Saturday, 20 September 2014

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RMP Infotech
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Email - infotech@rmp.org.in

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Remember your marriage forever in your own website

Some Examples of websites for resturant

10 Essential Features of Every Good Business Website

So your business has a website — or you're in need of one for your brand new venture. Web design can be an overwhelming process, so we've spoken to a few web designers who told us what you need to have on your site ... and what you can probably do without (like crazy Flash animation).
The first thing you must do is secure a good, catchy URL. Make sure it makes sense for your business, doesn't have quirky spelling and is available on social platforms, too. Panabee can help you get creative if your business name is taken, and Name Vine is a great resource for seeing what's available.
Once you've set up your domain, it's time to build out the site and make some big decisions. Here are 10 must-haves for your website that will ensure your customers have a positive experience on the site, improve your company's digital footprint and increase engagement with your brand.

1. A Logical Roadmap

ure, a website should be aesthetically pleasing, but it's more important for it to be useful. Before you even pick a server or type an HTML tag, you should map out how you'd like the website to work. This is important both for user experience and for SEO, since Google considers the content and structure of a site when it ranks for search. So, map out and mock up a design for the site — what designers call "wireframing" — and run it by a few friends to make sure it makes sense and is intuitive. "If they can understand the logic, so will the people visiting your website ... and Google bots when ranking it!" says Pete Mills of web design consultancy Calls9.

2. Crucial Business Information

"The biggest failure that people have is that they try to build the website they want, not necessarily the website they need," says designer Josh Frankel. Take a restaurant, for example — Frankel says "everyone wants music and this giant 'about' page," but they neglect the basic things like the menu, contact information and directions.
Keep text to a minimum when it comes to your mission statement, because you should be writing things so people can skim — we all have short attention spans. One helpful tip for conveying your mission is to compare your business to something else, like how MeUndies.com is marketed as "Warby Parker for undies" to align itself with the eyewear manufacturer's keen curation and by-mail convenience. Don't underestimate brevity — one or two sentences can be really powerful, says Frankel.
Depending on your business, you should have a few things on your website that fall into the realm of "information." We know restaurants need a menu and a list of locations (ideally with directions or a map), but every industry has its necessary items. If you're an etailer, you need product images (and they need to be good pictures). If you work in the service industry and have a business that relies heavily on customer service and referrals, put some testimonials on your site. For example, a wedding planner could have one of her recent brides write about her experience with the business. A web designer should include screenshots or link out to previous work. A hair salon could have client testimonials about a stylist's skills and promptness. Tailor your site so that it offers the information users are likely to be looking for.

3. Contact Information

We can't stress enough that most crucial business detail is contact information— which is why it has its own section. Mills exclaims, "How many times do you visit a website and think 'how hard is to contact this company?' Have a number, email, address and a contact form easily accessible and visible," he says. It makes a difference because there's nothing more frustrating than being unable to get in touch with a needed business or service.
When you put an email address or a phone number on the site, don't upload this information as part of an image — the number or address should be able to be clicked on or copied right from the site in order to place the call or send an email conveniently and quickly. Most smartphones these days have the ability to do "click to call" on the web, so make the process as easy as possible for users.
Don't want your phone ringing off the hook? Just use an email address, but be sure you answer emails in a timely manner. And please, get an email address for your domain. Using Gmail — or worse, an AOL email address — isn't professional, and that's what you're striving to be. If you like Gmail's interface, you can use Google Apps to set up custom email addresses through Gmail — it's free for up to 10 email addresses.

4. Clear Navigation

A map is useless without a legend and a website is useless without clear navigation. Make sure you use easy-to-understand and logical names for the various pages of your site — contact, about, FAQ, etc. Being clever or cryptic will just be a turnoff for users.
When developing your navigation strategy, you should consider a call to action. What is it that you want people to do on your site? Place an order? Email for a quote? Become a member? Come to your brick-and-mortar store? Call to speak with a customer service rep? Make your goals clear and obvious.
"Put yourself in the shoes of who's coming to your site," says Frankel. "What are they trying to get done? Think about the goal of your potential customer." Pepper the site with action items to help customer easily do what you want them to do. Birchbox has done a good job of this, encouraging users to "learn more" and directing them to claim a gifted Birchbox, since it's a popular gift item and giftees are likely to be first-time visitors.

5. Security


If you're selling anything online, you need to put some effort into securing your site with an SSL certificate. The SSL will encrypt communications between you and your clients (i.e. a credit card number, Social Security number), which will allay their fears of providing such information, since there's so much identity theft on the web. VeriSign, TrustE, Entrust and GeoTrust are good options to explore.

6. Social Media Integration

Twitter. Facebook. Tumblr. YouTube. Pinterest. Google+. LinkedIn. Instagram. Foursquare. There are a lot of social platforms out there, and you should promote your presence on them on your website, because social media is critical part of marketing your business. Though not a traditional business, digital savvy Team Coco does a great job promoting its many social channels on the website.
Integrating these platforms into your website will help boost your SEO, improve your business' footprint on the social web and build your following across numerous social platforms. Is it worth it to maintain a presence on so many social platforms? Yes — as long as you actually maintain your content, you'll keep your brand top-of-mind and keep users engaged. "Social media is not going to leave us anytime soon and its worth the investment in time — it does make a difference," says Mills.

7. A Mobile-Ready Version

 

Smartphones and tablets are driving an increasing amount of web traffic, and the numbers are only going to grow as mobile devices become cheaper and more mainstream. Andy Chu, director of Bing for Mobile, says 70% of task completion happens within one hour on mobile sites, meaning that people are often browsing on the web with intent — they're looking to do something, buy something or go somewhere. If someone searches for a restaurant on his smartphone, he's likely to eat at that restaurant within the hour, says Chu. So your website better be readable on handheld devices.
"Until two years ago, designing for the web meant designing for a computer, now it means designing for anything with an internet connection," says Frankel, referring to laptops, tablets and smartphones, all of which have different screen sizes. So, how can you do it? Responsive design.
Responsive website design enables you to use fluid widths, so that your website layout will adapt to the screen on which it's being browsed. You can enter HTML code so that your sidebar takes up, say 20% of the screen width, and the remaining 80% is reserved for the body of your website. Layouts are adjustable and images are scalable to make for a better web experience on myriad devices. Here are examples of sites with responsive design, so you can see for yourself.
Do you simply want to focus on developing a mobile website? You can use Mobify and other tools to create a mobile version of your website.

8. FAQ

People have a lot of questions. As you hear concerns from customers and receive feedback via email, gather up the most frequently asked questions into a list and offer clear, concise answers. Questions often revolve around materials and ingredients used (for allergy reasons), shipping information, company history, sizing (for apparel brands) and cancellation or return policies.

9. Good Hosting

Don't mess around with hosting. "You need your site on a mainstream provider, and it costs a handful of dollars every month to have 24/7 technical assistance," says Mills.
Not having good hosting can cost you in many ways. A slow site is frustrating, one that fails to load is obnoxious and both could turn off customers. But beyond annoying your users and increasing your bounce rate, poor hosting can also affect your rank in search engines, since many search engine algorithms detect webpage loading speed, says Malakai Whitston of design blog WebDesignFan.

10. Here's a Curveball — Some Features You Don't Need

Don't underestimate the power of simplicity. Feel free to forgo these things on your website:
  • Music
  • Flash
  • Anything that autoplays, whether it's music or a video. "It's not something you want to do to somebody," says Frankel.
  • Extraneous information and media — it'll only slow down the page's loading time.

If I want to create my own Web site, what do I have to do?

The best thing about the Web is the fact that anyone with an idea can create a Web site practically for free. A simple Web site costs about $1 a day to operate. That means that there are millions of different ideas out there being tried every day. Web sites broadcast to a gigantic world-wide audience instantly -- at no other time in the history of the world has a single human being been able to reach so many people for so little money.
So let's say that you have an idea for a Web site. What do you need to do to get started? There are a couple different levels for your idea to be operating on. Let's take a look at them.
Let's say that you have an idea for a Web site, and you have a cool domain name that you want to use. You aren't sure when you will be able to get started on the site itself, but you want to make sure that nobody else gets the idea and takes that domain name. For example, let's say that your domain name is MyIdea.com. What you want to do is check the domain name registry and make sure it's not already taken. If it is available, you want to register that domain name (also known as "reserving" or "parking" the domain name). Registering the name gives you ownership of it. In order for you to park the domain name, it has to actually live on a server somewhere. It will usually have some sort of "Under Construction" notice that shows up when people try to access that domain name.
You need to register your domain name. There are many companies that will park your domain name on a server, and a number of them charge a fee. Verio is one of the companies that will park your domain name, and it provides a nice form that makes it easy to check for domain name availability. It only takes a couple of minutes to check and reserve a domain name.
Let's say that you have an idea for a content site and you want to get started right away. A content site is a site that contains information for people to read or look at. The information might be words, pictures, links, etc. Yahoo! is essentially a gigantic content site. To create a content site, you need to learn HTML so you can create your pages, and then you need to find a company to host the site. That is, you need a company that will operate the Web server for your site:
  • Learn about HTML and Web pages
  • Learn about companies that can host your web site
Or maybe you have an idea for an e-commerce site. An e-commerce site lets you display the things you want to sell, take orders, process credit cards, etc. An e-commerce site is a bit more involved to set up because you have to apply for a merchant account and other commerce-related services. However, it's not that much trouble.
Good luck creating your new site!

What do I need to make a website?

Lack of answers to the question "what do I need to make a website?" prevents many people from bringing their businesses to the Web, or being able to assess what it will take to do so or even if it is worth it to their company.

It's not that they're not intelligent or knowledgeable about their fields; the problem is simply that the Internet is high tech, and we're not born knowing all about it. So if you have that "it's all Greek to me" feeling, that's pretty normal.
In this overview, we'll take a brief look at what it takes — in plain English.

What do you need to make a website?

Essentially, what's needed to make a simple website is:
  1. A computer (this goes without saying, but we've been asked)
  2. An Internet connection
  3. The website itself (plus programs for making images and text)
  4. Browsers (e.g., Internet Explorer and Netscape)
  5. Web hosting space
  6. Domain name (e.g., yourwebsite.com — optional)
  7. Uploading software

A Computer

Although it may be obvious that you'll need a computer to create a website, we've been asked often enough that we thought we'd mention it.

An Internet Connection

You'll need an account with an Internet Service Provider (such as Earthlink) so that you can log on to the Web, upload your website, receive email, etc.

The Website

Pages & Programs. Simple websites generally are made up of two main elements: pages and images. The pages themselves are all text (really!), such as the text you see on this page, interspersed with web page coding that causes browsers to display them as, well, a web page.
You don't even need expensive programs to write it — any old text editor, like NotePad, can suffice. But, of course, you must know HTML to do this. You basically have two options:
  1. Get a graphically-oriented program which writes the HTML for you. These will generally work well for you at the beginning, but later on you will probably find that you need to learn HTML.
  2. Use a simple text editor such as NotePad, which comes standard with the Windows operating system, and learn HTML. While this sounds a bit more difficult, you can spend the time you'd take learning how to use your graphically-oriented program actually learning HTML — and it's not that hard to learn! This will save you a lot of confusion.
Images & Image Programs. Few websites can go without images. At the very least, you'll need a decent logo, and perhaps some pictures to enhance your presentation. Images can really make a website.
You will likely find that you need to enhance the images or, at the very least, prepare them for use on the Web. There are a number of image editing programs running from Adobe Photoshop (the expensive industry standard) and Macromedia Fireworks to Adobe's Photoshop Elements, which will allow you add various "effects" (such as shadows) to your images as you prepare them for display on the Web.

Web Browsers

A web browser is a program you use to surf the Web — like the one you're using to view this page.
As you create your website, you'll need to test it in different browsers to see how it will look on the Web and to spot any errors. At a minimum, I recommend testing in later versions of Internet Explorer, Netscape and Opera. See our earlier issue entitled Web Designer Tools.
Tip: in my opinion, it's a mistake to code websites for only one browser, such as Internet Explorer. Your best potential customers may be using another browser.

Web Hosting

Once your website is complete, you'll need somewhere to put it so that people can view it on the Web — that is, you'll need a web hosting account.
If you're making a personal website, you can probably use the web hosting space your Internet Service Provider (e.g., Earthlink) may have included with your Internet connection account. However, for anything more — and certainly if we're talking about your company website — you'll need professional web hosting.
Free Web Hosting. Free web hosting exists; however, it is normally slow, lacks effective or fast customer support, and probably won't give the impression you wish to give to clients and potential customers. Same with cheap web hosting.
Web hosts usually have online instructions for uploading websites and setting up email; the better ones offer support by email; the best ones also have phone support. Truthfully, one probably never calls a web host unless something is drastically wrong — which is not the time to be waiting for emails or waiting until the 9-5:00 shift arrives for the day!
If you can afford it, I'd suggest going with one of the better web hosts. It will save you time and aggravation, and make you look good (and allow you to sleep at night!).
Professional web hosting usually costs around $20-$35 a month; well worth it in terms of making you look professional, wouldn't you say?

Domain Name

A "domain name" is actually a website address, such as yourwebsite.com.
Normally, the web hosting space provided with an Internet Service Provider account does not allow for domain names. Instead, you get an address much like this:
http://members.yourserviceprovider.com/~yourcompany
While this may suffice for a personal website, it is an inappropriate address for a company. It's too long to fit on a business card, too hard to remember, looks unprofessional — and don't forget that you'd be clarifying it with clients and potential clients more often than you'd wish. Worse, if you ever change Service Providers, you'll no longer have this address, making you effectively "disappear" from the Web, and the time and effort you've put into getting listed in search engines will now be wasted.
That is, you'll be starting over. Getting a website is only the first step; there's the matter of promoting it on the Web.
This goes for email addresses, too: mycompany@someprovider.com makes a company look small, unprofessional and unsavvy, whereas you@yourcompany.com does the opposite — and advertises your website at the same time. If you move or change ISPs — or even web hosts — neither your email address nor your domain name change.
Domain names are registered, not bought; they normally cost from $10-35 a year.

Uploading Program

Last but not least, once your website is completed, you'll need to put it (the pages and images) on your web hosting space. This is called uploading. There are quite a few programs available for doing this. One of our favorites is Ipswitch WS_FTP Pro. And then — always, always, always test it in your browser(s). Always.



Well, that's it, the bare bones of what it takes to make a website. I hope this has been of help!

What’s the difference between a website and a blog?

A website is collection of online “pages” containing information and images. A blog (short for “Web log”) is a specific type of website where articles are posted periodically, displayed with the newest entries at the top of the page. These articles (called “posts”) are typically written by the site owner, but “guest posts” can also be included from other people. Blog posts were originally a sort of online diary, and they are often written in an informal, personal style. Most blogs allow readers to post comments on each article.
Blogging is a great way for authors to share news, information and promotions with their target audience and develop an online following. Blogs are also an ideal tool for nonfiction authors to showcase their expertise in their topic. Blog posts are valuable in attracting readers to the site. They even help websites rank higher in search engine results, because search engines value sites that are updated frequently.

So, do you need both a website and a blog? For most authors, I advise creating a combined site that incorporates both traditional information pages and blog posts. This is very easy to do when you set up your site on a blogging platform. (More about that in a future article.)

Do Writers Need a Website?

Let’s get the hard part out of the way first. No writer coming up can survive on story alone today and even writing talent doesn’t guarantee you a spot on the stage. No one will pay you to write poetry, and it’s difficult to even give your fiction away for free and get anyone to pay attention to it. There are too many people out there looking for their quarter hour of fame and demanding to be heard which makes it extremely difficult to find the ones who do deserve the attention, the fame and the money that comes from excellent talent well applied.
So assuming that you’re not Stephen King’s son or daughter and that you don’t have inside biographical knowledge on the latest former teen idol train wreck; you’re going to have to start where all good writers do—in the streets begging for attention. The only difference between today and the past is that the boulevard has turned into the information superhighway, and if you don’t have your own website, you’ve lost the race before you even started.

Step 1: Going Past the Blog

I hate the word blog. It sounds so pretentious to me to say, “Read my blog;” It’s a website, end of story. But the fact is that the word blog has become a major part of our cultural lexicon, and you do yourself damage by refusing to embrace the format. That’s just what a blog is—a format of presenting content to your readers. For those that don’t know, a weblog (or blog for short) is a piece of software which coordinates and catalogues the publishing of your content into a nifty chronological listing which you can categorize by post and even tag so the search engines make it easier for information seekers to find your writing.
While the landing page of your weblog features your posts in a list format, each post is a page unto itself and allows for much easier referencing by search engines. What this means is that if you have a decent design for your site then publishing content becomes a no-brainer and in a short period of time, you can build a site with hundreds of pages of quality content that each becomes indexed and searchable by anyone with sense enough to type keywords into Google.
You can hire someone to do all the fancy stuff for you but only if you have what it takes to get people to sit down for 75 consecutive seconds to read what you’ve written. That’s the trick because today we want more information faster and without effort. People are reading less in one sitting because they don’t have to anymore. You as a writer must deal with this reality and either write in snippets digestible and interesting enough to keep people coming back, or you have to give them something worth sticking around for a few minutes when their fingers are screaming at them to click the mouse button and move on already.

Step 2: Get It Together

Now that you’ve made the decision to get a website, where should you start? Typepad or Blogger would be my suggestions unless you’ve got several hundred bones to lay down on a custom-made site design with preferred hosting. If so, I recommend using WordPress, but do some research and find out which option is best for you in the long run. I have changed blogging platforms three times now and each time has been a headache that was well worth it in the end (I use WordPress now on an independent server).
If you’re a web designer, I’d recommend holding off on your custom site design and pick one of the standard templates just so you can get yourself up and running. Start writing immediately because you’ve got a lot of catching up to do; there have been millions of blogs started and abandoned since I started using blogger over two years ago and millions more are coming. That’s a lot of bullcheet for people to wade through until they get to your stuff.

Step 3: Write Interesting and Write Right

Many writers online are all about the stream of consciousness diary style expression without edit or filter, but I am not. I believe that good writing may start there but that great writing comes from great editing and multiple revisions. If you care about your work and are passionate about getting others to read and respect your writing, meticulous editing will show proper grammar, sentence structure and capitalization. This attention to detail will show agents and publishers that you mean business and actually care about the product you’re putting out into the world. Your readers will appreciate you treating them like adults and putting capitals on proper nouns and the beginning of your sentences.

Step 4: Network with Your Blogroll, RSS and Your Time and Attention on Other Writers

A Blogroll is a section in the sidebar of your site where you list other sites that you read and provide links to those sites so your readers can click through. Whenever you mention or quote something that other writers have written, you can link to them using a trackback ping which is basically a shout out from your server to their server saying, “Hey, I mentioned what you wrote over here—come check out what I said.”
Also, get hip to Really Simple Syndication (RSS) which is a feed you subscribe to using an RSS Aggregator like Newsgator (which I use) or Bloglines—kind of like Tivo for your Internet. Subscribe to all your favorite blogs, news, link dumps (sites like Digg which link to multiple news stories or other content rich sites which will provide you with endless fodder to write about and give your interesting opinion on).
Leave intelligent comments on other sites, adding to the conversation and always giving props in a respectful manner (trust me, it’s not worth it to get into vicious arguments online—you always lose even when you win) and people will click onto your site and some of them will even keep coming back. If you’re lucky, the bloggers (who should always be readers first) will link to you, put you on their blogroll and send others your way.
Step 5: Let Go of the Old Model of Publishing but Don’t Forget It Completely
I can remember senior year in my BFA Creative Writing program—everything was all about prepping and shipping out short stories and poems to obscure literary magazines in the hopes that some pretentious highbrow would descend from their hermetically sealed academic podium to bestow the grandest of honors upon us newbies—publishing us in a magazine that only a handful of people might read.
I am still amazed when I hear from good and intelligent writers that they are reticent to create a website and publish their work on it because many magazines refuse to publish something which has been published prior in any medium, especially online where anyone can access it for free. BS, I say! If your writing is good enough and hundreds or thousands of people come to your site to read your work, any magazine worth its sticker price should be happy to republish your work on their pages. If what you say is interesting enough to enough people, someone will be willing to pay you to polish it up, revise it and put it out there for their readers who will in turn become your readers. Writing is fast-becoming a meritocracy and we the writers of the new millennium will be the ones to profit from the evolution.

Step 6: Give Everything Away

There are so many benefits I could give you to writing online but I’ll mention one outright. Your writing will get better because your readers will tell you what they want to read. The ability for them to leave comments and have their comments read and commented on by other readers allows for a one-to-many conversation about your ideas and your writing that will shape the way you write to them and polish your work so that the act of writing engaging content will become easier and easier to you as time and talent aggregate.
So don’t hold anything back online—give it away and it will come back to you ten fold. If you provide an aesthetically pleasing online environment along with creative, interesting and original content; slowly but surely you will build up your reputation (not to mention your portfolio) online and you will gain the respect and attention of the right people. Keep hammering away and your tipping point will come and you’ll be able to look back and say that you built your writing career from nothing to an audience that you earned through raw talent honed laser sharp and perseverance as thick as the yearly reject pile at Simon and Schuster.


MintonJoshua Minton is the author of Flipping the Temple: Win the Information War Using the Internet to Achieve Fantastic Success as an Artist. You can keep up with him on award winning website, Boys Wear Pants, Men Wear Trousers where he is currently reposting his serial novel …And the Third Floor Magistrates Took the Rape

15 Quick Tips About Websites for Authors

  1. Having an author website can help you get published. The larger the following you have before reaching out to a publisher, the more likely that publisher is going to invest time and money in you.
  2. Author websites MUST be mobile-friendly. It’s 2014, and every author website needs to be visible on mobile devices, including both tablets/iPads and smartphones/iPhones.
  3. The best thing an author can do on his or her website is blog, blog, blog. The worst thing an author can do is build a blog and then not keep it current. After all, if an author isn’t paying attention to the site, why should a visitor?
  4. The design of an author website should convey the genre of the book(s). For example, a romance author should have a website that’s romantic in nature; it shouldn’t be so cookie-cutter that it looks similar to that of a children’s book author or a nonfiction author.
  5. An author website is part of an author’s brand. Before building an author website, you need to have a very clear idea of your overall brand and message. And that message should clearly come across when someone arrives on the site, in the form of a tagline or something similar.
  6. The average amount of time someone spends on a website? Three seconds. Make sure your author website is strong enough to take advantage of those three seconds and really grab a reader’s attention.
  7. Too many authors forget to collect email addresses. There is no good reason an author shouldn’t use his or her website to build an email list. Even if there isn’t going to be a traditional newsletter, that email list can turn out to be invaluable when there’s a new book to announce.
  8. Book authors aren’t always copywriters. Writing the text for an author website is a very different beast from writing a book. If you have a history of writing marketing copy, great. If not, then have someone who does work with you on writing the copy for your website.
  9. Be wary of too much design. The design of a website is important. Too much design can make the site hard to use or unfriendly to the search engines. Trust the experts to find the right balance between design and functionality.
  10. Author websites can interact well with social media. Some people might tell you that if you have a Facebook presence, you don’t need a website … or vice versa. Don’t believe them. Use your website to build followers on social media (by embedding links and widgets). Then use social media to drive traffic to your website, where you can really sell your brand.
  11. Building an author website doesn’t necessarily mean you’ll get traffic to it. You know that saying, “If you build it, they will come?” Not true for author websites. Building a website is the first step. Getting traffic there is a whole other ballgame.
  12. An author needs to decide early on: is it a book website or an author website? Is the goal of the site to sell the current book? Or is it to build a following for the author? Ensuring that the brand and the message is clear from the beginning is essential.
  13. Every page needs a “buy the book” link. How is that website ultimately going to pay for itself? By selling books, of course. With that in mind, don’t make it difficult for people to buy your book from the site. Include “buy the book” links everywhere the book cover appears.
  14. When it comes to SEO, time is your best friend. A new author website isn’t going to show up on Google search results right away. It can take weeks for it to appear at all. And then, it can take months (as well as some SEO strategies) to start climbing up the search results ladder. Patience is key.
  15. Author websites need to address all audiences. It’s not just readers that visit these sites. There are agents, publishers, media, book club organizers, etc… who may wind up there. Make sure they each can find exactly what they’re looking for quickly and easily.

6 Things Every Author Website Needs


1. Your Books

Now, I know this seem obvious, but a large focus of your site really should be on your books. They are your pride and joy, your little creations, and probably the reason someone has heard of you and is coming to your site. With that in mind here are some more specifics on what about your books you should include.
A list of all of your published books
This isn’t a place to pick and choose which books you should show. Your author site should include all books you have ever published, even ones that are now out of print. Don’t leave people guessing as to whether the person who wrote the book they just finished is really you or not. You don’t necessarily need to heavily publicize all your works, but they should be discoverable.
Links to buy your books
While your own website might not be the place you sell the majority of your books, not having them available for purchase online would be silly. Don’t worry about trying to setup a complicated ecommerce system yourself – links to Amazon, Barnes and Noble and/or another online store are just fine. If you can, offer your visitor choices as to where to buy their book, but don’t give so many options that you create choice paralysis.
Your latest book
While most authors have a library of published books, they are usually focused on just actively promoting and marketing their latest story. Use your site design to surface and market the books you want to promote. Your homepage is a great place to place the cover of your most recent book and a great place for a teaser about why your visitor should become your reader.


2. A Way to Connect

Readers at your site have made an active decision to seek you out and read more about you. Chances are they are either a fan or are on their way to becoming one. And fans are people. And people that want to connect to other people, especially ones whose work they love. Offer your readers a chance to connect to you.
Now, this can get tricky. You want your readers to be able to get to know you a little better, but you don’t want them coming to your house for a sleepover. I think the balance here is to find a means of communication with your readers that a) maintains a comfortable privacy for you and b) is something that you will use. Then let readers know what this avenue is and offer it to them easily.
In many cases social media is the perfect solution for this. Users can follow you on Twitter or like you on Facebook without you following them back. They can send small messages to you without you having to give out your email address or telephone number. But again, I wouldn’t suggest creating a Twitter account or Facebook page (or any other social media channel) unless you really are going to use it.


3. Upcoming appearances

Taking the connection theme another step, readers love to meet authors. You website should feature pertinent information about you, and your public appearances are hugely pertinent. Whether you are doing a book signing, presenting at a workshop, or even just attending a conference you need to get that info out to as many people as you can. The very first place these dates should go is on your website. If you’re not getting the word out about your appearance, who is?


4. About the Author Page

Your author website is about you – the author.  So give your visitors as much information about you as you can. Make it obvious to find this info by creating an “About the Author” page.
This is a great place to have go-to information for press members that want information about you. Make sure your bio has everything a journalist needs and add more info that gets frequently requested. Another great idea is to have a link to a hi-res photo so that you don’t have to keep emailing your bio photo to people that ask for it.


5. A Call to Action

This is something that every website really should have. It’s a question that I ask all of my clients when we start a project, “What do you want visitors to your site to do?” Don’t be coy here. Make it obvious what you want them to do and offer a big easy way to do it. Is the point of your page to visitors to buy a book? Give them a big “Buy Now” button. Do you want more followers on Facebook? Place a “Like Me on Facebook” at the top of every page.
You should have some sort of call to action on every page, but most importantly on your homepage. Coming off of your homepage, what do you want the user to do?


6. Personality


Your writing is a reflection of your unique personality and style. Your website should be too. The design of your site should be unique to you and your work. Try not to use templates that will make your site look just like every other website out there. Working with a good designer can really help you set create a complete mood on your site. The visual design should mirror and expand the character of your books, while staying easy for your visitors to use and read.

The Web in education

The Web has spurred our imagination as to how education could be radically transformed and enhanced through the adoption of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs). While there have been many significant innovations and successes over the last decade there have also been many unrealised aims. Beliefs in technology-driven change for education have been countered by shortcomings in technological understanding by educationalists and in turn by shortcomings in the understanding of educational theories and learning concepts by technologists. The use of the Web in education has revealed issues such as the distinction between formal and informal learning; the packaging and formatting of learning materials for online distribution and use; the management of learning materials and processes in virtual and managed learning environments; solutions offered by the semantic Web; and how the quality of experience in interactive learning environments relates to the quality of the Internet infrastructure. A comparison between the performance of early and current Web technologies from a user perspective is given for an interactive learning environment which has been in use for over a decade. Client, server, network and protocol components which contribute to the quality of experience for the end user are presented and analysed. In summary, this paper examines the use of the Web in education to date and looks forward to new challenges and aspirations such as MOOCs (massively online open coursewares) and the immersive 3D Web as the basis for the next generation of learning environments.
Some Expert Views
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Colin Allison is a Reader in the School of Computer Science at the University of St Andrews, Scotland. He has worked for over 20 years in two complementary research strands: the use of networked and distributed systems to support teaching and learning, and the analyses of these systems when loaded by interactive learning environments. He holds an MA in Sociology from the University of Edinburgh and a PhD in Computer Science from St Andrews.
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Rosa Michaelson is a Senior Lecturer in Information Systems in the School of Business, University of Dundee, Scotland. She has worked in academia for over 30 years. She has a BSc in Mathematics from Edinburgh, an MSc in Knowledge-Based Systems from Heriot-Watt and a PhD from the Institute of Education, London. Her thesis topic was a socio-technical investigation of thirty years of educational technology adoption in higher education.
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Thanassis Tiropannis is a lecturer in the Web and Internet Science Group at the University of Southampton. His research includes distributed linked data infrastructures and linked data for higher education. He has previously worked on Web technologies and e-learning at Athens Information Technology Institute. He holds a DipIng in Informatics from the University of Patras, Greece, and a PhD in Computer Science from University College London.
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Iain Oliver is a Research Fellow in the School of Computer Science at the University of St Andrews. His research interests are in network traffic measurement, management and adaptation. He holds a BSc and PhD in Computer Science from St Andrews. His PhD topic was adaptive traffic management for virtual worlds.
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Alan Miller is a lecturer in the School of Computer Science at the University of St Andrews. His research interests are in network traffic management, the use of technology to enhance learning and systems aspects of virtual worlds. He holds a PhD in Computer Science from the University of Glasgow, Scotland.