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"Will blogs replace websites?" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-10-05 02:10:27

Websites will not be replaced; however they will and currently are evolving. What you will find is social computing will become more relevant and prevalent as the need for dynamic content emerges. Websites are addresses for companies on the information highway; people know where to go when they be to access that company. But websites will play less of a role in channeling information and building relationships with clients. Blogs are just a precurser of what is to come. We have some ideas on how companies can bring home the bacon "persistent presence" through the Internet and tap into the cater of social computing. Best Answers in: Using LinkedIn (8). Business Development (7). Public Relations (7). Non-profit Management (6). Advertising (5). Internet Marketing (5). Staffing and Recruiting (4). Career Management (4). Web Development (4). Guerrilla Marketing (3). Viral Marketing (3). Writing and Editing (3). Corporate Governance (3). dress Management (3). Organizational Development (3). Branding (3). Ethics (3). Purchasing (2). Accounting (2). Government Contracts (2). Government Policy (2). Government Services (2). Tax Law (2). Graphic Design (2). Supply Chain Management (2). Business Plans (2). Starting Up (2). Regulation and Compliance (1). Education and Schools (1). Certification and Licenses (1). Job Search (1). Conference Venues (1). Offshoring and Outsourcing (1). Corporate Law (1). Intellectual Property (1). bring about Generation (1). Sales Techniques (1). Business Analytics (1). Planning (1). Inventory Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Project Management (1). Distribution (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Positioning (1). Professional Networking (1). Small Business (1). Computers and Software (1). Information Storage (1). Telecommunications (1). Software Development (1). Wireless (1) Though each generally provides a means for providing content and interaction online etc a greater distinction emerges with how information gets found by whom for what purpose. Production for mass consumption. Generating useful interesting or relevant stuff for specialized audiences. Digesting what's available into more navigable experiences. Somewhere across the three extremes content converges online in purpose and form. This could speak more to the direction of Internet audiences and their habits than anything else. That's why it's interesting to note that by themselves websites require concentration blogs back up specialization but neither by themselves encourages actual discovery of content. Great think conjoin by Mashable (see URL) discusses this advance. Ultimately the "intermediaries" (ad networks social networks social bookmarking. SEO/SEM widgets dashboard aggregators et al.) are going to cause online circumscribe more as come up as its ultimate uses the more disparate and concentrated the locations. I evaluate the size of the company is relative when offering an answer. In big business definitely not. But in the world of small business. I think there is a very good chance blogs ordain replace the customary business card website. Small business owners often conclude limited in their ability to set-up a traditional website; they see it as a potentially expensive and difficult undertaking. Many feel the need to contract a person for the sign set-up and ongoing maintenance paying for each small change and update thus eliminating the ability to make their web pages truly interactive on a small budget. While the web create by mental act technology has improved and costs can be reasonable there are enough small business owners who still sight the technology dumbfounding. Blogs are perfect for these business owners. Blog technology offered by Google's Blogger takes away the thought process and eases the learning curves. Blogs can be set-up in a matter of minutes by following a simple 1-2-3 affect to help tip the scales -- they are often free. Static pages blogs message boards wikis tweets video audio feeds etc are merely tools that people and companies use to present content. The specific tools that any person or company will use will vary depending upon specific needs. For personal purposes my home summon is my blog (supplemented with my other content) but this is NOT the best access method for some people or companies. For example the multi-directional/dimensional navigation capabilities of a wiki may be preferable to the time-oriented navigation found in a blog. If you look at Oracle it is using static web pages blogs wikis tweets videos and probably some other avenues besides. Some companies ordain be everything including the kitchen sink to reach their audience. Not really... Blogs are a great way to interact between users but comfort if you are looking for professional information and authentic circumscribe you will still need to rely on a website. Blogs generally share views of individuals which come from personal experiences so the opinions and views expressed will no disbelieve be first hand but at the same time they could be biased or influenced by disadvantage and preconcieved notions of the blogger. If you are looking for an impartial information you still ordain have to rely on professionally maintained websites. Also these sites would provide more specific information whereas blogs tend to more generic. But blogs could have their own advantages as websites that have more user interaction tend to be more useful and informative as well as have more diversified content for eg youtube com and wikipedia Best Answers in: Organizational Development (89). Staffing and Recruiting (56). Career Management (48). Change Management (46). Using LinkedIn (46). Mentoring (23). Personnel Policies (20). Corporate Governance (17). Business Analytics (16). Professional Networking (16). Business Development (15). Labor Relations (15). Planning (15). Project Management (12). Compensation and Benefits (10). Starting Up (8). Freelancing and Contracting (7). Small Business (7). Customer Service (6). Job examine (6). Occupational Training (6). Education and Schools (5). Branding (5). Public Relations (4). Ethics (4). Sales Techniques (3). Regulation and Compliance (2). Internationalization and Localization (2). Advertising (2). Quality Management and Standards (2). Communication and Public Speaking (2). Enterprise Software (2). Certification and Licenses (1). Resume Writing (1). Auditing (1). Venture Capital and Private Equity (1). Financial Regulation (1). Mergers and Acquisitions (1). Government Policy (1). Internet Marketing (1). Viral Marketing (1). Customer Relationship Management (1). Lead Generation (1). Currency Markets (1). avoid Funds (1). Non-profit Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Positioning (1). Professional Organizations (1). Business Plans (1). Blogging (1). E-Commerce (1). Web Development (1) Hi Susan,I don’t believe that Blogs will replace to corporate sites anytime soon. Indeed Blogs corporate sites and Intranets will be perfectly complementary in scope and intention and ordain closely interrelate. A current turn that is easily observable in some corporate websites and Intranets is that the careful inclusion of content made by company’s employee’s through blogs is only happening in those companies which open-minded culture willingness to share knowledge and experiences and proper mindset to innovate effectively fosters the effective using of collaborative technologies in the workplace. I hope this helps you. Octavio Blogs are archives of information. Depending on the web developer a website can be completely customized with administrative features that ordain enable an admin to make changes on the fly. By definition this is a "blog" customized for a specific focus. There are thousands of off the shelf website templates and blogs. There will always be an easy solution whether a site uses templates. MySpace. Blogger or an out of box package.. you can be assured that your site will not original will have limitations set by the template (communicate program) and may not cater the goals that a customized place and an experienced developer can meet. From my undergo blogs will be an integral part of communication but not the sole winner in the future. Look more towards growing interactive technologies like Flash and video. The iPhone is a fix example of future interactivity. Best Answers in: Web Development (18). Using LinkedIn (16). Starting Up (15). Business Development (12). Internet Marketing (9). Software Development (8). Career Management (7). Advertising (6). Professional Networking (6). Business Plans (5). E-Commerce (5). Direct Marketing (4). Wireless (4). go Capital and Private Equity (3). Government Policy (3). Staffing and Recruiting (3). Internationalization and Localization (3). Public Relations (3). Writing and Editing (3). Small Business (3). Computers and Software (3). Computer Networking (3). jaunt Tools (2). Education and Schools (2). Mentoring (2). Accounting (2). Economics (2). Personnel Policies (2). Exporting/Importing (2). Employment and Labor Law (2). Graphic Design (2). Customer Relationship Management (2). Organizational Development (2). Planning (2). Equity Markets (2). Engineering (2). Telecommunications (2). Customer Service (1). Regulation and Compliance (1). Freelancing and Contracting (1). Job Search (1). Corporate Debt (1). Foreign Investment (1). IPO (1). Financial Regulation (1). assay Management (1). Government Services (1). Compensation and Benefits (1). Offshoring and Outsourcing (1). Treaties. Agreements and Organizations (1). Customs. Tariffs and Taxes (1). Contracts (1). Intellectual Property (1). Events Marketing (1). Viral Marketing (1). Corporate Governance (1). fight Relations (1). Derivatives Markets (1). list Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Individual Insurance (1). Wealth Management (1). Distribution (1). Market investigate and Definition (1). Product Design (1). Positioning (1). Professional Organizations (1). Ethics (1). Biotech (1). Blogging (1) Best Answers in: Using LinkedIn (53). Staffing and Recruiting (12). Career Management (10). Computers and Software (8). Quality Management and Standards (7). Software Development (7). Ethics (6). Change Management (5). Enterprise Software (5). Web Development (5). Freelancing and Contracting (4). Job Search (4). Accounting (4). Government Policy (4). Internet Marketing (4). Organizational Development (4). communicate Management (4). Professional Networking (4). Education and Schools (3). Business Development (3). Supply arrange Management (3). Blogging (3). E-Commerce (3). Databases (3). Travel Tools (2). Certification and Licenses (2). Personnel Policies (2). Internationalization and Localization (2). Contracts (2). Employment and Labor Law (2). Advertising (2). Public Relations (2). Business Analytics (2). Corporate Governance (2). Inventory Management (2). Manufacturing (2). Personal Taxes (2). Biotech (2). Computer Networking (2). Commercial Real Estate (1). Facilities Management (1). Regulation and Compliance (1). Mentoring (1). Corporate Taxes (1). Economics (1). Government Contracts (1). Government Services (1). International Law (1). Treaties. Agreements and Organizations (1). Criminal Law (1). Antitrust Law (1). Intellectual Property (1). Direct Marketing (1). Guerrilla Marketing (1). Labor Relations (1). Planning (1). Bond Markets (1). Hedge Funds (1). Market investigate and Definition (1). Professional Organizations (1). Starting Up (1). Information Security (1). Information Storage (1). Telecommunications (1) No. Blogs can only give to businesses and audiences that benefit from a two-way conversation as move of doing business. For example. I would see a blog as a great drive for a speakers bureau website (constantly changing engaging and open to two-way interaction) but not good for a company like a mop-wringer manufacturer.. as they have no real conversation with the customer. Blogs will continue to bring home the bacon with interests and industries on a greater scale as a news reporting mechanism I am sure. As to using Blog software such as Wordpress as a hybrid and simple Content Management System (CMS). I can see where that may bring home the bacon as long as a designer knows what they are doing. Unfortunately these implementations seem to only work on small-size clients that have very shallow navigation complexity. No. In fact. I accept we have seen the top of blogs. Blogs are excellent to promote individuals but are not effective promoting a lot of other dynamic organisms especially not when they are organized. Blogging as a FAD is FADING. People who hopped on blogs to follow the trend are finding out that it takes stamina to nurture a relevant communicate and in spite of good intentions it often decreases in priority once they cognise they undergo a life and a career beyond the blogging sphere. I think technological advancement will equally reduce the use of blogs. Hope this helps. Cheers,Pat

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://www.linkedin.com/answers/marketing-sales/public-relations/MAR_PRR/132201-5593612

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"Will blogs replace websites?" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-10-05 02:10:21

Websites will not be replaced; however they will and currently are evolving. What you will find is social computing will change state more relevant and prevalent as the need for dynamic content emerges. Websites are addresses for companies on the information highway; people know where to go when they want to find that affiliate. But websites will play less of a role in channeling information and building relationships with clients. Blogs are just a precurser of what is to come. We have some ideas on how companies can achieve "persistent presence" through the Internet and tap into the power of social computing. Best Answers in: Using LinkedIn (8). Business Development (7). Public Relations (7). Non-profit Management (6). Advertising (5). Internet Marketing (5). Staffing and Recruiting (4). Career Management (4). Web Development (4). Guerrilla Marketing (3). Viral Marketing (3). Writing and Editing (3). Corporate Governance (3). Change Management (3). Organizational Development (3). Branding (3). Ethics (3). Purchasing (2). Accounting (2). Government Contracts (2). Government Policy (2). Government Services (2). Tax Law (2). Graphic Design (2). Supply Chain Management (2). Business Plans (2). Starting Up (2). Regulation and Compliance (1). Education and Schools (1). Certification and Licenses (1). Job Search (1). Conference Venues (1). Offshoring and Outsourcing (1). Corporate Law (1). Intellectual Property (1). Lead Generation (1). Sales Techniques (1). Business Analytics (1). Planning (1). list Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Project Management (1). Distribution (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Positioning (1). Professional Networking (1). Small Business (1). Computers and Software (1). Information Storage (1). Telecommunications (1). Software Development (1). Wireless (1) Though each generally provides a means for providing content and interaction online etc a greater distinction emerges with how information gets found by whom for what purpose. Production for mass consumption. Generating useful interesting or relevant stuff for specialized audiences. Digesting what's available into more navigable experiences. Somewhere across the three extremes content converges online in purpose and form. This could communicate more to the direction of Internet audiences and their habits than anything else. That's why it's interesting to note that by themselves websites require concentration blogs encourage specialization but neither by themselves encourages actual discovery of content. Great think piece by Mashable (see URL) discusses this further. Ultimately the "intermediaries" (ad networks social networks social bookmarking. SEO/SEM widgets dashboard aggregators et al.) are going to shape online content more as well as its ultimate uses the more disparate and concentrated the locations. I think the size of the affiliate is relative when offering an answer. In big business definitely not. But in the world of small business. I think there is a very good chance blogs will replace the customary business card website. Small business owners often feel limited in their ability to set-up a traditional website; they see it as a potentially expensive and difficult undertaking. Many feel the need to contract a person for the initial set-up and ongoing maintenance paying for each small change and update thus eliminating the ability to alter their web pages truly interactive on a small budget. While the web design technology has improved and costs can be reasonable there are enough small business owners who still find the technology dumbfounding. Blogs are perfect for these business owners. Blog technology offered by explore's Blogger takes away the thought process and eases the learning curves. Blogs can be set-up in a be of minutes by following a simple 1-2-3 process to help tip the scales -- they are often free. Static pages blogs message boards wikis tweets video audio feeds etc are merely tools that populate and companies use to present circumscribe. The specific tools that any person or company will use will differ depending upon specific needs. For personal purposes my home page is my blog (supplemented with my other content) but this is NOT the best access method for some people or companies. For example the multi-directional/dimensional navigation capabilities of a wiki may be preferable to the time-oriented navigation found in a blog. If you look at Oracle it is using static web pages blogs wikis tweets videos and probably some other avenues besides. Some companies will be everything including the kitchen sink to reach their audience. Not really... Blogs are a great way to interact between users but comfort if you are looking for professional information and authentic content you will still need to rely on a website. Blogs generally share views of individuals which go from personal experiences so the opinions and views expressed will no doubt be first hand but at the same time they could be biased or influenced by prejudice and preconcieved notions of the blogger. If you are looking for an impartial information you still will have to rely on professionally maintained websites. Also these sites would provide more specific information whereas blogs be to more generic. But blogs could have their own advantages as websites that have more user interaction tend to be more useful and informative as well as have more diversified content for eg youtube com and wikipedia Best Answers in: Organizational Development (89). Staffing and Recruiting (56). Career Management (48). dress Management (46). Using LinkedIn (46). Mentoring (23). Personnel Policies (20). Corporate Governance (17). Business Analytics (16). Professional Networking (16). Business Development (15). Labor Relations (15). Planning (15). Project Management (12). Compensation and Benefits (10). Starting Up (8). Freelancing and Contracting (7). Small Business (7). Customer Service (6). Job Search (6). Occupational Training (6). Education and Schools (5). Branding (5). Public Relations (4). Ethics (4). Sales Techniques (3). Regulation and Compliance (2). Internationalization and Localization (2). Advertising (2). Quality Management and Standards (2). Communication and Public Speaking (2). Enterprise Software (2). Certification and Licenses (1). bear on Writing (1). Auditing (1). Venture Capital and Private Equity (1). Financial Regulation (1). Mergers and Acquisitions (1). Government Policy (1). Internet Marketing (1). Viral Marketing (1). Customer Relationship Management (1). Lead Generation (1). Currency Markets (1). Hedge Funds (1). Non-profit Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Positioning (1). Professional Organizations (1). Business Plans (1). Blogging (1). E-Commerce (1). Web Development (1) Hi Susan,I don’t believe that Blogs will replace to corporate sites anytime soon. Indeed Blogs corporate sites and Intranets will be perfectly complementary in scope and intention and will closely interrelate. A current turn that is easily observable in some corporate websites and Intranets is that the careful inclusion of content made by affiliate’s employee’s through blogs is only happening in those companies which open-minded grow willingness to share knowledge and experiences and proper mindset to innovate effectively fosters the effective using of collaborative technologies in the workplace. I hope this helps you. Octavio Blogs are archives of information. Depending on the web developer a website can be completely customized with administrative features that ordain enable an admin to make changes on the fly. By definition this is a "blog" customized for a specific focus. There are thousands of off the shelf website templates and blogs. There will always be an easy solution whether a site uses templates. MySpace. Blogger or an out of box package.. you can be assured that your site will not original will undergo limitations set by the template (blog program) and may not meet the goals that a customized place and an experienced developer can meet. From my undergo blogs will be an integral part of communication but not the sole winner in the future. Look more towards growing interactive technologies like Flash and video. The iPhone is a prime example of future interactivity. Best Answers in: Web Development (18). Using LinkedIn (16). Starting Up (15). Business Development (12). Internet Marketing (9). Software Development (8). Career Management (7). Advertising (6). Professional Networking (6). Business Plans (5). E-Commerce (5). Direct Marketing (4). Wireless (4). Venture Capital and Private Equity (3). Government Policy (3). Staffing and Recruiting (3). Internationalization and Localization (3). Public Relations (3). Writing and Editing (3). Small Business (3). Computers and Software (3). Computer Networking (3). jaunt Tools (2). Education and Schools (2). Mentoring (2). Accounting (2). Economics (2). Personnel Policies (2). Exporting/Importing (2). Employment and Labor Law (2). Graphic Design (2). Customer Relationship Management (2). Organizational Development (2). Planning (2). Equity Markets (2). Engineering (2). Telecommunications (2). Customer Service (1). Regulation and Compliance (1). Freelancing and Contracting (1). Job Search (1). Corporate Debt (1). Foreign Investment (1). IPO (1). Financial Regulation (1). Risk Management (1). Government Services (1). Compensation and Benefits (1). Offshoring and Outsourcing (1). Treaties. Agreements and Organizations (1). Customs. Tariffs and Taxes (1). Contracts (1). Intellectual Property (1). Events Marketing (1). Viral Marketing (1). Corporate Governance (1). fight Relations (1). Derivatives Markets (1). Inventory Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Individual Insurance (1). Wealth Management (1). Distribution (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Product Design (1). Positioning (1). Professional Organizations (1). Ethics (1). Biotech (1). Blogging (1) beat Answers in: Using LinkedIn (53). Staffing and Recruiting (12). go Management (10). Computers and Software (8). Quality Management and Standards (7). Software Development (7). Ethics (6). Change Management (5). Enterprise Software (5). Web Development (5). Freelancing and Contracting (4). Job Search (4). Accounting (4). Government Policy (4). Internet Marketing (4). Organizational Development (4). Project Management (4). Professional Networking (4). Education and Schools (3). Business Development (3). Supply Chain Management (3). Blogging (3). E-Commerce (3). Databases (3). jaunt Tools (2). Certification and Licenses (2). Personnel Policies (2). Internationalization and Localization (2). Contracts (2). Employment and Labor Law (2). Advertising (2). Public Relations (2). Business Analytics (2). Corporate Governance (2). Inventory Management (2). Manufacturing (2). Personal Taxes (2). Biotech (2). Computer Networking (2). Commercial Real Estate (1). Facilities Management (1). Regulation and Compliance (1). Mentoring (1). Corporate Taxes (1). Economics (1). Government Contracts (1). Government Services (1). International Law (1). Treaties. Agreements and Organizations (1). Criminal Law (1). Antitrust Law (1). Intellectual Property (1). Direct Marketing (1). Guerrilla Marketing (1). Labor Relations (1). Planning (1). Bond Markets (1). Hedge Funds (1). merchandise investigate and Definition (1). Professional Organizations (1). Starting Up (1). Information Security (1). Information Storage (1). Telecommunications (1) No. Blogs can only cater to businesses and audiences that benefit from a two-way conversation as part of doing business. For example. I would see a blog as a great drive for a speakers bureau website (constantly changing engaging and open to two-way interaction) but not good for a company like a mop-wringer manufacturer.. as they have no real conversation with the customer. Blogs ordain continue to work with interests and industries on a greater measure as a news reporting mechanism I am sure. As to using Blog software such as Wordpress as a hybrid and simple Content Management System (CMS). I can see where that may work as long as a designer knows what they are doing. Unfortunately these implementations be to only work on small-size clients that have very shallow navigation complexity. No. In fact. I believe we have seen the top of blogs. Blogs are excellent to promote individuals but are not effective promoting a lot of other dynamic organisms especially not when they are organized. Blogging as a FAD is FADING. People who hopped on blogs to follow the turn are finding out that it takes stamina to nurture a relevant blog and in spite of good intentions it often decreases in priority once they realize they have a life and a go beyond the blogging sphere. I think technological advancement will equally reduce the use of blogs. Hope this helps. Cheers,Pat

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://www.linkedin.com/answers/marketing-sales/public-relations/MAR_PRR/132201-5593612

comments | Add comment | Report as Spam


"Will blogs replace websites?" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-10-05 02:10:20

Websites will not be replaced; however they will and currently are evolving. What you will find is social computing will change state more relevant and prevalent as the need for dynamic content emerges. Websites are addresses for companies on the information highway; people know where to go when they be to access that company. But websites ordain play less of a role in channeling information and building relationships with clients. Blogs are just a precurser of what is to come. We have some ideas on how companies can achieve "persistent presence" through the Internet and tap into the cater of social computing. Best Answers in: Using LinkedIn (8). Business Development (7). Public Relations (7). Non-profit Management (6). Advertising (5). Internet Marketing (5). Staffing and Recruiting (4). Career Management (4). Web Development (4). Guerrilla Marketing (3). Viral Marketing (3). Writing and Editing (3). Corporate Governance (3). Change Management (3). Organizational Development (3). Branding (3). Ethics (3). Purchasing (2). Accounting (2). Government Contracts (2). Government Policy (2). Government Services (2). Tax Law (2). Graphic Design (2). Supply Chain Management (2). Business Plans (2). Starting Up (2). Regulation and Compliance (1). Education and Schools (1). Certification and Licenses (1). Job Search (1). Conference Venues (1). Offshoring and Outsourcing (1). Corporate Law (1). Intellectual Property (1). bring about Generation (1). Sales Techniques (1). Business Analytics (1). Planning (1). Inventory Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Project Management (1). Distribution (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Positioning (1). Professional Networking (1). Small Business (1). Computers and Software (1). Information Storage (1). Telecommunications (1). Software Development (1). Wireless (1) Though each generally provides a means for providing content and interaction online etc a greater distinction emerges with how information gets found by whom for what purpose. Production for mass consumption. Generating useful interesting or relevant stuff for specialized audiences. Digesting what's available into more navigable experiences. Somewhere across the three extremes content converges online in purpose and form. This could speak more to the direction of Internet audiences and their habits than anything else. That's why it's interesting to say that by themselves websites demand concentration blogs encourage specialization but neither by themselves encourages actual discovery of content. Great think piece by Mashable (see URL) discusses this further. Ultimately the "intermediaries" (ad networks social networks social bookmarking. SEO/SEM widgets dashboard aggregators et al.) are going to shape online content more as well as its ultimate uses the more disparate and concentrated the locations. I think the size of the company is relative when offering an answer. In big business definitely not. But in the world of small business. I think there is a very good chance blogs will replace the customary business separate website. Small business owners often feel limited in their ability to set-up a traditional website; they see it as a potentially expensive and difficult undertaking. Many feel the need to hire a person for the initial set-up and ongoing maintenance paying for each small change and update thus eliminating the ability to make their web pages truly interactive on a small budget. While the web design technology has improved and costs can be reasonable there are enough small business owners who still find the technology dumbfounding. Blogs are perfect for these business owners. Blog technology offered by explore's Blogger takes away the thought process and eases the learning curves. Blogs can be set-up in a matter of minutes by following a simple 1-2-3 process to help tip the scales -- they are often free. Static pages blogs message boards wikis tweets video audio feeds etc are merely tools that people and companies use to present content. The specific tools that any person or company will use will vary depending upon specific needs. For personal purposes my home summon is my blog (supplemented with my other content) but this is NOT the best access method for some people or companies. For example the multi-directional/dimensional navigation capabilities of a wiki may be preferable to the time-oriented navigation found in a blog. If you look at Oracle it is using static web pages blogs wikis tweets videos and probably some other avenues besides. Some companies will need everything including the kitchen sink to reach their audience. Not really... Blogs are a great way to act between users but still if you are looking for professional information and authentic circumscribe you ordain comfort need to rely on a website. Blogs generally share views of individuals which go from personal experiences so the opinions and views expressed will no doubt be first hand but at the same time they could be biased or influenced by disadvantage and preconcieved notions of the blogger. If you are looking for an impartial information you still ordain undergo to believe on professionally maintained websites. Also these sites would provide more specific information whereas blogs be to more generic. But blogs could have their own advantages as websites that have more user interaction tend to be more useful and informative as well as have more diversified content for eg youtube com and wikipedia Best Answers in: Organizational Development (89). Staffing and Recruiting (56). Career Management (48). Change Management (46). Using LinkedIn (46). Mentoring (23). Personnel Policies (20). Corporate Governance (17). Business Analytics (16). Professional Networking (16). Business Development (15). Labor Relations (15). Planning (15). Project Management (12). Compensation and Benefits (10). Starting Up (8). Freelancing and Contracting (7). Small Business (7). Customer Service (6). Job Search (6). Occupational Training (6). Education and Schools (5). Branding (5). Public Relations (4). Ethics (4). Sales Techniques (3). Regulation and Compliance (2). Internationalization and Localization (2). Advertising (2). Quality Management and Standards (2). Communication and Public Speaking (2). Enterprise Software (2). Certification and Licenses (1). Resume Writing (1). Auditing (1). Venture Capital and Private Equity (1). Financial Regulation (1). Mergers and Acquisitions (1). Government Policy (1). Internet Marketing (1). Viral Marketing (1). Customer Relationship Management (1). Lead Generation (1). Currency Markets (1). Hedge Funds (1). Non-profit Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Positioning (1). Professional Organizations (1). Business Plans (1). Blogging (1). E-Commerce (1). Web Development (1) Hi Susan,I don’t believe that Blogs will replace to corporate sites anytime soon. Indeed Blogs corporate sites and Intranets will be perfectly complementary in scope and intention and will closely interrelate. A current turn that is easily observable in some corporate websites and Intranets is that the careful inclusion of circumscribe made by company’s employee’s through blogs is only happening in those companies which open-minded culture willingness to share knowledge and experiences and proper mindset to innovate effectively fosters the effective using of collaborative technologies in the workplace. I hope this helps you. Octavio Blogs are archives of information. Depending on the web developer a website can be completely customized with administrative features that will enable an admin to make changes on the fly. By definition this is a "communicate" customized for a specific focus. There are thousands of off the shelf website templates and blogs. There ordain always be an easy solution whether a site uses templates. MySpace. Blogger or an out of box package.. you can be assured that your site will not original will have limitations set by the template (blog schedule) and may not meet the goals that a customized site and an experienced developer can cater. From my undergo blogs ordain be an integral part of communication but not the sole winner in the future. Look more towards growing interactive technologies like radiate and video. The iPhone is a prime example of future interactivity. beat Answers in: Web Development (18). Using LinkedIn (16). Starting Up (15). Business Development (12). Internet Marketing (9). Software Development (8). Career Management (7). Advertising (6). Professional Networking (6). Business Plans (5). E-Commerce (5). Direct Marketing (4). Wireless (4). Venture Capital and Private Equity (3). Government Policy (3). Staffing and Recruiting (3). Internationalization and Localization (3). Public Relations (3). Writing and Editing (3). Small Business (3). Computers and Software (3). Computer Networking (3). Travel Tools (2). Education and Schools (2). Mentoring (2). Accounting (2). Economics (2). Personnel Policies (2). Exporting/Importing (2). Employment and Labor Law (2). Graphic Design (2). Customer Relationship Management (2). Organizational Development (2). Planning (2). Equity Markets (2). Engineering (2). Telecommunications (2). Customer Service (1). Regulation and Compliance (1). Freelancing and Contracting (1). Job Search (1). Corporate Debt (1). Foreign Investment (1). IPO (1). Financial Regulation (1). Risk Management (1). Government Services (1). Compensation and Benefits (1). Offshoring and Outsourcing (1). Treaties. Agreements and Organizations (1). Customs. Tariffs and Taxes (1). Contracts (1). Intellectual Property (1). Events Marketing (1). Viral Marketing (1). Corporate Governance (1). Labor Relations (1). Derivatives Markets (1). Inventory Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Individual Insurance (1). Wealth Management (1). Distribution (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Product Design (1). Positioning (1). Professional Organizations (1). Ethics (1). Biotech (1). Blogging (1) Best Answers in: Using LinkedIn (53). Staffing and Recruiting (12). Career Management (10). Computers and Software (8). Quality Management and Standards (7). Software Development (7). Ethics (6). dress Management (5). Enterprise Software (5). Web Development (5). Freelancing and Contracting (4). Job Search (4). Accounting (4). Government Policy (4). Internet Marketing (4). Organizational Development (4). Project Management (4). Professional Networking (4). Education and Schools (3). Business Development (3). Supply Chain Management (3). Blogging (3). E-Commerce (3). Databases (3). jaunt Tools (2). Certification and Licenses (2). Personnel Policies (2). Internationalization and Localization (2). Contracts (2). Employment and Labor Law (2). Advertising (2). Public Relations (2). Business Analytics (2). Corporate Governance (2). Inventory Management (2). Manufacturing (2). Personal Taxes (2). Biotech (2). Computer Networking (2). Commercial Real Estate (1). Facilities Management (1). Regulation and Compliance (1). Mentoring (1). Corporate Taxes (1). Economics (1). Government Contracts (1). Government Services (1). International Law (1). Treaties. Agreements and Organizations (1). Criminal Law (1). Antitrust Law (1). Intellectual Property (1). Direct Marketing (1). Guerrilla Marketing (1). Labor Relations (1). Planning (1). Bond Markets (1). Hedge Funds (1). Market investigate and Definition (1). Professional Organizations (1). Starting Up (1). Information Security (1). Information Storage (1). Telecommunications (1) No. Blogs can only cater to businesses and audiences that acquire from a two-way conversation as part of doing business. For example. I would see a blog as a great drive for a speakers bureau website (constantly changing engaging and change state to two-way interaction) but not good for a company like a mop-wringer manufacturer.. as they have no real conversation with the customer. Blogs will continue to bring home the bacon with interests and industries on a greater measure as a news reporting mechanism I am sure. As to using Blog software such as Wordpress as a hybrid and simple circumscribe Management System (CMS). I can see where that may work as long as a designer knows what they are doing. Unfortunately these implementations seem to only work on small-size clients that have very alter navigation complexity. No. In fact. I accept we have seen the top of blogs. Blogs are excellent to promote individuals but are not effective promoting a lot of other dynamic organisms especially not when they are organized. Blogging as a FAD is FADING. People who hopped on blogs to go the trend are finding out that it takes stamina to nurture a relevant blog and in spite of good intentions it often decreases in priority once they realize they have a life and a career beyond the blogging sphere. I think technological advancement will equally reduce the use of blogs. wish this helps. Cheers,Pat

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://www.linkedin.com/answers/marketing-sales/public-relations/MAR_PRR/132201-5593612

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"Will blogs replace websites?" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-10-05 02:10:20

Websites ordain not be replaced; however they will and currently are evolving. What you will find is social computing ordain become more relevant and prevalent as the be for dynamic circumscribe emerges. Websites are addresses for companies on the information highway; populate know where to go when they want to access that company. But websites will compete less of a role in channeling information and building relationships with clients. Blogs are just a precurser of what is to come. We have some ideas on how companies can bring home the bacon "persistent presence" through the Internet and tap into the power of social computing. Best Answers in: Using LinkedIn (8). Business Development (7). Public Relations (7). Non-profit Management (6). Advertising (5). Internet Marketing (5). Staffing and Recruiting (4). go Management (4). Web Development (4). Guerrilla Marketing (3). Viral Marketing (3). Writing and Editing (3). Corporate Governance (3). Change Management (3). Organizational Development (3). Branding (3). Ethics (3). Purchasing (2). Accounting (2). Government Contracts (2). Government Policy (2). Government Services (2). Tax Law (2). Graphic Design (2). Supply Chain Management (2). Business Plans (2). Starting Up (2). Regulation and Compliance (1). Education and Schools (1). Certification and Licenses (1). Job Search (1). Conference Venues (1). Offshoring and Outsourcing (1). Corporate Law (1). Intellectual Property (1). Lead Generation (1). Sales Techniques (1). Business Analytics (1). Planning (1). Inventory Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Project Management (1). Distribution (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Positioning (1). Professional Networking (1). Small Business (1). Computers and Software (1). Information Storage (1). Telecommunications (1). Software Development (1). Wireless (1) Though each generally provides a means for providing content and interaction online etc a greater distinction emerges with how information gets open by whom for what intend. Production for crowd consumption. Generating useful interesting or relevant stuff for specialized audiences. Digesting what's available into more navigable experiences. Somewhere across the three extremes content converges online in purpose and form. This could speak more to the direction of Internet audiences and their habits than anything else. That's why it's interesting to say that by themselves websites require concentration blogs encourage specialization but neither by themselves encourages actual discovery of circumscribe. Great think piece by Mashable (see URL) discusses this further. Ultimately the "intermediaries" (ad networks social networks social bookmarking. SEO/SEM widgets dashboard aggregators et al.) are going to shape online content more as well as its ultimate uses the more disparate and concentrated the locations. I think the size of the company is relative when offering an answer. In big business definitely not. But in the world of small business. I evaluate there is a very good chance blogs will replace the customary business card website. Small business owners often feel limited in their ability to set-up a traditional website; they see it as a potentially expensive and difficult undertaking. Many conclude the need to hire a person for the initial set-up and ongoing maintenance paying for each small change and update thus eliminating the ability to make their web pages truly interactive on a small budget. While the web design technology has improved and costs can be reasonable there are enough small business owners who still find the technology dumbfounding. Blogs are ameliorate for these business owners. communicate technology offered by Google's Blogger takes away the thought affect and eases the learning curves. Blogs can be set-up in a matter of minutes by following a simple 1-2-3 process to back up tip the scales -- they are often free. Static pages blogs message boards wikis tweets video audio feeds etc are merely tools that people and companies use to present content. The specific tools that any person or company will use will vary depending upon specific needs. For personal purposes my home page is my communicate (supplemented with my other circumscribe) but this is NOT the best access method for some people or companies. For example the multi-directional/dimensional navigation capabilities of a wiki may be preferable to the time-oriented navigation found in a blog. If you look at Oracle it is using static web pages blogs wikis tweets videos and probably some other avenues besides. Some companies ordain need everything including the kitchen change posture to reach their audience. Not really... Blogs are a great way to interact between users but still if you are looking for professional information and authentic content you will still need to rely on a website. Blogs generally share views of individuals which go from personal experiences so the opinions and views expressed ordain no doubt be first hand but at the same time they could be biased or influenced by prejudice and preconcieved notions of the blogger. If you are looking for an impartial information you still ordain have to rely on professionally maintained websites. Also these sites would provide more specific information whereas blogs tend to more generic. But blogs could have their own advantages as websites that have more user interaction tend to be more useful and informative as come up as have more diversified content for eg youtube com and wikipedia Best Answers in: Organizational Development (89). Staffing and Recruiting (56). go Management (48). dress Management (46). Using LinkedIn (46). Mentoring (23). Personnel Policies (20). Corporate Governance (17). Business Analytics (16). Professional Networking (16). Business Development (15). Labor Relations (15). Planning (15). Project Management (12). Compensation and Benefits (10). Starting Up (8). Freelancing and Contracting (7). Small Business (7). Customer Service (6). Job Search (6). Occupational Training (6). Education and Schools (5). Branding (5). Public Relations (4). Ethics (4). Sales Techniques (3). Regulation and Compliance (2). Internationalization and Localization (2). Advertising (2). Quality Management and Standards (2). Communication and Public Speaking (2). Enterprise Software (2). Certification and Licenses (1). Resume Writing (1). Auditing (1). Venture Capital and Private Equity (1). Financial Regulation (1). Mergers and Acquisitions (1). Government Policy (1). Internet Marketing (1). Viral Marketing (1). Customer Relationship Management (1). Lead Generation (1). Currency Markets (1). Hedge Funds (1). Non-profit Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Positioning (1). Professional Organizations (1). Business Plans (1). Blogging (1). E-Commerce (1). Web Development (1) Hi Susan,I don’t believe that Blogs ordain replace to corporate sites anytime soon. Indeed Blogs corporate sites and Intranets will be perfectly complementary in scope and intention and will closely interrelate. A current trend that is easily observable in some corporate websites and Intranets is that the careful inclusion of content made by company’s employee’s through blogs is only happening in those companies which open-minded culture willingness to overlap knowledge and experiences and proper mindset to innovate effectively fosters the effective using of collaborative technologies in the workplace. I hope this helps you. Octavio Blogs are archives of information. Depending on the web developer a website can be completely customized with administrative features that will enable an admin to make changes on the fly. By definition this is a "communicate" customized for a specific focus. There are thousands of off the shelf website templates and blogs. There ordain always be an easy solution whether a site uses templates. MySpace. Blogger or an out of box package.. you can be assured that your site will not original will have limitations set by the template (communicate schedule) and may not meet the goals that a customized site and an experienced developer can cater. From my experience blogs ordain be an integral part of communication but not the sole winner in the future. Look more towards growing interactive technologies like Flash and video. The iPhone is a prime example of future interactivity. Best Answers in: Web Development (18). Using LinkedIn (16). Starting Up (15). Business Development (12). Internet Marketing (9). Software Development (8). Career Management (7). Advertising (6). Professional Networking (6). Business Plans (5). E-Commerce (5). Direct Marketing (4). Wireless (4). Venture Capital and Private Equity (3). Government Policy (3). Staffing and Recruiting (3). Internationalization and Localization (3). Public Relations (3). Writing and Editing (3). Small Business (3). Computers and Software (3). Computer Networking (3). Travel Tools (2). Education and Schools (2). Mentoring (2). Accounting (2). Economics (2). Personnel Policies (2). Exporting/Importing (2). Employment and Labor Law (2). Graphic Design (2). Customer Relationship Management (2). Organizational Development (2). Planning (2). Equity Markets (2). Engineering (2). Telecommunications (2). Customer Service (1). Regulation and Compliance (1). Freelancing and Contracting (1). Job examine (1). Corporate Debt (1). Foreign Investment (1). IPO (1). Financial Regulation (1). Risk Management (1). Government Services (1). Compensation and Benefits (1). Offshoring and Outsourcing (1). Treaties. Agreements and Organizations (1). Customs. Tariffs and Taxes (1). Contracts (1). Intellectual Property (1). Events Marketing (1). Viral Marketing (1). Corporate Governance (1). Labor Relations (1). Derivatives Markets (1). Inventory Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Individual Insurance (1). Wealth Management (1). Distribution (1). Market investigate and Definition (1). Product create by mental act (1). Positioning (1). Professional Organizations (1). Ethics (1). Biotech (1). Blogging (1) beat Answers in: Using LinkedIn (53). Staffing and Recruiting (12). Career Management (10). Computers and Software (8). Quality Management and Standards (7). Software Development (7). Ethics (6). Change Management (5). Enterprise Software (5). Web Development (5). Freelancing and Contracting (4). Job Search (4). Accounting (4). Government Policy (4). Internet Marketing (4). Organizational Development (4). Project Management (4). Professional Networking (4). Education and Schools (3). Business Development (3). Supply Chain Management (3). Blogging (3). E-Commerce (3). Databases (3). Travel Tools (2). Certification and Licenses (2). Personnel Policies (2). Internationalization and Localization (2). Contracts (2). Employment and Labor Law (2). Advertising (2). Public Relations (2). Business Analytics (2). Corporate Governance (2). list Management (2). Manufacturing (2). Personal Taxes (2). Biotech (2). Computer Networking (2). Commercial Real Estate (1). Facilities Management (1). Regulation and Compliance (1). Mentoring (1). Corporate Taxes (1). Economics (1). Government Contracts (1). Government Services (1). International Law (1). Treaties. Agreements and Organizations (1). Criminal Law (1). Antitrust Law (1). Intellectual Property (1). Direct Marketing (1). Guerrilla Marketing (1). fight Relations (1). Planning (1). Bond Markets (1). Hedge Funds (1). Market investigate and Definition (1). Professional Organizations (1). Starting Up (1). Information Security (1). Information Storage (1). Telecommunications (1) No. Blogs can only cater to businesses and audiences that benefit from a two-way conversation as part of doing business. For example. I would see a communicate as a great tool for a speakers bureau website (constantly changing engaging and open to two-way interaction) but not good for a affiliate like a mop-wringer manufacturer.. as they undergo no real conversation with the customer. Blogs will continue to work with interests and industries on a greater scale as a news reporting mechanism I am sure. As to using Blog software such as Wordpress as a hybrid and simple Content Management System (CMS). I can see where that may work as desire as a designer knows what they are doing. Unfortunately these implementations seem to only work on small-size clients that have very shallow navigation complexity. No. In fact. I believe we undergo seen the top of blogs. Blogs are excellent to promote individuals but are not effective promoting a lot of other dynamic organisms especially not when they are organized. Blogging as a FAD is FADING. People who hopped on blogs to follow the trend are finding out that it takes stamina to encourage a relevant blog and in spite of good intentions it often decreases in priority once they realize they have a life and a career beyond the blogging sphere. I evaluate technological advancement ordain equally reduce the use of blogs. Hope this helps. Cheers,Pat

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://www.linkedin.com/answers/marketing-sales/public-relations/MAR_PRR/132201-5593612

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"Will blogs replace websites?" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-10-05 02:10:20

Websites will not be replaced; however they will and currently are evolving. What you will find is social computing will become more relevant and prevalent as the need for dynamic content emerges. Websites are addresses for companies on the information highway; people know where to go when they want to find that company. But websites ordain play less of a role in channeling information and building relationships with clients. Blogs are just a precurser of what is to come. We have some ideas on how companies can achieve "persistent presence" through the Internet and tap into the cater of social computing. beat Answers in: Using LinkedIn (8). Business Development (7). Public Relations (7). Non-profit Management (6). Advertising (5). Internet Marketing (5). Staffing and Recruiting (4). Career Management (4). Web Development (4). Guerrilla Marketing (3). Viral Marketing (3). Writing and Editing (3). Corporate Governance (3). Change Management (3). Organizational Development (3). Branding (3). Ethics (3). Purchasing (2). Accounting (2). Government Contracts (2). Government Policy (2). Government Services (2). Tax Law (2). Graphic create by mental act (2). give arrange Management (2). Business Plans (2). Starting Up (2). Regulation and Compliance (1). Education and Schools (1). Certification and Licenses (1). Job Search (1). Conference Venues (1). Offshoring and Outsourcing (1). Corporate Law (1). Intellectual Property (1). bring about Generation (1). Sales Techniques (1). Business Analytics (1). Planning (1). list Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Project Management (1). Distribution (1). merchandise Research and Definition (1). Positioning (1). Professional Networking (1). Small Business (1). Computers and Software (1). Information Storage (1). Telecommunications (1). Software Development (1). Wireless (1) Though each generally provides a means for providing circumscribe and interaction online etc a greater distinction emerges with how information gets open by whom for what purpose. Production for mass consumption. Generating useful interesting or relevant cram for specialized audiences. Digesting what's available into more navigable experiences. Somewhere across the three extremes content converges online in purpose and form. This could communicate more to the direction of Internet audiences and their habits than anything else. That's why it's interesting to say that by themselves websites demand concentration blogs encourage specialization but neither by themselves encourages actual discovery of content. Great think conjoin by Mashable (see URL) discusses this advance. Ultimately the "intermediaries" (ad networks social networks social bookmarking. SEO/SEM widgets dashboard aggregators et al.) are going to shape online content more as come up as its ultimate uses the more disparate and concentrated the locations. I think the size of the company is relative when offering an say. In big business definitely not. But in the world of small business. I think there is a very good chance blogs ordain replace the customary business card website. Small business owners often feel limited in their ability to set-up a traditional website; they see it as a potentially expensive and difficult undertaking. Many feel the need to contract a person for the initial set-up and ongoing maintenance paying for each small change and update thus eliminating the ability to make their web pages truly interactive on a small budget. While the web design technology has improved and costs can be reasonable there are enough small business owners who still find the technology dumbfounding. Blogs are perfect for these business owners. Blog technology offered by Google's Blogger takes away the thought process and eases the learning curves. Blogs can be set-up in a matter of minutes by following a simple 1-2-3 affect to help tip the scales -- they are often free. Static pages blogs message boards wikis tweets video audio feeds etc are merely tools that populate and companies use to present circumscribe. The specific tools that any person or affiliate will use will vary depending upon specific needs. For personal purposes my home page is my blog (supplemented with my other content) but this is NOT the beat access method for some people or companies. For example the multi-directional/dimensional navigation capabilities of a wiki may be preferable to the time-oriented navigation found in a communicate. If you look at Oracle it is using static web pages blogs wikis tweets videos and probably some other avenues besides. Some companies will need everything including the kitchen sink to arrive their audience. Not really... Blogs are a great way to interact between users but still if you are looking for professional information and authentic circumscribe you ordain still be to rely on a website. Blogs generally overlap views of individuals which come from personal experiences so the opinions and views expressed ordain no disbelieve be first hand but at the same measure they could be biased or influenced by prejudice and preconcieved notions of the blogger. If you are looking for an impartial information you still will have to rely on professionally maintained websites. Also these sites would provide more specific information whereas blogs tend to more generic. But blogs could have their own advantages as websites that have more user interaction tend to be more useful and informative as come up as have more diversified content for eg youtube com and wikipedia Best Answers in: Organizational Development (89). Staffing and Recruiting (56). Career Management (48). Change Management (46). Using LinkedIn (46). Mentoring (23). Personnel Policies (20). Corporate Governance (17). Business Analytics (16). Professional Networking (16). Business Development (15). Labor Relations (15). Planning (15). Project Management (12). Compensation and Benefits (10). Starting Up (8). Freelancing and Contracting (7). Small Business (7). Customer function (6). Job Search (6). Occupational Training (6). Education and Schools (5). Branding (5). Public Relations (4). Ethics (4). Sales Techniques (3). Regulation and Compliance (2). Internationalization and Localization (2). Advertising (2). Quality Management and Standards (2). Communication and Public Speaking (2). Enterprise Software (2). Certification and Licenses (1). Resume Writing (1). Auditing (1). go Capital and Private Equity (1). Financial Regulation (1). Mergers and Acquisitions (1). Government Policy (1). Internet Marketing (1). Viral Marketing (1). Customer Relationship Management (1). Lead Generation (1). Currency Markets (1). Hedge Funds (1). Non-profit Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Positioning (1). Professional Organizations (1). Business Plans (1). Blogging (1). E-Commerce (1). Web Development (1) Hi Susan,I don’t believe that Blogs will replace to corporate sites anytime soon. Indeed Blogs corporate sites and Intranets will be perfectly complementary in scope and intention and will closely interrelate. A current trend that is easily observable in some corporate websites and Intranets is that the careful inclusion of content made by company’s employee’s through blogs is only happening in those companies which open-minded culture willingness to share knowledge and experiences and proper mindset to innovate effectively fosters the effective using of collaborative technologies in the workplace. I hope this helps you. Octavio Blogs are archives of information. Depending on the web developer a website can be completely customized with administrative features that ordain enable an admin to make changes on the fly. By definition this is a "blog" customized for a specific focus. There are thousands of off the shelf website templates and blogs. There ordain always be an easy solution whether a place uses templates. MySpace. Blogger or an out of box package.. you can be assured that your site will not original ordain have limitations set by the template (communicate schedule) and may not cater the goals that a customized site and an experienced developer can meet. From my experience blogs will be an integral part of communication but not the bushel winner in the future. Look more towards growing interactive technologies like Flash and video. The iPhone is a prime example of future interactivity. Best Answers in: Web Development (18). Using LinkedIn (16). Starting Up (15). Business Development (12). Internet Marketing (9). Software Development (8). go Management (7). Advertising (6). Professional Networking (6). Business Plans (5). E-Commerce (5). Direct Marketing (4). Wireless (4). Venture Capital and Private Equity (3). Government Policy (3). Staffing and Recruiting (3). Internationalization and Localization (3). Public Relations (3). Writing and Editing (3). Small Business (3). Computers and Software (3). Computer Networking (3). Travel Tools (2). Education and Schools (2). Mentoring (2). Accounting (2). Economics (2). Personnel Policies (2). Exporting/Importing (2). Employment and Labor Law (2). Graphic Design (2). Customer Relationship Management (2). Organizational Development (2). Planning (2). Equity Markets (2). Engineering (2). Telecommunications (2). Customer Service (1). Regulation and Compliance (1). Freelancing and Contracting (1). Job Search (1). Corporate Debt (1). Foreign Investment (1). IPO (1). Financial Regulation (1). Risk Management (1). Government Services (1). Compensation and Benefits (1). Offshoring and Outsourcing (1). Treaties. Agreements and Organizations (1). Customs. Tariffs and Taxes (1). Contracts (1). Intellectual Property (1). Events Marketing (1). Viral Marketing (1). Corporate Governance (1). Labor Relations (1). Derivatives Markets (1). Inventory Management (1). Manufacturing (1). Individual Insurance (1). Wealth Management (1). Distribution (1). merchandise investigate and Definition (1). Product create by mental act (1). Positioning (1). Professional Organizations (1). Ethics (1). Biotech (1). Blogging (1) beat Answers in: Using LinkedIn (53). Staffing and Recruiting (12). Career Management (10). Computers and Software (8). Quality Management and Standards (7). Software Development (7). Ethics (6). Change Management (5). Enterprise Software (5). Web Development (5). Freelancing and Contracting (4). Job Search (4). Accounting (4). Government Policy (4). Internet Marketing (4). Organizational Development (4). Project Management (4). Professional Networking (4). Education and Schools (3). Business Development (3). Supply Chain Management (3). Blogging (3). E-Commerce (3). Databases (3). Travel Tools (2). Certification and Licenses (2). Personnel Policies (2). Internationalization and Localization (2). Contracts (2). Employment and fight Law (2). Advertising (2). Public Relations (2). Business Analytics (2). Corporate Governance (2). Inventory Management (2). Manufacturing (2). Personal Taxes (2). Biotech (2). Computer Networking (2). Commercial Real Estate (1). Facilities Management (1). Regulation and Compliance (1). Mentoring (1). Corporate Taxes (1). Economics (1). Government Contracts (1). Government Services (1). International Law (1). Treaties. Agreements and Organizations (1). Criminal Law (1). Antitrust Law (1). Intellectual Property (1). Direct Marketing (1). Guerrilla Marketing (1). fight Relations (1). Planning (1). Bond Markets (1). Hedge Funds (1). Market Research and Definition (1). Professional Organizations (1). Starting Up (1). Information Security (1). Information Storage (1). Telecommunications (1) No. Blogs can only give to businesses and audiences that benefit from a two-way conversation as move of doing business. For example. I would see a communicate as a great tool for a speakers bureau website (constantly changing engaging and open to two-way interaction) but not good for a company like a mop-wringer manufacturer.. as they undergo no real conversation with the customer. Blogs will continue to work with interests and industries on a greater scale as a news reporting mechanism I am sure. As to using Blog software such as Wordpress as a hybrid and simple Content Management System (CMS). I can see where that may work as long as a designer knows what they are doing. Unfortunately these implementations seem to only bring home the bacon on small-size clients that undergo very alter navigation complexity. No. In fact. I accept we have seen the top of blogs. Blogs are excellent to promote individuals but are not effective promoting a lot of other dynamic organisms especially not when they are organized. Blogging as a FAD is FADING. People who hopped on blogs to follow the trend are finding out that it takes stamina to nurture a relevant communicate and in spite of good intentions it often decreases in priority once they realize they undergo a life and a go beyond the blogging sphere. I think technological advancement will equally reduce the use of blogs. Hope this helps. Cheers,Pat

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://www.linkedin.com/answers/marketing-sales/public-relations/MAR_PRR/132201-5593612

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"Google?s Hopes for Government Websites" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-06-28 07:37:37

and the government hand in transfer again. Almost. This time. explore’s working on a Sitemap Protocol which it’s hoping will be implemented across the come in for government websites. The bill S. 2321 will be considered tomorrow by a Senate committee. It will actually increase and update the E-Government Act of 2002 which offers guidance and best practices for federal agencies to make their websites more accessible for search engine crawlers. So if you didn’t notice. Google is hoping to work with the government to make their sitemaps exceed so you won’t spend 45 minutes trying to find the divide of your state’s website that tells you what you be in order to renew your driver’s license. While Google’s hoping to push this bill through the Senate and make things official it’s also begun working with state governments in Arizona. California and Virgina to improve their sitemaps. Throw in the Department of Agriculture. Energy and Health and Human Services too. From to is there anything Google doesn’t want to create the standard for? Are these standards proprietary to Google or are they change state to anyone who is building or running a search engine?

Forex Groups - Tips on Trading

Related article:
http://mashable.com/2007/11/14/google-4/

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"Corporate Websites Hosting" posted by ~Ray
Posted on 2008-03-18 23:30:04

To alter a solid corporate website you need a solid web hosting provider. A lousy provider will have bad uptime horrible technical support and many other deficiencies that a corporate website simply cannot tolerate. Choosing a good host for a corporate website is extremely important and many steps must be taken to ensure quality once you are with a entertain. The first go is to contact the sales team and see how long they act to respond and how helpful they are. Keep in mind that the sales team usually responds a lot faster than technical give unless you are a large priority customer. For a corporate website less than 2 hour responses should be mandatory for the pre-sales challenge. If they cannot act within that short measure frame it likely means they do not have 24/7 support staff on—site at all times and will not be able to provide around-the-clock help. As such they should not be your choice for a entertain to host a corporate website with. If they do answer back to you in this short time close in ask them some basic questions about the service such as uptime bandwidth allotments terms of service agreements and other basic facts that sales people should experience. If they cannot answer these questions quickly and efficiently you should go seek hosting elsewhere. Clueless sales-people usually translates into bad technical give populate for the same company and should be avoided. After talking with sales check to see if you can talk with technical support as well. If they let you this should be a big plus for the company because it shows that they are confident in the abilities of their technical give staff and they care enough about potential customers to spare some of the technical give staff’s time. Be sure to ask technical give good questions such as server specifications. CPU/RAM usage allotments guaranteed uptime and which providers they use for bandwidth. You may also want to ask some questions about compose usage on their servers. If the technical support gives sluggish not-so-sure answers you should look for another hosting solution as that is the kind of support you will get when you are a customer. Before you make the final decision to buy be sure to go to webhostingtalk com to ask about other populate’s experiences with the host. If no one has any experience with the host it is a new host and you should look elsewhere. If people have many negative things to say about the entertain you should also look elsewhere. But if reviews are generally favorable then you may have found yourself a good hosting company. Aside from technical support four other things should be looked at when choosing a corporate hosting. The first of these is plough lay. Most hosting plans ordain undergo no trouble giving you enough disk space. But to be safe you should estimate how much disk space you be for your corporate website. This includes all HTML and PHP/ASP/JSP/etc files you will be for your website all images that you will need for the website any flash/video/multimedia files you need for the website and all database data that you ordain need for the website. Make sure to furnish yourself 30% extra space over this calculation to make room for expansion possibilities. Next you should be at the bandwidth allotment for your website and make a calculation based on what you think you ordain need. Bandwidth calculations are quite simple. You act the add up size of a page(with all images and multimedia included),multiply that by the add up number of page views per visitor multiply by be of visitors per day and then multiply by 30 to get the be amount of bandwidth you need for the month. Also check for hosts that have daily bandwidth limits(desire Servage) rather than monthly ones. As a rule of the thumb always allow for 30% more bandwidth than you currently need for expansion purposes. The third thing you should look for is features that come included in the web hosting. Things that should be in this category should include programming languages supported(PHP/ASP/JSP/ETC) database types supported(MYSQL/MSSQL/ORACLE) be of simultaneous database connections allowed and any additional frameworks or add-ons that go with the hosting plans. Be sure the features that the hosting service offers covers all your needs. You need to be as nit-picky as possible and look out for things like CPU cycle limits safe mode restrictions in PHP and other things that will restrict the ability of your site to function to its full potential. The last thing to be aware of and probably the most important thing out of the four is uptime. This basically means the % of measure that the entertain can guarantee your site can be up. For a corporate site this number needs to be at least 99.5% if not 99.7% or 99.9%. One hundred percent is near impossible to bring home the bacon(although hosts like RackSpace claim it) as there will always be server maintenance measure where your site will have to be down for work to proceed. Think about it this way at 99.5% uptime your site will be down roughly 43. 8 hours a year or nearly two days per year. At 99.7% this drops to 26.28 hour or a little over a day and at 99.9% this drops to 8.76 hours or a little more than 1/3 of a day. Corporate hosting should have a clause for refunds if downtime goes above the guaranteed maximum amount. You should also make arrangements with your host for server maintenance to be done at the times when your website has the smallest amount of merchandise so you will lose the minimum be of potential customers during this time. Hosts should also give a heads-up warning of when maintenance is going to take place. Having good uptime adequate bandwidth enough disk space and good technical support are all crucial for running a corporate website. 1. Free Hosting – This should not actually be a choice for corporate webhosting as remove hosting often squeezes thousands of accounts onto a single server which makes for poor performance and slow server speeds. Bandwidth also tends to be of poor quality and the bandwidth pipes are just not big enough to handle the amounts of merchandise that the 1000’s of sites bespeak. Technical give is usually poor or non-existent because remove hosts don’t undergo the calculate to actually hire any kind of technical support staff. You will most certainly not get on-demand 24/7 give because the host has no way to keep that sort of cater. Database connections are severely limited on free hosts and even that is not enough to keep their servers from constantly overloading and crashing. Accounts are easily suspended for over-usage of resources or just for any particular reason the free host feels desire suspending you for. In addition people will not take you seriously as a business if you reside on a remove host. It is easy to find out where you are hosting by looking at DNS names or following a trace despatch. If it is found and made known that your site is on a free host your business ordain lose much credibility. Personally I would not believe any business that runs off of a free host because if someone cannot pay $5/month for a hosting service how can I possibly take them seriously as a business?2. Shared hosting – This is possibly a good starting point for a non e-commerce business. Shared hosting puts you on a server with many other users like free hosting although that ratio of users per server should be lower than on a remove host. There are many companies that grossly oversell shared hosting such as 1&1,Powweb,Servage and Ixwebhost among others. For a corporate website. I would highly recommend staying away from these hosting companies because the be of accounts they need to arrange on a server for things to financially bring home the bacon out is horrendous and you will often experience uptime issues bad technical give decrease servers and being suspended for absolutely no reason at all. If your going for a shared solution for a corporate website you be to not look for budget hosting options and instead go for the more expensive but higher quality hosting options. Good examples of such are mediatemple hosting and downtownhost com. I personally do not use either of these services but have heard nothing except for good reviews about them on web hosting forums. These high-quality shared hosts will furnish you a good go away and also provide options to grade to larger solutions once you are ready to expand.3. Semi-dedicated hosting – Semi-dedicated hosting is a mixed bag for corporate websites. Semi-dedicated hosting may allow for higher burst rates of usage than VPS(Virtual Private Hosting) but you also run the risk of getting suspended if your account keeps using a lot of CPU and RAM. In a semi-dedicated environment you are generally put on a server that has a very low client to server ratio and there are far fewer people competing for resources. But since the server is not sliced into sections everyone is still sharing a communal pie which means one person can slow everyone else down if he or she is experiencing arrive at usage ratios. This is generally much better than a shared plan for corporate hosting but at the usual prices these packages are offered at it is probably better to go with a VPS since both are about the same price. 4. VPS(Virtual Private Hosting) – If you’ve outgrown your shared host then a Virtual Private Server may be the next step you be to take. On a VPS server you overlap a server with relatively few clients like in a semi-dedicated plan. However unlike a semi-dedicated plan each account is sliced off into a displace area by itself. This means that no one else can use your allotted resources. Similarly you cannot acquire anyone else’ resources. This prevents one user from slowing everyone else down. However if you are that one user that constantly demands all of a server’s resources you may undergo a decrease website. In a VPS you will not get suspended for over-usage because you can’t really over-use anything. You have a set be of CPU and RAM you can use and a “burst RAM “ rate for emergencies. This write of solution is safer than a semi-dedicated solution and is a good stepping stone between going from shared hosting to having a dedicated server all to yourself. alter sure to get a VPS with a decent amount of guaranteed RAM or you ordain suffer slow website loading times.5. Dedicated Server – In this environment you have the server all to yourself and are not sharing with anyone. All the CPU and RAM is guaranteed to one person so you don’t have to worry about other populate. However unlike a VPS that is all the resources there is available and there is not a “burst rate” to take advantage of. You are also responsible for server management unless you go with a managed intend(which I recommend for a corporation). This solution is better than a VPS because it gives you consistent higher resources but also comes at a higher price. It is very important to choose a provider in a datacenter that has good technical support and uptime for a corporate website. Services I can recommend for this solution are LiquidWeb. Wiredtree and Softlayer com as all undergo guaranteed 24/7 support(if you pay for it) and excellent reputations. I personally use gate2vn net and have found them great for my needs but I do not run a corporate website and response times are generally a bit longer than the 15 minute times promised by the services mentioned above. If you need the absolute beat then I would recommend RackSpace and their “fanatical support”. Their servers cost over three times the amount that other places charge but they give on-demand telecommunicate give fully managed service and guaranteed website technical give converse and also 5-minute response times 7 days a week. 365 days a year(this is for real. I actually contacted them on Christmas once just to check). RackSpace ordain also back up you act to more complex solutions if you should be them.6. Dedicated cluster – This is the ultimate in hosting for extremely high-traffic sites. Most of the larger corporations such as Microsoft use this solution(MS also has their own datacenter but that be millions to build). In this setup a group of servers are working together to fulfill the needs of your website. If you change state a multi-billion dollar corporation you will need to go this despatch. Places like Wiredtree or Rackspace will be happy to help you with this solution. For startup businesses this is probably not something you will be looking at for quite a while.

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