Tuesday 26 March 2013

The Easiest Technique To Make Your Reputable Wedding Idea Website Flow

By Bob Spike


Growing a wedding idea website takes time and dedication. It involves many days with little or no sleep in building a successful wedding idea websites. Here are key pointers for you to run and operate a successful wedding idea website.

Keep useful content open to the 'public' visitor. Requiring registration just to view basic info is a big turn off for your users. Only require registration for more advanced functions or for actually making a purchase.

Stay away from excessive use of frames on your wedding idea website. Apart from making your customers and clients to scroll in multiple places and reduces the site's credibility before prospects, it is not favored by the search engines.

Create a "Event Planning Board" on Pinterests' private boards. You can post images of dcor, venues, links to vendors, music ideas and food themes. You can also use it to plan your holiday office party or lunch meetings.

When writing articles, be sure to spend your time wisely. The best articles are between 400 and 1500 words. This in long enough to be useful, attract links, and get search hits, but short enough that you can turn them out.

Use the social media dashboard MarketMeSuite. This tool helps guage how many Pinterest users are pinning and promoting your site. This can help you become more interactive with Pinterest users who are promoting your site.

Put a leash on your ego. Leave emotion out of your business and whatever criticism you receive in the course of offering your services or products, should be taken in good faith and seen as a ladder towards becoming the best in what you do.

If you are seeking to be seen as an expert in your field, use Yahoo Answers as a way to demonstrate your knowledge. As long as you play by the rules you can post a link to your site along with your answer. Make sure you are providing actual answers to the questions and not just spamming the board with your link.

Breadcrumbs are basically a trail of webpages that have led you to the one you are on. Including the breadcrumb 'trail' near the top of each page makes your site more navigable. Take the guesswork out of what page a user is on, or how they go there.




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