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  Category: Articles » Internet & Online Businesses » Article
 

Job Description: Webmaster




By Lois S.

Job description: webmaster

A brain surgeon was conversing with a famous writer at a party. "When I retire,
I'd like to become a writer," he told her. "That's interesting," she responded.
"When I retire, I'd like to become a brain surgeon." Running a website isn't
exactly brain surgery, but like writing professionally, neither is it as easy as
many people think it is. But as with writing, it looks easy. "It must be nice to
work at home and make money online," they say. "Can you show me how?"
How do we as webmasters answer that question?

Getting started as a webmaster

To begin, we can try to quell any misconceptions that people may have. No,
we do not lie around watching TV all day while the money pours in. The skills
needed to derive income online take more than a few hours to develop. And
while we enjoy what we do, it's work. It takes time, sometimes a lot of time.
Running a revenue-generating website is part (or in some cases, all) of
running a business. Talking about business specifics can help people
understand what's involved. When friends and relatives ask us to show them
how to make money online, we can ask them what products or services they
plan to offer. Have they researched the market to see if there is enough
demand for their idea? Do they even have an idea? Have they found a niche?
Have they written up a business plan and looked into the costs of the products
or services they want to provide, a business license, insurance, and other
business expenses? They need to know all that in addition to being able to run
a website. Not that we want to discourage people, but we don't want them to
waste their time getting into something that they aren't prepared for. Or
perhaps they already have a bricks-and-mortar business and want to start
offering their services online as well. On to the website itself. No night school
course or diploma fully prepares people for running an online business. Most
or all of us are self-taught to a great degree, learning from our mistakes and
picking up valuable knowledge from website articles and forums. We all
started at the beginning, and we had some success before we knew
everything that we needed to know. We still don't know everything. But
learning does take time and effort. What does an aspiring webmaster need to
know to get started? How to choose, register, and protect a domain name

What do look for when choosing a web host for specific needs

Web design standards and principles, HTML, CSS, perhaps some
programming languages (but a website builder or template may be adequate
for a starter website)

How to choose and set up a shopping cart

What to look for in a merchant account and payment gateway (PayPal or
PayQuake are probably fine for starting out)

Search engine optimization: finding the right keywords and knowing how and
where to use them, getting inbound links, avoiding techniques that could get
sites banned from search engines

How to write online copy that works for both an online audience and for search
engine bots

Web-specific advertising and marketing techniques



As the webmaster world turns

"Ah, once I do all that, the money will flow to me," people may say. It might
start coming in with all of the above in place. But will it keep coming? Not if the
competition continues adding content and inbound links and we do nothing.
That's why we're putting time into acquiring more inbound links and promoting
our site instead of lying around watching TV as people might imagine. We're
analyzing our website statistics to see what we can learn about our visitors
and how we can make our site work better for them. We're keeping up on
what's new in SEO, web development, and our field of business. We're looking
for ways to try to stay ahead of the competition. And, of course, we're
responding to inquiries and selling the products or providing the services that
we offer at our website. Customer service is just as important online as it is
with face-to-face contact. We're still serving real people. Online, people
sometimes expect immediate responses, which makes taking a day off less of
an option. We may be communicating with people whose native language
isn't the same as ours, which can create communication difficulties. While
most people are polite, some use the anonymity of online contact to be rude in
ways they wouldn't think of behaving in front of us. And if they feel that our
service isn't good enough, they may share their unhappiness in online forums.
Working from home and being our own boss has its benefits. We can work at
our own pace and take time to do what we need to do in our personal lives, If
we want, we can turn on the TV in the middle of the day to watch our favorite
soap ¡ª but we probably make up for the time later, when 9-to-5ers are
relaxing after their day of work. 9-to-5 jobs have their benefits too. Employees
have job descriptions, they know what's expected of them, and most can leave
work when the clock says that it's time to go home. It's easier to persevere
when you know that the boss is evaluating your work. Working on our own, we
have to find that perseverance within ourselves and keep working on bringing
visitors to our website if we want to have an income. Not everyone has that
drive to continue pushing themselves to work when they're on their own. The
cycle of starting

Should we help our friends and relatives who want to earn money online?
Perhaps the biggest help we can offer them is to paint a realistic picture of
webmaster work and to get them thinking about their business ideas and
preparation. We can all remember what it was like to start out, and we
somehow made it without knowing everything that we know now. If people
have done their research and are ready to jump in without expecting us to do
the work for them, and if we give them some help, we're continuing the cycle
of support that many of us also received as beginning webmasters.


 
 
About the Author

Lois S. is a Technical Executive Writer for
http://www.websitesource.com
and
http://www.lowpricedomains.com
with experience in the website hosting
industry. 




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  Some other articles by Lois S.
Choosing Domain Names for Your Business
Let's say that you're creating a website for Barb's Specialty Pet Products. Should the domain name be barbsspecialtypetproducts.com? Perhaps -- ...

Reselling Domain Names
Reselling Domain Names September 2005 You offer web hosting services. Or web design services. Or both. When your clients need domain names for their websites, do ...

  
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