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  • Other Added - What You See Isn't All You Get

    Why You Should Track Your Competition
    While it may seem obvious that competition poses a threat to the success of your business many organizations fail to effectively track their competition within the marketplace.This is important for a number of reasons – one (the obvious one) they take possible revenue and secondly they often provide innovations within your marketplace, they expand opportunities and they influence your customers. By doing this competitors constantly force your organization to develop strategies and satisfy customers.Who are your competitors?Identifying your competitors can be more complicated than you initially think and needs to be tackled in a number of ways. By understanding how your customers make their buying decisions, your competitors are often exposed, once you k
    odern websites, such as shopping carts and forums, can be implemented with ready-made components. By doing this, you achieve several major benefits:

    1. Cost savings through rapid implementation

    2. A proven, robust product from day 1, avoiding embarrassing bugs on your brand-new site

    3. A widely-used package will have the customer base necessary for support and add-on development. Even if you want something special, there’s a chance someone has already developed or fixed it for his needs.

    4. A familiar look-and-feel which may be comforting to easily confused or mistrusting customers

    In many cases, the off-the-shelf solutions can be customized to look and feel exactly how you want, or with a few compromises. A smart web developer will ask you “is it worth $20,000 in development to built 100% of what you want from scratch, or will 98 percent of the features with an $300 off-the-shelf product do?”. Smart Choices So how should sites be designed? Simple: Remember all sites have both a front and a back.

    * Decide what you’ll want to change and include later. Everything from site layout to what type of server gets used will depend on this, s

    Blogging for Beginners
    If writing is an art, then, blogging is ultimate way of using words to convey your personal expression. This is because people who are blogging are very creative individuals, carefully crafting words that would best describe their feelings, sentiments, wishes, desires, and everything in between.Basically, blogs were first introduced in the mid-1990s. Blogging has exploded into the virtual community making the Internet a increasingly popular source of information. Today according to Technorati there are well over 50 million blogs on the internet.If you're looking to get started blogging there are two ways you can go. You can get your own hosting with and purchase your own domain name, or you can search for a free blogging provider. In mo
    A comment on sensible site design

    It’s common to consider your website’s design solely in terms of the look and feel visible from outside. I can understand it entirely. A concept like ‘modularity’ or ‘standards-compliance’ is more abstract than specifying colours and text, and difficult to verify without strong technical knowledge. It’s easier to think in terms of look and feel and hope the backend works itself out.

    But would say to your auto dealer “I don’t care if it’s all welded solid on the inside, as long as it’s RED?” You’re going to be spending a lot of money on your website—both directly on development and marketing, and indirectly by investing your company’s image and future in it. By looking beyond the visible design of the site, you can not only improve your site’s chances in the search engines, but save money over the short and long terms.

    Search Engines are Blind

    I’m sure over the years you’ve seen many gorgeous sites. Odds are, you’ll reference some of them as models when you ask for professional web development. But if your dream site is an all-Flash package with translucent menus and graphical text only slightly less elaborate than a stained-glass window, I’ll bet you didn’t find it via Google. Often, look-driven sites make heavy use of content wrapped in graphics or as Flash or Java applets. These are completely unreadable to a search engine, so when it comes time to promote your site, you’re at a disadvantage from day one. In addition, these plugins tend to also cause problems for users with limited-capability web browsers, like mobile phones, game consoles and WebTV units, screen readers for the blind, and even regular users on slow connections who won’t sit and wait for video or Flash. While some developers honestly believe they’re showing a compelling image for their clients by overusing these tricks, they’re neglecting the true audience of the site: the customer you’re trying to attract.

    Needs Change

    Few websites are static, yet many website designs seem to assume they are. Over the course of a website’s life, the company it represents will usually expand its product lines and contact methods. They may wish to go from simply catching user feedback to actively selling online or maintaining a user-community forum. There are smart ways to handle change, but they need to be built in from the beginning.

    Designing pages in a modular fashion will allow you to add extra pages in minutes instead of hours, and reduce wasted effort keeping repeated page components like navigation bars and headers in synch.

    There’s also a matter of choosing the right underlying technology. ColdFusion based sites, for example, will require special support from the hosting company, often at an extra cost, and specially trained developers, who are in shorter supply, compared with a similar PHP-based site. Those additional hassles over the long term have to be weighed against the benefits the technology provides.

    Standards Shift

    The late 2006 release of Internet Explorer 7 and the continued growth of Mozilla Firefox have clearly deliniated one fact: the browser marketplace isn’t homogenous anymore. While it would take a psychic developer to figure out HOW the next browser coming along will break your site, good back-end design can keep it from becoming a crisis. Modular pages can ensure that you only have to fix a single copy of problematic code, even if it appears on many pages. Reasonable coding practices can avoid the use of browser-specific features and ‘legalities’ of specifications. Clear, ‘self-documenting’ code can be fixed later without having to decipher the last developer’s twisted logic. These are not exceptional features to ask, and can actually help your developer save time and money on the initial product. But even innocuous requests—like deliberately making the code difficult to read to make it difficult to copy—can stymie these practices.

    Do It Yourself

    Even if you’ve got a professional web-development team on hire, there are times when it makes sense to do some light tending of your site yourself. Setting a sale in your shop area? Adding a new “latest news” blurb? Why pay a professional $150 an hour? If you design the backend right, you can make those changes right from the browser. But if you don’t, you may be saddled with having to upload modified files, or worse yet, prying apart balls of Flash or manually hacking databases. Some developers may see bad design as a way to ensure future maintenance business. We see it as a scam.

    Let Someone Else Do It

    Odds are, you really don’t want a completely custom web site, but you don’t realise it now. Many of the complicated parts of modern websites, such as shopping carts and forums, can be implemented with ready-made components. By doing this, you achieve several major benefits:

    1. Cost savings through rapid implementation

    2. A proven, robust product from day 1, avoiding embarrassing bugs on your brand-new site

    3. A widely-used package will have the customer base necessary for support and add-on development. Even if you want something special, there’s a chance someone has already developed or fixed it for his needs.

    4. A familiar look-and-feel which may be comforting to easily confused or mistrusting customers

    In many cases, the off-the-shelf solutions can be customized to look and feel exactly how you want, or with a few compromises. A smart web developer will ask you “is it worth $20,000 in development to built 100% of what you want from scratch, or will 98 percent of the features with an $300 off-the-shelf product do?”. Smart Choices So how should sites be designed? Simple: Remember all sites have both a front and a back.

    * Decide what you’ll want to change and include later. Everything from site layout to what type of server gets used will depend on this, so

    Successful Start Up Financing Made Easy
    One of the many things that makes America so great is the fact that anyone of her people can start a business and achieve freedom and financial prosperity. This is in fact, the American Dream. All too often though, this dream becomes a nightmare when the individual with the knowledge, drive, and passion does not have the funds, no matter how small an amount, to start their endeavor off correctly.The first thing that most do is go to friends and family. Once that well is found to be dried up, they go to their local banker, next they look for angel investors and finally venture capital partners. More often than not, the banks will not lend on start up endeavors, as they deem them too risky. Angel investors take months to locate if one could be found that would actually do the deal an
    n a stained-glass window, I’ll bet you didn’t find it via Google. Often, look-driven sites make heavy use of content wrapped in graphics or as Flash or Java applets. These are completely unreadable to a search engine, so when it comes time to promote your site, you’re at a disadvantage from day one. In addition, these plugins tend to also cause problems for users with limited-capability web browsers, like mobile phones, game consoles and WebTV units, screen readers for the blind, and even regular users on slow connections who won’t sit and wait for video or Flash. While some developers honestly believe they’re showing a compelling image for their clients by overusing these tricks, they’re neglecting the true audience of the site: the customer you’re trying to attract.

    Needs Change

    Few websites are static, yet many website designs seem to assume they are. Over the course of a website’s life, the company it represents will usually expand its product lines and contact methods. They may wish to go from simply catching user feedback to actively selling online or maintaining a user-community forum. There are smart ways to handle change, but they need to be built in from the beginning.

    Designing pages in a modular fashion will allow you to add extra pages in minutes instead of hours, and reduce wasted effort keeping repeated page components like navigation bars and headers in synch.

    There’s also a matter of choosing the right underlying technology. ColdFusion based sites, for example, will require special support from the hosting company, often at an extra cost, and specially trained developers, who are in shorter supply, compared with a similar PHP-based site. Those additional hassles over the long term have to be weighed against the benefits the technology provides.

    Standards Shift

    The late 2006 release of Internet Explorer 7 and the continued growth of Mozilla Firefox have clearly deliniated one fact: the browser marketplace isn’t homogenous anymore. While it would take a psychic developer to figure out HOW the next browser coming along will break your site, good back-end design can keep it from becoming a crisis. Modular pages can ensure that you only have to fix a single copy of problematic code, even if it appears on many pages. Reasonable coding practices can avoid the use of browser-specific features and ‘legalities’ of specifications. Clear, ‘self-documenting’ code can be fixed later without having to decipher the last developer’s twisted logic. These are not exceptional features to ask, and can actually help your developer save time and money on the initial product. But even innocuous requests—like deliberately making the code difficult to read to make it difficult to copy—can stymie these practices.

    Do It Yourself

    Even if you’ve got a professional web-development team on hire, there are times when it makes sense to do some light tending of your site yourself. Setting a sale in your shop area? Adding a new “latest news” blurb? Why pay a professional $150 an hour? If you design the backend right, you can make those changes right from the browser. But if you don’t, you may be saddled with having to upload modified files, or worse yet, prying apart balls of Flash or manually hacking databases. Some developers may see bad design as a way to ensure future maintenance business. We see it as a scam.

    Let Someone Else Do It

    Odds are, you really don’t want a completely custom web site, but you don’t realise it now. Many of the complicated parts of modern websites, such as shopping carts and forums, can be implemented with ready-made components. By doing this, you achieve several major benefits:

    1. Cost savings through rapid implementation

    2. A proven, robust product from day 1, avoiding embarrassing bugs on your brand-new site

    3. A widely-used package will have the customer base necessary for support and add-on development. Even if you want something special, there’s a chance someone has already developed or fixed it for his needs.

    4. A familiar look-and-feel which may be comforting to easily confused or mistrusting customers

    In many cases, the off-the-shelf solutions can be customized to look and feel exactly how you want, or with a few compromises. A smart web developer will ask you “is it worth $20,000 in development to built 100% of what you want from scratch, or will 98 percent of the features with an $300 off-the-shelf product do?”. Smart Choices So how should sites be designed? Simple: Remember all sites have both a front and a back.

    * Decide what you’ll want to change and include later. Everything from site layout to what type of server gets used will depend on this, s

    “You Tube” Is Beating the Pants off TV & the Movie Industry
    Blame cable and satellite and your local video stores all you like.But the simple fact is that there are thousands of movies available for immediate viewing, but possibly one tenth of one percent are worth watching.Around New Years Eve I’ll celebrate one year without cable or satellite TV. I unplugged, went to the 99 Cent Store and bought a pair of rabbit ears, that enable me to get about twenty-five stations on FV, Fuzz Vision, for free.I vented my spleen again by swearing off my local video store which dinged me for late fees.Like one so vulnerable to disappointment that he thought he’d never love again, I was surprisingly swept off my feet by Netflix. With this partner I figured I could relive all of my best cinematic moments from the past.I could check o
    from the beginning.

    Designing pages in a modular fashion will allow you to add extra pages in minutes instead of hours, and reduce wasted effort keeping repeated page components like navigation bars and headers in synch.

    There’s also a matter of choosing the right underlying technology. ColdFusion based sites, for example, will require special support from the hosting company, often at an extra cost, and specially trained developers, who are in shorter supply, compared with a similar PHP-based site. Those additional hassles over the long term have to be weighed against the benefits the technology provides.

    Standards Shift

    The late 2006 release of Internet Explorer 7 and the continued growth of Mozilla Firefox have clearly deliniated one fact: the browser marketplace isn’t homogenous anymore. While it would take a psychic developer to figure out HOW the next browser coming along will break your site, good back-end design can keep it from becoming a crisis. Modular pages can ensure that you only have to fix a single copy of problematic code, even if it appears on many pages. Reasonable coding practices can avoid the use of browser-specific features and ‘legalities’ of specifications. Clear, ‘self-documenting’ code can be fixed later without having to decipher the last developer’s twisted logic. These are not exceptional features to ask, and can actually help your developer save time and money on the initial product. But even innocuous requests—like deliberately making the code difficult to read to make it difficult to copy—can stymie these practices.

    Do It Yourself

    Even if you’ve got a professional web-development team on hire, there are times when it makes sense to do some light tending of your site yourself. Setting a sale in your shop area? Adding a new “latest news” blurb? Why pay a professional $150 an hour? If you design the backend right, you can make those changes right from the browser. But if you don’t, you may be saddled with having to upload modified files, or worse yet, prying apart balls of Flash or manually hacking databases. Some developers may see bad design as a way to ensure future maintenance business. We see it as a scam.

    Let Someone Else Do It

    Odds are, you really don’t want a completely custom web site, but you don’t realise it now. Many of the complicated parts of modern websites, such as shopping carts and forums, can be implemented with ready-made components. By doing this, you achieve several major benefits:

    1. Cost savings through rapid implementation

    2. A proven, robust product from day 1, avoiding embarrassing bugs on your brand-new site

    3. A widely-used package will have the customer base necessary for support and add-on development. Even if you want something special, there’s a chance someone has already developed or fixed it for his needs.

    4. A familiar look-and-feel which may be comforting to easily confused or mistrusting customers

    In many cases, the off-the-shelf solutions can be customized to look and feel exactly how you want, or with a few compromises. A smart web developer will ask you “is it worth $20,000 in development to built 100% of what you want from scratch, or will 98 percent of the features with an $300 off-the-shelf product do?”. Smart Choices So how should sites be designed? Simple: Remember all sites have both a front and a back.

    * Decide what you’ll want to change and include later. Everything from site layout to what type of server gets used will depend on this, s

    Recruitment as the Most Important Aspect of Human Resource Management
    Human Resource Management theories focus on methods of recruitment and selection and highlight the advantages of interviews, general assessment and psychometric testing as employee selection processes. The recruitment process could be internal or external or could also be online and involves the stages of recruitment policies, advertising, job description, job application process, interviews, assessment, decision making, legislation selection and training (Korsten 2003, Jones et al, 2006).Examples of recruitment policies within healthcare sector and business or industrial sectors could provide insights on how recruitment policies are set and managerial objectives are defined. Successful recruitment methods include a thorough analysis of the job and the labor market conditions and inter
    s and ‘legalities’ of specifications. Clear, ‘self-documenting’ code can be fixed later without having to decipher the last developer’s twisted logic. These are not exceptional features to ask, and can actually help your developer save time and money on the initial product. But even innocuous requests—like deliberately making the code difficult to read to make it difficult to copy—can stymie these practices.

    Do It Yourself

    Even if you’ve got a professional web-development team on hire, there are times when it makes sense to do some light tending of your site yourself. Setting a sale in your shop area? Adding a new “latest news” blurb? Why pay a professional $150 an hour? If you design the backend right, you can make those changes right from the browser. But if you don’t, you may be saddled with having to upload modified files, or worse yet, prying apart balls of Flash or manually hacking databases. Some developers may see bad design as a way to ensure future maintenance business. We see it as a scam.

    Let Someone Else Do It

    Odds are, you really don’t want a completely custom web site, but you don’t realise it now. Many of the complicated parts of modern websites, such as shopping carts and forums, can be implemented with ready-made components. By doing this, you achieve several major benefits:

    1. Cost savings through rapid implementation

    2. A proven, robust product from day 1, avoiding embarrassing bugs on your brand-new site

    3. A widely-used package will have the customer base necessary for support and add-on development. Even if you want something special, there’s a chance someone has already developed or fixed it for his needs.

    4. A familiar look-and-feel which may be comforting to easily confused or mistrusting customers

    In many cases, the off-the-shelf solutions can be customized to look and feel exactly how you want, or with a few compromises. A smart web developer will ask you “is it worth $20,000 in development to built 100% of what you want from scratch, or will 98 percent of the features with an $300 off-the-shelf product do?”. Smart Choices So how should sites be designed? Simple: Remember all sites have both a front and a back.

    * Decide what you’ll want to change and include later. Everything from site layout to what type of server gets used will depend on this, s

    What is Your Tempo for Time
    What is your time tempo? Are you impatient when people who use the express lane have one item over the limit? Do you leave for a destination with just enough time to arrive? Then maybe your time tempo is faster than many people who are in your life. We live in a world with different time zones, but what we don’t realize is that the tempo of time is different around the world. Culture shapes the way we approach time and spend time. Our inner clocks dance to the tempo that we are raised with. According to a study done by Professor Robert Levine with the University of Fresno in California, Japan has one of the fastest pace of life, while Indonesia is more relaxed. This placed the United States and England in the middle of the beat.Time crunches can increase our adrenaline and induce a sen
    odern websites, such as shopping carts and forums, can be implemented with ready-made components. By doing this, you achieve several major benefits:

    1. Cost savings through rapid implementation

    2. A proven, robust product from day 1, avoiding embarrassing bugs on your brand-new site

    3. A widely-used package will have the customer base necessary for support and add-on development. Even if you want something special, there’s a chance someone has already developed or fixed it for his needs.

    4. A familiar look-and-feel which may be comforting to easily confused or mistrusting customers

    In many cases, the off-the-shelf solutions can be customized to look and feel exactly how you want, or with a few compromises. A smart web developer will ask you “is it worth $20,000 in development to built 100% of what you want from scratch, or will 98 percent of the features with an $300 off-the-shelf product do?”. Smart Choices So how should sites be designed? Simple: Remember all sites have both a front and a back.

    * Decide what you’ll want to change and include later. Everything from site layout to what type of server gets used will depend on this, so there’s honestly no benefit in not mentioning your plans ahead of time

    * Think modular. Rearranging the navigation on every page may LOOK cool, but it’s going to significantly increase maintenance costs

    * Plan to use industry standard tools and languages. Don’t just pick a technology because it sounds impressive, or comes from a favoured vendor. Check wether it floats in the real world.

    * Research what problems have already been solved by off-the-shelf components

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