• I have told my customers for years to diversify their chosen providers of domain names, web hosting services, development services & other internet related services.  This simple concept can be applied to many more facets of your business though.  In this post I would like to offer some advice on this concept as well as give real world examples of what can happen when much of your online presence is tied to one service provider.

    Secure The Control Of Your Domain Names
    I can not stress this enough.  There are some providers who may offer free domain registration in exchange for design, ecommerce or other services.  Do not fall for this gimmick, instead choose an ICANN approved registrar and register all of your domains there.  There are many registrars which will register domains for around 10 dollars a year or lower and will provide a control panel which gives you full control of your domain name’s contact information and DNS records.  The low price that you pay is worth it to ensure that you can easily move your website if you decide to go a different route in your business.

    Be Wary Of All-In-One Hosting & Design Services
    Although my company previously offered both development & hosting services in the past, I now recommend to keep these services separate.  Although it may be convenient to have one company handle both of these needs, you must always look at the possibility that unhappiness with one of those services will transcend to unhappiness with the other service.  Many website developers also offer hosting services and some developers even require that you host your website with their company.  The majority of the time a person is better off finding a larger reputable host with 24-7 support than hosting the site through the developer.

    Multiple Revenue Streams
    The concept of keeping all your eggs in one basket can also be applied to revenue sources.  This year our struggling economy has taken its toll on nearly everyone.  If your entire web presence is based on the sales of one line of products or one type of service offering, your business will be in dangerous times if what you are offering is not considered a necessity due to the economy or other reasons.  Even in a booming economy, if your main line of products is a seasonal line of products such as baseball equipment or a seasonal service such as lawn care, you should find other lines or other services that can be offered to customers when your primary line is not in demand.

    I’d like to offer 3 real world examples of the concepts that I have mentioned…

    • From the years of 2000 to 2004, I worked as the main web developer for a web hosting company.  It was during this time that I learned the value of good domain names.  The first domain names that I registered were done through the company I worked for, and at time I did not know very much about purchasing domain names as investments.  My relationship with this company ended due to a dispute over the direction of the company as well as other reasons, and it would be correct to say that it ended in a very heated & negative way.  I had major issues in the next month after leaving the company when I tried to transfer the domain names that I owned and had rights to.  The owner of the company would not approve the registrar requests to transfer the domains and I was stuck.  Luckily, I still had a friend within the company who approved the transfers of the domains, unbeknownst to the owner.
    • Just recently, I was involved in a similar situation in regards to transferring domain names for the main company I work for now as my dayjob.  This company was using an all-in-one ecommerce system provided by a company that shall remain nameless, so lets just refer to them as Company Z.  One of the owners of the company had worked for Company Z for many years in a relationship that was mutually beneficial to both parties, and one of the perks of the job was free domain registrations.  After building a new system for this company, we planned to move our website on a certain date and then problems with moving the domain off Company Z’s system began.  We experienced blatant lies about dns changes that were never made, derogatory heated emails attacking the character of our entire company and other childish actions.  We then realized that we were getting nowhere with Company Z.  We finally had to go over their heads and go direct to the actual registrar of the domain names & prove that we owned the domain name in question in order to get anything at all changed.  A process that should have taken less than 5 minutes ended up taking up nearly a week to get straightened out.
    • An example of multiple revenue streams in action comes from my own business in the last year.  During the years of 2007-2009, one of my main revenue sources was affiliate marketing.  My company owned a network of affiliate stores which would showcase products from various merchants and then send the customer to the merchant’s website to complete a purchase, giving our company a percentage of the sale.  We did very well in this venture until the middle of 2009 when the state of North Carolina passed an affiliate nexus tax which seriously decreased the amount of revenue that our company could make from affiliate sales.  Internet companies usually do not have to charge sales tax on purchases if they do not have an actual location in that particular state.  The affiliate nexus tax was worded so that affiliates of a company are considered to be a sales force in that particular state and the merchant would have to charge sales tax.  Amazon was one of the first merchants to oppose this ruling and decided to cancel all affiliates in states that passed the affiliate nexus tax instead of paying sales tax on those sales, and many other larger merchants followed.  My affiliate revenue started dwindling down immediately following this law being passed.  Luckily, my company was already running our own network of stores selling our own products so we converted some of the better affiliate based sites into actual merchant sites selling products from our own inventory.  Had our company’s only source of revenue been based on affiliate marketing only, our company probably wouldn’t still be online today.
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  • I finally broke down and decided to get an iPhone… I have held off on this purchase because I did not want to have to sign a 2 year contract with AT&T. I did not want to pay for what is supposedly a 3G network when 3G is not even available in Eastern North Carolina.

    Well, I now have an iPhone but I do not use AT&T. I purchased a used iPhone, jailbroke & unlocked it, and I am headed to T-Mobile. I can get unlimited data, talk & text for nearly half the monthly cost of a comparable plan on AT&T. I will not be on a 3G network in Eastern NC, but I wouldn’t have been had I decided to go with AT&T, either.

    Although I am one of those “computer geeks”, I have always been one of those type people who want a cell phone to be a PHONE. I hate text messages with a passion and the truly terrible web browsing experience on Windows Mobile devices & Blackberry phones is enough to make a person toss that “smart phone” out the window.

    The iPhone changed all that, and there is no need to go into the praise in this blog post. The entire world has showered enough praise on this phone already, and once again Apple has completely changed an entire industry within a few short years.

    Their claim of “there’s an app for that” is most definitely true in nearly all aspects, though. Whether I am checking sales & advertising statistics, waving my lightsaber app at my friends or doing a quick tune on one of my guitars, its literally amazing the power of this “phone”. Many of the most useful apps are for checking various websites such as eBay, FaceBook, MySpace, Twitter, Google and others. Many times its actually quicker to open the iPhone app for a certain website (or company) than it is to get on the computer and pull it up through a regular browser.

    Steve Jobs is a God amongst the insects crawling around in this world with their day to day lives… I hope that his health allows him to live long enough to change even more industries.

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  • Computers 07-01-2009 No Comments

    Goodbye Windows,  great COC song also (legendary national metal band from NC)…
    That is Corrosion Of Conformity if you didn’t know from the initials…

    I made the switch…  My main computer is now a new Apple 24” Widescreen iMac, 4 GB of DDR3 RAM, 650 GB hard drive, etc…

    I have been an Apple devotee all my life, and Steve Jobs has been a huge role model for me for years.  It’s actually amazing that I waited so long to make this change to begin with.

    My first computer experience came back in middle school in the eighties with an Apple II.  The first real computer I purchased was an Apple IIc from a pawnshop in the late eighties.  My next computer was a used early Macintosh, which I think I bought out of a local classifieds magazine.  In college, my mom & dad bought me a brand new Macintosh Performa model.  That was one of the models made during the years that Steve Jobs was not at Apple, and in hindsight, it shows.

    Once I went to work for a web hosting company, I realized that due to all the support calls, I had to switch to PCs (or Windows based PCs anyway) just so I could have some real experience with the problems many of our customers were having.  My first PC was a Sony Vaio laptop, which was truly a workhorse and still runs to this day, although it’s creepingly slow now.  I then went through many other Windows based personal computers as well as servers once I branched out to my own company and through the early part of 2009.

    I got to the breaking point with Windows after endless problems with spam, viruses, crashes, OS reinstalls & everything else that comes along with using Windows.  When my main hosting server & my main workstation crashed (both Windows machines) within a month of each other, I started to think that there must be a better way.

    I already knew that there was a better way as far as web servers go, as I was running a Linux based server for mostly all of the servers that ran my own websites and other customers’ internet stores.

    When my own personal computer crashed though, I decided that I was going to go back to Mac.  After experiencing the amazing evolution of the iPod and then the iPhone, I realized that maybe Steve Jobs had brought something back to Apple that was definitely not there on my last Macintosh.

    I was right…

    What a wonderful experience my new iMac is…  I had never used OSX at all when I purchased the new machine, but the night I turned it on, it was like saying hello to an old friend.  MANY things have been changed though, so it definitely took a month or so to get used to everything.  I can already see improvements in all areas of work that I have completed since then.  I can definitely say that this is the best operating system I have ever used on a computer.   After getting a new Mac, I started to realize that it just helps streamline all aspects of my life.   Everything works like I want it to, and instead of fighting the operating system, I’m using the computer to actually get work done.

    Another thing that made me want to go back to Mac was the idea that I wanted get into doing a lot more audio recording & video production type projects.  Everyone knows that Mac has always been the computer of choice for these type applications.
    What surprised me though, was realizing just how “pro” some of the FREE applications that come installed on the Mac were, such as Garage Band & iMovie.

    Garage Band basically turns your Mac into a multi-track digital recording studio…  In the past, I have paid more money for a standalone multi-track digital recording workstation than I paid for the iMac, which has this as an afterthought.  iMovie gives you a limited version of a digital movie editor that for most users will be the only digital movie editing software that you will ever need.

    I have upgraded to more pro versions of each of the above-mentioned programs, but I have to say that the free “consumer” versions work very well and would be fine for a good majority of people out there that use a computer in their daily life.

    Oh…
    By the way…
    That first computer that I purchased in a pawnshop (Apple IIc) still runs to this day, complete with its monochrome, two-color, green letters on black screen.

    I wonder if my new iMac will still actually boot up in 2029???
    Something to ponder…

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