marketing Emails Out of the Trash Folder by Charles Vance.  Available from <https://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2016/oct/12/5-tips-to-keep-your-marketing-emails-out-of-the-trash-folder/>. [Wednesday, October 12, 2016] Photo Credit: Public Domain Picture

On a typical day, the average professional receives about 100 emails and, according to a recent study, that number is only expected to grow. The average professional also is in the routine of quickly scanning the inbox and deleting emails that don’t quickly catch their attention. It can be tough for any email these days to not end up in the trash bin.

So how can you make your company’s marketing emails stand out in a sea of doomed correspondence?

If you want to get your email opened, the subject line has to be enticing and relatable. This can make or break an email. Give your recipients enough information to know what they are about to read, but not too much. You want to lure them in for the great content inside.

Your recipients are more than likely pretty busy on any given day. So make your email easy to browse. Once they open your email, they need to be able to quickly scan through and get to the information they want and need. Break up the content into short, concise paragraphs. Be sure to include headers and images that grab their attention and pop off the screen.

These days, people read a lot of email on the go. You must optimize your emails to be viewable on smartphones. Use a mobile-responsive design that looks good on smartphones and tablets to be sure your email always looks its best. You may even want to focus more on the mobile layout than the desktop layout, as more than 60 percent of people now view emails on mobile devices.

Make sure it’s simple to subscribe to your email list. A lot of companies have success with signup forms on their homepage. You can also ask for signups on your Facebook page, Twitter page, company blog and, really, anywhere you engage with your customers on a regular basis.

Speaking of customers, if you want help growing the subscriber list, enlist their help by making your emails shareable. Only send content that your audience will want to share, and make it extremely easy for them to share it by adding social media buttons or links within the content.

Email marketing is a smart way to reach your customers, but you need to do it right. Too often, companies race to get the information out without taking the time to make sure that information will ever even be read. Be sure to follow these tips to ensure you’re giving your audience the information they want and to ensure they avoid immediately deleting when you are the sender.

5 Tips to Keep Your Marketing Emails Out of the Trash Folder by Charles Vance.  Available from <https://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2016/oct/12/5-tips-to-keep-your-marketing-emails-out-of-the-trash-folder/>. [Wednesday, October 12, 2016] Photo Credit: Public Domain Picture

SEO vs. Ad Blocking

SEO vs. Ad Blocking by On Yavin.  Available from <http://www.business2community.com/seo/seo-vs-ad-blocking-01673778#zqDkBgb14BTPsACb.97>. [October 11, 2016]

Sea Changes in Marketing Communication

In a way, managing the marketing aspects of a business has always been a major battle for business owners and managers. From the dawn of time to the modern era, the main roadmap for the majority of businesses has remained roughly the same: create a product or service and focus on bringing that product to as many of your potential customers as possible. Since businesses rarely operate in a space devoid of competitors with similar goals and intentions, that means engaging in a battle with your competition in order to win over the customers. However, what is often overlooked is that there is another dimension to the story. There is another group of key players with its own agenda and waging its own battle: the customers themselves.

Just as businesses use various tools and strategies to try and reach their goals, customers do the same. Until recently, customers’ two main goals were finding the products with the best quality and discovering products at the lowest price. Yet, along with the Information Age has come the emergence of customer attention as a new, increasingly important resource, thus significantly changing the metaphorical battleground.

According to a range of studies, the average Internet user is exposed to anywhere from a few hundred to over a thousand advertisements every single day, making the masses ad-weary and fueling the backlash against advertisements in general. So while businesses are continually advancing in their quest to gain more customer attention, customers are simultaneously beginning to resist that change. The result is one of the most dangerous threats to any serious Internet marketer: ad blocking.

Ad Blocking As a Major Threat

While ad blocking itself is not a new invention, a few recent trends have shed a new light on this technology. Adblock Plus – one of the most popular ad blocking tools – was chosen as one of the 100 Best Products by PC World magazine as far back as 2007, an eon ago in Internet time. However, ad blocking technology eventually outgrew its role as a merely useful tool for the tech-savvy and is now a legitimate problem for online advertisers worldwide.

According to an ad blocking related study conducted by PageFair in partnership with Adobe, there were 198 million active ad block users in the world in 2015, a whopping 41% increase compared to just a year before. The real shocker, though, is the amount of money that online publishers lost due to ad block usage. The report estimated that losses amounted to almost $22 billion in 2015 alone.

The trend only continued in 2016, as ad blocking similarly found its way to mobile web browsing, making it one of the hottest topics in the online publishing world. Now just six months after Apple’s decision to allow ad blocking on its iOS devices, the numbers from the mobile web are far from encouraging for the digital media industry as more than 400 million users are currently using ad blockers on their smartphones.

And online publishers are not the only ones bearing the burden as advertisers themselves are equally affected by ad blocking. Not only are they left without traffic on their website which blocked ads could have brought, but they are also billed for those ads because ad blocking software works by blocking the ads on the user’s device after they’ve already been served. In a nutshell, that means that as an advertiser, you pay for ads that your targeted customers will never see.

SEO to The Rescue?

As valuable as SEO already is, it just might become even more valuable for businesses that also rely on paid advertising to get Internet users to visit their site. Not only is the number of people using ad blocking on the rise, but even those who don’t use ad blockers have learned to ignore and avoid ads, essentially making them blind to marketing efforts thrown at them.

Obviously, your best bet as a business in such an environment is to improve your organic search engine rankings as much as you can, and that’s where SEO shines. With that in mind, here are a few tips on how SEO can help you fight against ad blockers by putting less emphasis on paid ads and getting more traffic from organic searches.

Offsite SEO Methods

Offsite SEO is an umbrella term encompassing a variety of methods and tactics used to rank your site better on search engines and it revolves mostly around backlinks. By getting good links for your site from valuable sites in your niche, you will improve your organic search engine rankings and get more visitors without having to rely on paid advertising.

If you don’t already have a solid link building strategy, guest posting is a good place to start. By posting your articles on related sites, you help them by providing them with free content and they help you by giving you links and exposure to their audience. Additionally, you can start looking into other tactics such as directory submissions, blog commenting and social media optimization in order to gain the needed backlinks for your site and build your brand.

Onsite SEO Tactics

While offsite SEO methods such as link building are concerned mainly with getting people to find your site, the role of onsite SEO is twofold. Although it plays an important role in improving your sites’ visibility on Google and other search engines, it also serves to attract people to actually visit your site and engage with it in a way that suits you best.

The main pillars of onsite SEO are quality content, optimized title tags and attractive meta descriptions, so optimizing them should be among your top priorities. Quality content will help you grow your audience and get more natural, unsolicited links while optimized title tags and meta descriptions can help you stand out among competing websites in the search engine results, therefore getting you more visitors.

Overall, the marketing world is in the middle of a drastic change due to changes in Internet technology. Businesses and customers alike are changing their habits as the Internet becomes an increasingly important part of their everyday lives. Ad blocking has emerged as a major threat to online publishers and advertisers as consumers become wearier and less aware of ads published online. It seems that SEO may be able to mitigate this trend and a quality SEO strategy can help put many businesses back on their customers’ radar.

SEO vs. Ad Blocking by On Yavin.  Available from <http://www.business2community.com/seo/seo-vs-ad-blocking-01673778#zqDkBgb14BTPsACb.97>. [October 11, 2016]

3 tips to help make and manage complex passwords

3 tips to help make and manage complex passwords by Nick Ismail.  Available from <http://www.information-age.com/3-tips-complex-passwords-123462571/> [October 11, 2016] Photo: AdobeStock_21942031-634x0-c-default.jpeg

Passwords, despite the rise of biometrics, are still the most common form of user protection. It is important, therefore, to understand the best methods of producing and managing the most secure passwords possible

Every platform, every service we use requires a password or some other form of authentication.

Remembering dozens, perhaps hundreds, of unique passwords and usernames and keeping all of our devices up to date is difficult, to say the least, and these necessities conflict directly with our desire for maximum convenience.

Most people are guilty of re-using simple passwords across services and of writing them down to make them easier to recall when needed.

In the balancing act between security and convenience, convenience currently has the upper hand at the cost of immeasurable amounts of our most private data.

How can we begin to manage this growing list of passwords in a secure way? Here are 3 key tips and tricks you can use when it comes to password generation and management.

Apply mnemonics

You are probably aware of the rules of password best practice: Passwords must be long; they must contain a mix of characters; they should not be easily guessable; you should never share them; change your passwords often; use different passwords for different applications. The list goes on.

Satisfying all of these criteria can be a challenge, especially when considering that if you create a different password for each service you use you will somehow need to remember each one and avoid writing them down.

An easy way to approach this problem is by applying mnemonics to generating passwords.

For example, take the phrase ‘I would love to fly British Airways first class to Singapore!’ I can easily remember this phrase because it is true and it is not personal.

Also, it doesn’t include a name, an employer, a home location, or any other information about a person that’s easy to guess.

From this phrase, someone can formulate a password by using the first letter(s) of each word, numbers, capitalisation, and special characters.

Suddenly, this sentence creates a strong password that satisfies all the length and complexity requirements set forth by most services: IWLtoFBA1stCtoS!

You can also use other forms of mnemonics, such as misspelling common dictionary words, as a basis for your password instead of just the first letter. Be creative—the important factor is creating a complex password that you can actually remember!

Use a password manager

Though now you know an effective technique for creating passwords, you might still be struggling to remember enough different phrases to cover every account you own.

To help avoid re-using passwords across accounts, you can use password management applications or your web browser’s ability to save and remember passwords.

Password managers typically store passwords in the cloud and secure them all with a master password.

If you or your employer are not comfortable with cloud solutions, some password managers offer local storage as an alternative, giving you control and full responsibility over your password store.

However, bear in mind that though password managers are becoming increasingly feature rich, they can be vulnerable just like any other service.

For example, last year password manager LastPass experienced “suspicious activity” and urged users tochange their passwords.

As an alternative, saving passwords in your web browser is also convenient, as some browsers allow you to set a master password as an extra layer of protection, preventing your password from potentially being displayed in clear text.

Add more layers of protection

As well as passwords, you can add other forms of authentication to the data protection mix.

Authentication can be something you know (password), something you have (smart card, token, or mobile device app), or something you are (fingerprint).

On their own, each form of authentication has its weaknesses, but using multiple forms together – known as multi-factor authentication – strengthens the process.

So, even if your passwords are compromised, a malicious actor still needs another authenticator to access your data. Unless they also have access to that second factor, your data remains secure.

Everyone’s responsibility

Effective cybersecurity is not just a matter of installing the right software.

Technical ability alone is not enough to resolve the issue. If it were, breaches wouldn’t occur in such great numbers and with such frequency.

Only a holistic security stance will enable you to limit the opportunities cyber criminals have to steal your organisation’s data.

Preventing breaches requires encouraging secure behaviour at all levels across your organisation.

Every employee, contractor, third party vendor, intern or volunteer should understand the basics of password protection, as well as the basics of identifying, deflecting and reporting potential threats.

That way, if someone succeeds in breaking through your defences, which unfortunately seems inevitable, having a well-educated and aware user base will only help reduce the damage and identify the problem sooner.
Sourced by Stuart Clarke, chief technical officer, cybersecurity, Nuix

3 tips to help make and manage complex passwords by Nick Ismail.  Available from <http://www.information-age.com/3-tips-complex-passwords-123462571/> [October 11, 2016] Photo: AdobeStock_21942031-634x0-c-default.jpeg