Archive for the ‘Website Development’ Category

How to sell more software from your website

Web Design | Posted by Sanjiv
Jan 05 2010

You want to sell more software from your website? How do you make the client truly understand your product and trust it and your company enough to pay the price? Tips on what you should do.

Selling software online is not an easy task. How do you make the client truly understand your product and trust it and your company enough to pay the price? Like it or not, it’s very similar to selling face to face: the first impression may be decisive for the clients’s future actions. Online, the website is your face.

It has to be comprehensible and easy to use. Here are a few tips on how your website should be to sell software better:

  • It has to look professional and attractive at the same time.
    You don’t have to show off your web designer skills. Too many colours, graphics, flash animations or drop-down boxes can only tire the visitors and make them leave faster. Less graphics will also make the site load faster. At the same time, it shouldn’t be dull, so it needs to be somewhere in the middle.
  • Make sure your message comes across loud and clear.
    In order to sell more software, information about software products must be easy to find, easy to follow and the same goes for the order process. Since most information is in the text, make it easy to read. Some coloured backgrounds make the text difficult to read, like purples, orange and reds. On the other hand, dark backgrounds may have a depressing effect on the visitors’ mood. The text colour is very important. Keep in mind that different browsers show colours differently, so don’t go crazy with it. It’s better to use Plain fonts, like Arial, Times New Roman, Verdana and Courier, because they’re easier to read. Fancier fonts may be used for headlines, but not full text. Remember though that sans serif fonts are easier to read on screen.
  • Easy navigation is law.
    Make sure there’s a link to the homepage at the top left of every page, except the homepage itself. Be careful not to have ‘dead end’ from which the visitor can’t find their way back to where they came from. Place the most important links in the top part of each page. Clearly mark read and unread links, preferably using standard colours.
  • Base the site’s hierarchy on your customer’s needs.
    Don’t make them search the entire site before they find information about products, prices and payment methods.
  • Don’t make pages too long.
    A web shouldn’t be more than 2 or 3 normal pages lengths, as no one likes an endless scrolling. If you have information for more than that, divide it into several pages with short information clips on the main index page leading to the second page.
  • Check all the links on your website to make sure they lead to a page.
    Tags from the navigation menu must be representative for what that page is about.
  • Serve friendly error messages.
    Don’t let the visitors see a page with ’404 not found’ written on it. Put your creativity to good use. Error messages may include navigation to documents that do exist, a search box or a contact email address.
  • Have a privacy statement and testimonials.
    Potential clients must feel confident dealing with you. Having a separate page to express your policy towards their email addresses, how you accept orders and gather information, who has access to information and how you use that information will help you sell more software. Also make a separate page for comments from satisfied customers. Offer to include links to the customers’ websites in return for using their comments.
  • Contact information or a link to it should be on every page.
    If customers need additional information about the product, contact information like a phone number and an email address should be easy to find on the website. Let people know the hours and days of operation and the time needed to answer their requests. Give a contact name; it makes people have more faith that someone will actually read their message.
  • Set up a frequently-asked-questions (FAQ) page.
    Base it on real questions your customers had in the past.

The Benefits of ASP.Net Excel

Website Development | Posted by Sanjiv
Oct 05 2009

In business, spreadsheets have become a necessity. They are used for a wide range of purposes, including calculations and tracking. But how do you know which version is being used by end users when you send out a spreadsheet-related application or documentation? Some users may have Excel, others may have Open Office, and still others might not even be using spreadsheet software at all on their computer. What can you do to ensure your program or files are still going to operate? One option might be a program supporting ASP.NET Excel.

Finding the Right Spreadsheet Option

When you’re working on spreadsheets, you need to feel comfortable with the software. You don’t want to worry about whether or not you’ll open it on a different computer using different software and end up losing all of the formatting. You also want more convenient options so you can use the data in other ways and can convert the files into other formats, such as text files. This isn’t always possible with current spreadsheet software.

Another common problem with spreadsheets is that each software program tends to have their own calculation functions so you won’t necessarily be able to read the calculations made from one program in another spreadsheet. That can be a real problem if you need to continue on the work someone else started.

The bottom line is that whether you’re looking at paid software or open source programs, you’re going to run into many of the same limitations, especially when you’re working with a wide range of people who are using different programs or versions of spreadsheet software. You need some way to ensure consistency no matter what. Otherwise, you could end up with poorly formatted spreadsheets and unprofessional-looking finished products. You don’t want that to happen so you should look for an ASP.NET Excel program.

The Right Alternative for You

Bytescout Spreadsheet SDK (bytescout.com/bytescoutspreadsheetsdk.html) is just such as ASP.NET Excel program. You can use this program on any computer without even needing to have another spreadsheet program installed. Even without Open Office or Excel, you’ll be able to open spreadsheets saved in their file formats and can read, modify, change, or export those files into other formats, including XLS, XLSX, CSV, HTML, and TXT format for added flexibility and convenience.

With Bytescout Spreadsheet SDK (bytescout.com/bytescoutspreadsheetsdk.html), you can still use dozens of common functions for calculations and can still do cell formatting as needed. The program can also be used as part of ASP.NET, Visual Basic.NET, and Visual C#. The number of file formats that can be read and altered using the program, as well as the number of export file formats supported makes it one of the most versatile and useful programs available for spreadsheet users.

Even better, purchasing the program entitles you to free one year of free updates and technical support, as well as royalty free distribution with your application. This means you won’t have to worry any longer about which spreadsheet program is being used by end users. With the ASP.Net Excel program, they can use your application or view your documentation even if they have no such program installed.

Mark is the freelanced .NET and ASP.NET developer, with experience on different href=”http://bytescout.com/bytescoutspreadsheetsdk.html”>ASP.NET Excel and other back office projects

5 Website Design Common Mistakes You Should Avoid

Web Design | Posted by Sanjiv
Aug 29 2009

Websites disappear from the internet everyday. Do you want your website to be one of them?

Of course not.

Then how can you avoid your website’s failure?

The answer is – understand the common mistakes other websites made and avoid doing them in your website.

Here are 5 of them, which you should try to avoid at all cost.

1. A slow loading website.
Most visitors are impatient to wait for a website loading for more than 10 seconds. In building your website, try not to use any enormous graphic files. No, you do not need a high resolution images. No, you do not need lengthy movies or flash animation. No, you do not need appealing music. You need a website that deliver the information strict to the point at fast as possible, and for this reason, you should focus on functionality first, design second.

2. A complicated and difficult to understand navigationsystem.
do not make your menu bar too complicated, otherwise you will end up pushing your visitors away from your websites. Therefore, you need to make it easy for them to explore your website. Your pages must be linked in a logical way, and this connection should be easily navigable through an simple interface that even a 10 years old boy or 60 years old grandma will be able to understand. Place your navigation links either at the top of the page right below
the header, or at either side of the page in a separate column. This is where your visitors’ eyes tend to look once they want to visit the other pages in your website.

3. Low quality content.
Content is the king on the net. People use the internet to search information they need, and information is shared through your content. If your content is poorly written, who will have the patience to read it? Or if your content is not unique, why will people choose your website over others? In brief, there are two requisites for good quality content: excellent presentation and originality. Without either of this, your website will be in trouble for retaining repeat visitors.

4. Poor choice of keywords
Keywords are the terms that people search for when they’re looking for information. They drive traffic to your website. If you targeted the right keywords, quality targeted visitors will come. If you targeted the wrong keywords, your website will have low traffic. Therefore, you should research the right keywords before you start building your website and content.

5. A website without focus.
Focus is the key in designing a good website. Why would visitors who are interested with cats be interested with computer? There is no direct connection between the two subjects, it will just confuse your visitors and kick them away. So generally you should build your website on one main theme.

Now I have shared 5 common mistakes that you should avoid. Your online business success depends on how well your website designs. So it’s your time to think about how you can properly build your website. Take care.

Website Launch Tips For Small Businesses

Website Development | Posted by Sanjiv
Aug 27 2009

Intended Audience: Small Business Owners/webmasters and anyone new to the world of web design and search engine optimization (SEO) particularly those working with small businesses, organizations and sole traders.

When launching a new website there are a number of key issues to address in order to get your new website off to a good start and get it indexed by the search engines particularly Google.

Create a Sitemap

A sitemap file is used to inform the search engines about the content of your website in terms of the number of web pages, their names, and the priority of each page and the frequency of change. There are a number of online sitemap generators that you can use to create a sitemap though always check before submitting your sitemap to Google that it is complete and contains all the web pages that you want indexed.

Create a robots.txt

A robots.txt informs search engines about which content you do not want indexed by the search engines. For example most websites do not want their images or documents directories indexed by Google and a robots.txt file can be used to prevent their indexing.

Install a Google Map on your website

Most small business will have a requirement for an interactive location map on their website for one or more of their locations. Websites that use the Google Maps Application Programming Interface (API) tend to be indexed more quickly than websites that do not use this facility.

Note: All of the above items should be completed prior to your website going live.

Add Your Website URL to Google

As soon as your website is live then you should submit your website URL to Google to let them know the website is ready for crawling and indexing. You should also add your website URL to Bing and Yahoo at this time. Instructions to add your website URL to the above search engines can be easily found on each search engine.

Utilise Website Monitoring Tools

Once your website goes live it is very important to monitor its progress closely during the early weeks to ensure it gets indexed and there are no content issues. Tools such as Google Webmaster Tools and Yahoo Site Explorer are useful in this regard and will allow you to ascertain which web pages have been indexed, display backlinks, uncover content errors etc.

Obtain Relevant Links

Good quality relevant links are also important.

5 Questions to Ask Your Web Developer Before Outsourcing Your Work

Website Development | Posted by Sanjiv
Aug 27 2009

Choosing a web developer can be difficult, especially when you are not familiar with the intricacies of the internet, search engines and web standards. A web developer is equipped with a larger range of skills than that of a web designer. Along with designing, he/she can handle generally XTML coding, graphic layout, creating databases, programming and testing web standards. Often web developers give a good presentation and convince you of giving a good output. But they may not be able to meet the standards you expect when they get down to work. So it is better to be vigilant about choosing a web developer. Here are some question you should ask the web developer that ca help you in making the right choice.

  • Is he a “web developer” or “web application developer”?

Many people claim they are web developers and all they know ASP.NET. They believe they can build a websites by using juts that. Don’t buy that. To build a good website, knowledge about XHTML, SEO and web standard compliance are all essential skills. 

  • Does he/she test the websites for their compliance with web standards?

Web standards are guidelines for creating websites that are compatible on a variety of browsers. Make sure the web developer is familiar with this practice. If the website does not work on multiple browsers, users may get annoyed and may not take the trouble to try looking up your website on other browsers.

  • Is he/she familiar with building SEO friendly websites?

It is important that the person knows about SEO standards so that he can make your website SEO friendly. 

  • What is the experience the person has?

It is not enough that the developer has a lot of experience. Check if he/she has relevant experience so that a website that matches your expectations can be built. 

  • Are the person’s communication skills good?

This is not directly related to web development, but is very important in getting the person to understand your requirements so that it can be executed properly.