Marketing

4 Hot Ways to Drive Mad Traffic

Traffic in other word for beginners is a way of driving visitors to a particular website in order for the website to gain the required exposure needed and to effectively complement the task in which the website is designed for. Traffic is very much important when it comes to online business. Whatsoever you may be doing, whatever the nature of the business may be, if you do not make use of traffics, your business cannot progress the way you want it to progress; because without traffic, your website would lack exposure and cannot be seen in any niche online. So this is telling you that every service you make use of online that gives you the best satisfaction you need is made possible by the help of traffic. The examples of such websites are yahoomail.com, googlemail.com and some of the other ones EasyAzon that I cannot begin to mention. The morale of what I am trying to emphasize here is just that traffic is an imperative and inevitable aspect of your task online that must be handled with all seriousness in order to be among the big players. As result of this, and because of some newbie and some have been out there online who are having a lot websites at their disposal but is like they are having the required result at the end of the day, I will like to unleash a seven secret on how to draw traffics to your website.1. ARTICLE WRITING. Article writing is another way of saying blogging. The effectiveness of this technique is very much dynamic and cannot be quantified; and that is why I will say that your effectiveness and how skillful you are in blogging will determine your rate of success overtime.


Verticity Playing B 2 B Matchmaker

A new B2B marketplace for matching buyers of IT development services with developers here and abroad has just gone live. Executives at Verticity, based here, say that during pilot testing, the company found the greatest demand came from customers looking for someone to build them an e-commerce site. ”They may say they want one [similar to another seen online],” says Jeff Mason, CEO of VertiCity. “Or they want two pieces of software integrated.” Mason, who spent 30 years at IBM (NYSE:IBM) prior to launching VertiCity, encourages buyers to write multiphased requests for proposal (RFPs) rather than a single, million-dollar bid. Similarly, Verticity’s sellers,its developer fleet,typically package their work in chunks, “so both parties get money flowing in increments,” he says. ”I think we would go back [to VertiCity's services],” says Sachin Chaudhry, principal of webdesign StudentOnline.com, a New York start-up that offers a Web-based application for college faculty and students. Verticity led StudentOnline.com to Astata, a company that develops and hosts wireless applications. Astata wrote a wireless component for StudentOnline.com’s application so that users can access the site with handheld devices such as PDAs or a cell phone. ”We got something like 30 bids, and we filtered out the bids that were potentially way too high [in cost],” Chaudhry says. “From five or six bids, we narrowed it down to one. [The choice] was a little price-conscious, but we also had a deadline for when we needed to roll out the application,the fall semester,” he adds. VertiCity hires developers from outside the United States to work on retainer for U.S. companies, Mason says. Roughly half of the company’s stable of developers live and work in Asia, he says.

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