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Hiring a Business Analyst

There are times when a company must hire a business analyst. When searching from an outside source there are certain things an employer should determine when hiring the perfect business analyst. Some of these suggestions are common sense. Other items listed may be overlooked in the desperation to find a qualified business analyst.

January 2009
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Ten Common SEO Mistakes

Ten Common SEO Mistakes Made on Database Driven Websites...

1. Pages with duplicate content - not enough differential areas within the pages, so that only small areas of the page change from page to page. Search engines must see an appreciable difference between one page and the next.

2. Pages with duplicate page titles - the page title is a great indicator to the search engines of the primary content of the page. Change it for each page!!  Make it unique to that page.

3. Pages with duplicate meta descriptions - See: #2. Should have different meta data relative to the premise of the page.

4. Using auto-generation of pages as a shortcut instead of creating good content. This is linked quite closely to point 1, where it is possible to create pages that have only a tiny percentage difference between them. Unique information about the subject of the page will immensely help both the long tail and the ability of the search engines to determine that a page is valuable.

5. Creating pages that are hidden behind form submissions or javascript postbacks that cannot be accessed by a search engine crawler. This is far more common that is generally realised. For instance .NET creates postback links by default instead of proper links - potentially making huge sections of a site unreachable. Likewise, it is easy to hide lovely content rich areas of your site behind a drop down selector in a form that means certain areas of the site are not visible.

6. Too many query strings - this is a common bugbear of the professional SEO, where complicated database selections create deep levels of pages, but with seven or eight &id= type strings. Additionally, some bad development methodology can leave pages with null query strings that appear in every URL but don't do anything. The answer to this is generally URL rewrites, creating much more search engine friendly and user-friendly URLs!

7. Putting query strings in different orders when accessed through different places - this can create duplicate content issues, which can cause major penalties.

8. Not using user language to generate automated pages - if you are going to create a database driven website that uses words in the query strings (or better in rewritten URLs) make sure that you use words that will help you with SEO - if you sell widgets, make sure you are using the word widgets somewhere in the URL instead of just product= or id= - keyword research can assist with this.

9. Not allowing the meta data and title to be edited easily after the site build. It is possible to hardcode the generation of meta information into a database that doesn't allow it to be edited later. Creating a mechanism for modifying this information initially helps everyone at a later stage when the information needs changing without shoehorning it into an already developed structure.

10. Creating keyword stuffed pages by using auto-generation. Once upon a time, search engines quite liked pages with high densities of your keywords, but now these are likely to get you marked down rather than up. So be aware when creating pages that long pages with lots of your products on can create too high a density. For instance listing blue widgets, light blue widgets, navy blue widgets, sky blue widgets is going to create a page with a very dense page for the phrase "blue widgets".

These are just 10 of the most common potential optimization pitfalls when creating dynamic websites.

The Fundamentals Of Our Economy - A Rational Look

WHAT ARE THE FUNDAMENTALS OF OUR ECONOMY ANYWAY?

  • GDP. Last quarter the U.S. posted 3.3 percent growth. The previous two quarters were .6 percent and 1 percent. 3.3 percent isn't bad but the previous two quarters were awful. We also still haven't seen the final report from last quarter. In any event, one quarter of growth isn't conclusive.
  • Unemployment Data. Currently, unemployment is at 6.1 percent, or about 9.4 million Americans, and has been increasing. A measurement that reflects people who cannot find full employment or who have been unable to find employment after 15 weeks would put the rate at 10.7 percent. These are high rates, whether you compare them to Europe or not. However, I bleieve you must compare to the AMERICAN ECONOMY because I am 'patriotic'.  I do believe we are the best, just like i believe my kids are the best, no matter what!!
  • Real Median Income. The median income of all Americans has actually gone down $324 since 2000 -- the first time it hasn't risen since at least 1969. This reflects the drop in real wages.
  • Consumer Confidence. Up a little in the last two months -- 56.9 percent, with only 13.2 percent saying business conditions are good -- but still at it's lowest level since 2003.
  • Inflation. Inflation has been increasing -- 5.6 percent -- but my understanding is that while this development isn't great, there is no need to be worried right now.
  • The Markets. These markets are down. Uh -oh.
  • Deficits. The U.S. deficit is currently $389.4 billion, double what it was last year. Our trade deficit, reflecting that the U.S. imports far more than it exports, has grown in the last year to $62.2 billion.

Do you think the fundamentals of our economy are strong?

I don't.  But I do believe that we will recover.

I just firmly believe that you must recognize a problem before you can fix it.

Why Tips For Small Businesses

When I saw an issue of Entrepreneur Magazine that had a cover that indicated that entrepreneurs had been surveyed, and results were inside, I thought, finally, small businesses are heard!! Time to hear from us little guys!

I can’t tell you how surprised I was as I began to read the article. Their idea of an “small business” and mine were as different as night and day. I always classified an entrepreneur as someone like the “Mom and Pop” coffee shop around the corner, the family run produce market in town, or the 18 to 24 year old who had come up with a fantastic “gizmo” and was scooped up into a corporation as their newest genius. Let me give you a quote from the article that will clue you into its idea of an “entrepreneur”.

To explain the method used for the survey they state, “Entrepreneur magazine and PricewaterhouseCoopers “Entrepreneurial Challenges Survey” is an annual telephone survey of more than 300 CEOs of privately held, U.S.-based businesses recognized for their sustained, rapid growth. They average $31.5 million in annual revenue with an average of 185 employees, and have an ongoing annual growth rate of more than 23 percent……”

That definitely was not my picture of an entrepreneur. I don’t know too many entrepreneurs who average $31.5 million annually, or employ 185 people. To me, that’s a pretty successful company on its way to being a corporation. We should all be such entrepreneurs!

What tips for small businesses could be gleaned?

At any rate, I continued reading and I must say the information was worth the read, and the business of doing business can apply to those of us who aren’t quite making that $31.5 million per year yet. Here’s what the survey discovered.

What were considered their biggest challenges for 2006?

  • 73% - Retention of key workers
  • 38% - Developing new products/services
  • 36% - Expansion to domestic markets
  • 35% - Increased productivity
  • 28% - Upgrading technology
  • 23% - Creating business alliances
  • 21% - Better management of cash flow
  • 14% - Expansion outside the U.S.
  • 13% - Improving risk management
  • 11% - Finding new financing
  • 11% - Buying another company or launching a spinoff
  • 7% - Preparing company for sale
  • 2% - Going public

Now when you stop and think about it, that’s pretty much what most entrepreneurs think about each year. Maybe not to the extent of expanding to foreign markets or launching a spinoff, but to keep your business perking along the road of improvement - all the rest are considered.

The next part of the survey was interesting because entrepreneurs were given a list of several “wild-card” factors that could affect business in 2006. When asked which three would be most harmful to their business, here’s what they said:

  • 47% - Unstable U.S. economy
  • 43% - Rising health-care costs
  • 41% - Shortage of qualified workers
  • 40% - Weak market demand
  • 24% - Rising oil/energy costs
  • 24% - Rising interest rates
  • 22% - New government regulations
  • 18% - Weaker capital spending
  • 14% - Weakening world economy
  • 12% - Increased global competition
  • 11% - Decreased access to capital
  • 10% - Sudden drop in U.S. real estate market
  • 10% - Tax increases
  • 9% - Inflation

So maybe my entrepreneurs and those surveyed are not really that much different in thinking. The outlook of most entrepreneurs is probably optimistic, or will be unless more unforeseen disasters strike.

Even after the huge devastation of 9/11, within two quarters we were back to the same level of optimism as we had before. People get used to dealing with tough circumstances and factor them in, but are not swayed by them. When you really think about it; isn’t that what most entrepreneurs are like?

If they’re not, then they aren’t entrepreneurs by my way of thinking.

So, for both the big and small guy out there, I hope our tips for small businesses, whatever your state of mind, come in handy…

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