It's easy to become a webmaster.
But, to become a really good webmaster
takes a lot more. And this takes a lot of work and study.
Many years ago, I started yacht racing in the Caribbean.
I had been
sailing since the age of 11. I thought that I was an "expert"
sailor,
but I found that I was really a novice. It's easy to teach
someone to
sail from point A to point B. BUT, getting from point A
to point B in
the shortest possible time is a whole new story. It took
me a full year
before I won my first race in a field of 10-12 boats.
Webmastering is very similar. Sure, anyone with more than
three brain
cells rubbing together can learn HTML, and with all the
free editors
out, it doesn't even take that much effort. (Like learning
to sail from
one point to another.)
As my own webmaster, being retired, an ex-digital engineer
(before
psychologist), and computer guru, ex-sales engineer/sales
manager, etc.
I thought that I had the tools to do the job.
After having a web site for over a year, I found that I
have put
thousands of hours of just plain study in to all facets
of this
fascinating job. Having spent my "retirement"
money in sailing around
the Caribbean for several years, I don't have much money,
so had to
learn it all on my own. (I don't regret the cruising years
at all, by
the way.)
So, what did I learn about webmastering? It's a very complex
job,
requiring several levels of completely different areas of
basic
knowledge. I've been studying it intensely for well over
a year, and
have set up four web sites for different types of sales,
(free health
advice, a yacht company, a travel company, and a personal
site). When
starting a web site, what is necessary?
First, the webmaster (and you if you have decided to hire
one), have to
analyse just what you are selling. After that analysis,
decide how to
present what you are selling, and how to do that on a website.
All too
many people just jump into a web site using one of the fancy
editors
such as Front Page. Using their "flashy" setups
is easy, but is it
really the way you want to present your message?
How about graphics and salemanship?
If your graphics are too big and take too long to load,
people will click off before they get to your real message.
So, you have to know (or learn) a lot about how to make
graphics effective - not just flashy - and how to condense
them so that they load as fast as you can get them to. You
have to learn a lot more than you wanted to know about graphics,
but it's all necessary. If you'd like to see a site (mine)
that has minimal graphics for the message, loads fast, easy
to read, see:
http://www.alternate-health.com/home.html
For this site with mostly free health advice, I believe
this approach is
right, but for more involved salesmanship, spice it up as
needed while
still keeping the load time as low as possible. For an example
of a lot
of necessary graphics, look at:
http://www.smg-yachts.com
The emphasis here is on graphics, as people want to get
a look at the
yachts that are being sold. This sells, where text wouldn't
do the
job.
Next, if you aren't gifted with sales ability in writing
(and graphics
to go along), you have to learn a lot more in this field.
Or, you have
to have somebody around that does. Decisions, decisions
- do you use
paid ads, paid banners, ffa's, ezines, MLM's,or what? More
and more
study is needed, or more and more money is needed to hire
this knowledge
(and hope that whoever you hire knows what they are doing.)
With thousands of ads telling you that "they"
have all the secrets of the internet, and positioning, and
making 10,000 a month, it's more than a little confusing,
and some expertise is needed in this area as well. From
personal experience, I can state that this knowledge comes
with making some mistakes and learning from them.
So what's a competent webmaster?
He/she is a really multitalented person, or preferably,
a team. A technical HTML expert, an expert on search engines,
a graphics expert, a sales/marketing manager, a technical
writer, an ad writer, a computer technician experienced
in software and the list goes on and on.
There are a lot of would-be webmasters out there, charging
a lot of
money, and designing lots of very flashy webs. But, are
these webs
actually doing the job, and making money for the owner?
Do they load
reasonably fast? Surfing will show you hundreds of sites
that are
pretty lousy in some ways, and the odds are that they cost
somebody a
lot of money, and they are getting very little return. |