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Will You Add? - 10 Ways to Peeve Your Website Visitors
Profitable Internet and Online Business - 8 Key Ways to Advance in Internet and Online Business y page, preferably top and bottom.The world of online business is prospering at a very fast pace. It is simply not possible for any company with a reasonable market share to survive without a web interface. The trend is so strong that now there are many businesses which are solely internet based. The internet based businesses can be very profitable if run in a proper manner. There are certain ways which can assure that you get a proper response form your target market and earn good money through your online business. These ways, if followed, can make it possible for you to succeed in your online business.If you want to advance in internet and online business Don't make me waste time trying to find the exact page I am really looking for. 8. No Contact Information Poor contact information is a binary pair of bad navigation. How many sites have you been to where you cannot find a phone number, a street address, or even an email address? Plenty. I think it's sweet that you put up an email contact form on your site, but I prefer to use my default email composer. Every web-based email form is different. I don't want to waste time learning to use your form when my email client works fine. What are you hiding? 9. No Decent Site Search Tool There is no excuse for this one. If you have a large website with dozens or hundreds of pages, give me an internal search box to find what I need. Google and Yahoo! and many Writing Ebooks For Profit How did peeves become pets? Don't know. Don't really care. But all of us have our pet peeves when it comes to surfing the net for information.Perhaps the quickest way for someone new to Internet Marketing to turn a substantial profit is by writing and selling information in the form of an ebook. For example, you could write a 30 page guide on eradicating ants from your home and sell it for $20.00 a copy. Selling just 500 copies would earn you $10,000 minus the advertising cost and ebook creation software. Not a bad take for a product that could be created in less than a week, and a process that can be repeated over and over. Learning to write and sell ebooks is simply too profitable and too easy a moneymaker to pass on.Everyday tens of millions of people all over Here are the top 10 according to many surveys: 1. Pop Ups Pop ups come in many flavors: entry pop ups, exit pop ups, delayed, small, large, multiple, Flyin, scrolling, always on top, browser stopping, surf interrupting, must be cleared to move on, viagra, and the ever popular porn. Except for an occasional squeeze page to get a free ebook or report, web surfers HATE pop ups. So why do they continue to litter the Internet landscape? Simple. They work. 2. Extra Software Needed to View Site Don't blame Canada. Blame Adobe. Adobe made the Acrobat reader a must for viewing PDF files mainly because: - It solved a need. Every page now prints out the same regardless of which printer or operating system was being used. It could even be made interactive for form completion. - Adobe gave away millions of the free readers before publishers adopted the new PDF format as a standard for ebooks. Acrobat users now demand PDF files in most instances where ebooks used to have various formats including "exe". Hackers have made downloading exe files from unknown sources an unsafe activity. As standard as Acrobat now is, the same is not true for Flash, Shockwave, Deja Vu, and a host of other add-ons with various degrees of support. I don't need to sit through a 2 meg Flash intro when what I want is information. Apparently, many others agree. You can add Flashblock to your FireFox browser and decide for yourself when to allow the Flash to load. 3. Dead Dead Dead Links Nothing hacks me off faster than finding a spot-on anchor text link that goes nowhere. It's like having you mouth water over a menu special only to have the kitchen say they have run out. 4. Registration Required to Visit Site Some sites think their bytes don't stink. They think you should register and login to see anything in the inner sanctum. What they are doing is asking me to get married before the first date. What's in it for me? In this Internet day and age, a company and site has to build trust before a random visitor is going to cough up a name and email address. Show me a little leg first. 5. Slowwww Pages If I have to wait more than 4 or 5 seconds to begin viewing your site, I am gone - never to return. If your servers are slow, find a new web host. If you loaded your pages with Flash, MIDI, audio, video, or other files that load with the page, dump them. Put up links instead. Let the visitor choose if they want to read or watch the video. 6. Outdated Content One huge advantage of the web is the ability of bloggers and other Drudge wannabes to bypass traditional media and post news online instantly. If you have not updated your website in 14 months, what does that tell me about your company. Certainly, you are less than a cutting edge solution for my problem. 7. Bad Navigation Web designers prefer dazzle over function. Function is boring. Who wants a simple text link when a pop up Javascript navigation bar impresses the client? I do. So do the search engines. Every web page needs recognizable, underlined text links on every page, preferably top and bottom. Don't make me waste time trying to find the exact page I am really looking for. 8. No Contact Information Poor contact information is a binary pair of bad navigation. How many sites have you been to where you cannot find a phone number, a street address, or even an email address? Plenty. I think it's sweet that you put up an email contact form on your site, but I prefer to use my default email composer. Every web-based email form is different. I don't want to waste time learning to use your form when my email client works fine. What are you hiding? 9. No Decent Site Search Tool There is no excuse for this one. If you have a large website with dozens or hundreds of pages, give me an internal search box to find what I need. Google and Yahoo! and many o SEO or PPC: Which One is Right for You? t the same regardless of which printer or operating system was being used. It could even be made interactive for form completion.There are two major search engine marketing strategies in use today: SEO (search engine optimization) and PPC (pay-per-click). Both strategies are entirely different and it is tough to decide which one or which combination is right for you.To decide which strategy is best for you, consider the basics. It is easier to judge the pros and cons when taking the big picture into account. People will continue to battle for the top search engine positions. Search engine marketing is undoubtedly one of the best sources of targeted traffic.As people continuously try to find new and unique ways to get additional traffic to their - Adobe gave away millions of the free readers before publishers adopted the new PDF format as a standard for ebooks. Acrobat users now demand PDF files in most instances where ebooks used to have various formats including "exe". Hackers have made downloading exe files from unknown sources an unsafe activity. As standard as Acrobat now is, the same is not true for Flash, Shockwave, Deja Vu, and a host of other add-ons with various degrees of support. I don't need to sit through a 2 meg Flash intro when what I want is information. Apparently, many others agree. You can add Flashblock to your FireFox browser and decide for yourself when to allow the Flash to load. 3. Dead Dead Dead Links Nothing hacks me off faster than finding a spot-on anchor text link that goes nowhere. It's like having you mouth water over a menu special only to have the kitchen say they have run out. 4. Registration Required to Visit Site Some sites think their bytes don't stink. They think you should register and login to see anything in the inner sanctum. What they are doing is asking me to get married before the first date. What's in it for me? In this Internet day and age, a company and site has to build trust before a random visitor is going to cough up a name and email address. Show me a little leg first. 5. Slowwww Pages If I have to wait more than 4 or 5 seconds to begin viewing your site, I am gone - never to return. If your servers are slow, find a new web host. If you loaded your pages with Flash, MIDI, audio, video, or other files that load with the page, dump them. Put up links instead. Let the visitor choose if they want to read or watch the video. 6. Outdated Content One huge advantage of the web is the ability of bloggers and other Drudge wannabes to bypass traditional media and post news online instantly. If you have not updated your website in 14 months, what does that tell me about your company. Certainly, you are less than a cutting edge solution for my problem. 7. Bad Navigation Web designers prefer dazzle over function. Function is boring. Who wants a simple text link when a pop up Javascript navigation bar impresses the client? I do. So do the search engines. Every web page needs recognizable, underlined text links on every page, preferably top and bottom. Don't make me waste time trying to find the exact page I am really looking for. 8. No Contact Information Poor contact information is a binary pair of bad navigation. How many sites have you been to where you cannot find a phone number, a street address, or even an email address? Plenty. I think it's sweet that you put up an email contact form on your site, but I prefer to use my default email composer. Every web-based email form is different. I don't want to waste time learning to use your form when my email client works fine. What are you hiding? 9. No Decent Site Search Tool There is no excuse for this one. If you have a large website with dozens or hundreds of pages, give me an internal search box to find what I need. Google and Yahoo! and many Truck Driving Schools - Your First Step To A Rewarding Career! Dead LinksTruck driving schools have had to meet the demand of the growing number of young drivers who are entering into one of the most in demand professions there is. By deciding to enroll at a truck driving school in any state of the USA, you have already made the decision that truck driving is the profession for you, but you are most probably confused at the number of truck driving schools, the different costs and programs, and wonder which one you should choose. Quite often truck driving schools can be quite costly, and if you are in other employment it may be difficult to arrange your tuition around your present work.Finding a Nothing hacks me off faster than finding a spot-on anchor text link that goes nowhere. It's like having you mouth water over a menu special only to have the kitchen say they have run out. 4. Registration Required to Visit Site Some sites think their bytes don't stink. They think you should register and login to see anything in the inner sanctum. What they are doing is asking me to get married before the first date. What's in it for me? In this Internet day and age, a company and site has to build trust before a random visitor is going to cough up a name and email address. Show me a little leg first. 5. Slowwww Pages If I have to wait more than 4 or 5 seconds to begin viewing your site, I am gone - never to return. If your servers are slow, find a new web host. If you loaded your pages with Flash, MIDI, audio, video, or other files that load with the page, dump them. Put up links instead. Let the visitor choose if they want to read or watch the video. 6. Outdated Content One huge advantage of the web is the ability of bloggers and other Drudge wannabes to bypass traditional media and post news online instantly. If you have not updated your website in 14 months, what does that tell me about your company. Certainly, you are less than a cutting edge solution for my problem. 7. Bad Navigation Web designers prefer dazzle over function. Function is boring. Who wants a simple text link when a pop up Javascript navigation bar impresses the client? I do. So do the search engines. Every web page needs recognizable, underlined text links on every page, preferably top and bottom. Don't make me waste time trying to find the exact page I am really looking for. 8. No Contact Information Poor contact information is a binary pair of bad navigation. How many sites have you been to where you cannot find a phone number, a street address, or even an email address? Plenty. I think it's sweet that you put up an email contact form on your site, but I prefer to use my default email composer. Every web-based email form is different. I don't want to waste time learning to use your form when my email client works fine. What are you hiding? 9. No Decent Site Search Tool There is no excuse for this one. If you have a large website with dozens or hundreds of pages, give me an internal search box to find what I need. Google and Yahoo! and many Top 10 Free Affiliate Program Will Put Cash In Your Pocket If You Understand Affiliate Marketing Finding the top 10 free affiliate program will not be of any use to you if you do not understand affiliate marketing. This is a fact that many affiliates have already found out to their great disappointment.Joining a top 10 free affiliate program that is making lots of cash for others is no guarantee that it will do the same for you. In fact if you do not understand affiliate-marketing chances are that you will hardly earn much.The first key rule about affiliate marketing has to do with traffic volumes. The plain truth is that you will not make anything from any affiliate program if you do no have enough traffic. It m If you loaded your pages with Flash, MIDI, audio, video, or other files that load with the page, dump them. Put up links instead. Let the visitor choose if they want to read or watch the video. 6. Outdated Content One huge advantage of the web is the ability of bloggers and other Drudge wannabes to bypass traditional media and post news online instantly. If you have not updated your website in 14 months, what does that tell me about your company. Certainly, you are less than a cutting edge solution for my problem. 7. Bad Navigation Web designers prefer dazzle over function. Function is boring. Who wants a simple text link when a pop up Javascript navigation bar impresses the client? I do. So do the search engines. Every web page needs recognizable, underlined text links on every page, preferably top and bottom. Don't make me waste time trying to find the exact page I am really looking for. 8. No Contact Information Poor contact information is a binary pair of bad navigation. How many sites have you been to where you cannot find a phone number, a street address, or even an email address? Plenty. I think it's sweet that you put up an email contact form on your site, but I prefer to use my default email composer. Every web-based email form is different. I don't want to waste time learning to use your form when my email client works fine. What are you hiding? 9. No Decent Site Search Tool There is no excuse for this one. If you have a large website with dozens or hundreds of pages, give me an internal search box to find what I need. Google and Yahoo! and many Infoproducts With Resale Rights-Are Profits Guaranteed? y page, preferably top and bottom.You’ve probably heard this talk about reselling infoproducts and making huge profits out of the venture. All you have to do is buy a dozen infoproducts at cheap rates, and ‘cheap’ usually revolves around $50-$200, sometimes more. But that doesn’t matter, the pundits declare, as long as you can sell them at higher rates and keep 100% profits. In short, you’re not buying those infoproducts, rather investing in them; and hence, there’s no harm in spending huge amounts to acquire hot-selling infoproducts. The logic sounds compelling enough for you to search for profitable infoproducts on the net. But wait, there’s more to come!T Don't make me waste time trying to find the exact page I am really looking for. 8. No Contact Information Poor contact information is a binary pair of bad navigation. How many sites have you been to where you cannot find a phone number, a street address, or even an email address? Plenty. I think it's sweet that you put up an email contact form on your site, but I prefer to use my default email composer. Every web-based email form is different. I don't want to waste time learning to use your form when my email client works fine. What are you hiding? 9. No Decent Site Search Tool There is no excuse for this one. If you have a large website with dozens or hundreds of pages, give me an internal search box to find what I need. Google and Yahoo! and many others will give you the tool - free - to put on your site. Use it. 10. Disabled "Back" Button I don't want a website to dictate how I experience their site. I am a guest on your site. I don't need to come back to your page when I hit the back button. That's why I hit the back button in the first place. You don't have the information I am looking for. In a similar vein, I don't like to see other right click functions like "view page source" disabled. I don't need to steal your HTML code, but if I want to, disabling right click will not stop me. I might want to see how you achieved a certain formatting effect. If I am impressed, you can bet I'll be back. Pet peeves take many forms online. No list is complete, but any webmaster that can avoid these 10 major annoyances is a hero in my book. I look forward to visiting your site.
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