However, to be successful, traditional publishers must understand the differences between the two mediums.
Most believe they do, but if you look at what many of them are doing online, they clearly don't. They end up trying to replicate what they do offline on the internet.
This doesn't work. Never has. Never will. Online publishing is very different from print. Those who understand the differences and structure their activities accordingly will thrive. Those who don't will fail.
Here is a checklist of the most important differences.
* Online publishing strips out many of the costs associated with print publishing (typesetting/DTP, printing, paper, postage, and fulfilment). Because of this, online publications become viable with far fewer subscribers than offline publications. This makes the start-up process cheap, quick and easy.
* The cost of delivery on the internet continues to fall as storage, hosting and bandwidth get cheaper. Distribution in the offline world continues to rise as paper costs, overhead and postage continue to increase.
* All content can be archived in a searchable database, which can be accessed at anytime by members. This is a superb and valuable resource for subscribers that builds loyalty and repeat visits.
* With online publishing, news and information are provided in real time. In a world of rapid change and instant gratification, the information sources that react quickest to events will become the most popular. Print cannot compete with the speed of online publishing.
* While online, members can interact with each other through discussion groups, forums, online seminars and classified ads. This turns passive readers into contributors and community members. Print publications have no way of enabling real-time interaction.
* Content can be provided in audio or video format. Amongst the digital generation, there is an expectation that they can consume their content in many different formats. The web makes publishing multimedia content simple and cheap.
* A specialist website can cost-effectively reach a worldwide audience. This can make niche subjects commercially viable. For a print publication, going global has significant cost implications.
* Online publishing implies excellent customer intelligence. It is possible to see what every visitor has looked at on a website, giving you the ability to track which articles are most popular and create new content based on what you know your visitors are reading. With a print publication, the editor has no idea which articles and what content are being read.
* On the internet, a lot of the marketing is free. A good website will automatically be indexed by the search engines and drive qualified traffic. New subscribers can be acquired for zero marketing spend.
* On the web, new offers, pricing plans and incentives can be quickly and easily tested and the results presented in real time.
* Most of the administration processes can be fully automated. Sign-ups, renewals, credit card processing and member database management can all be handled via a website with minimal human intervention.
* In a world of instant gratification, online publications deliver deep and rich content to new members within minutes of signing up. This content is available to them 24 hour a day, 7 days a week, with new articles continually being added.
* Free gifts, such as eBooks, can be digitally delivered as incentives for new customers to sign up and for keeping old customers loyal. This can be done at zero cost.
* It is possible to launch an entirely new online publication in less than 30 days. In the traditional print world, it can take many months of planning and preparation to get a publication to the point of launch.
* A website is always on and available 24 hours a day. There are no publication date restrictions on access.
* Printable newsletters can be sent digitally by email in a format ready for printing so that people who prefer to read from paper can still do so.
Within the next five years, online publishing will do to offline publishing what email has done to traditional mail, and what online music downloads have done to the CD industry. It is not a matter of 'if', it is simply a matter of 'when'. The internet now presents both the biggest threat and the biggest opportunity that the magazine and newsletter industries have ever faced. Publishers who embrace the opportunity will be able to use their knowledge, resources and skills to expand faster than they ever imagined possible.
Those resisting change will wither and die.
Adobe Print Publishing Guide
The finished web pages in your hands could be likened to a painting by Michelangelo without the Sistine Chapel. In your case, the Sistine Chapel would be the web server to host your web site masterpiece.
This is the first part of a series of articles touching on various aspects of publishing on the web. In this edition, we will dwell on the aspect of domain name and web hosting.
Domain Name
First, you need to register your domain name. FYI, a domain name is the location of your web site on the Internet, just like http://www.internetmarketinglearningcenter.com.
You should have your own domain name if you envision yourself to be a successful Internet entrepreneur. BTW, the domain name you have registered with some free hosting services is not too professional to be used for your business operation. Unless you are on some form of an experiment, get your own domain name. The cost of getting one has considerably gone down than say five or two years ago.
People would take your product or service seriously if you do have your own domain name. There are a host of domain name registrars out on the Net for you to choose from.
Before you go out and register your domain name, check it out first if the domain name you are planning to register is still available. There are a number of free services to check the names of registered domain names on the web.
If you check my web site you will find a listing of better domain name checkers. It will save you a lot of time. Some of these free services offer domain name registration - for a fee, of course.
Web Hosting
After you have decided on - and subsequently registered - your domain name, the next big task is for you to find a host server to which your domain name will be pointing to.
The choice of your web site host is crucial enough to be left to guesswork. For one, a downtime in your host's server will severely impact your online operation. The profit returns of your business will be at stake.
Tip: You often come across an advertisement that says: "We guarantee 99.9% uptime." Come to think of it, a 0.1% downtime translates close to 9 hours within a year that your web site can not be accessed by your clients. Can you afford this? My advice is for you to do your math if a web host is giving you this type of advert.
Web Hosting Checklist
The following checklist will help you select a reliable and efficient web site host:
- Does it offer 24/7 technical support?
- Does it have a reliable performance record? (Go for the near zero per cent server downtime)
- Does it offer a fast connection speed?
- Does it offer a quick and easy access to your log files?
- Are CGI scripts allowed for your package?
- Is autoresponder services being offered?
Web Server Categories
There are three types of web hosting services you can categorize web servers. List down these three categories and put under the appropriate item the name of the web host you are evaluating. Two things worth checking are pricing and performance record of the web host.
Offhand, a web host could fall into three types, namely, cheap web hosting, affordable web hosting, and free web servers. For reasons already discussed above, you have to opt out the free web hosting type, if you want to make serious your Internet business venture.
A study was conducted by our group on the cheap and affordable web hosting services currently being offered. You may want to check it out yourself from our web site. It may save you time.
Tip: You can get cheap web hosting for as low as $0.50 a month. Some web hosts claim to offer free web hosting if you register your domain name with them. Check this out very carefully because the cost of the web hosting may already be added to the cost of the domain name registration. See if the cost of domain name registration is high compared to the web host's competitors. Also check out the performance record of the web host.
Uploading Web Files to the Server
After you have registered your domain name and signed a web host, the next big task is uploading your files to the host's server. The popular and traditional way of transferring files to your web host's server is via an FTP program (for Windows) and Fetch (for Macintosh). If you belong to the 95 per cent of the computing population (i.e., Windows based), the best FTP program for you is still the WS-FTP software. You can download if for free from the web.
Most web hosts offer control panels where you can directly browse your file source and upload the files to the server. In this case, there's no need for you to use an FTP program.
Tip: Some web hosts offer state of the art control panels. Others have amateurish control panels. You have to choose between simplicity and time-consuming operation. My advice is for you to choose the easy to operate panel that offers hassle-free transferring of files.
(c) 2005 Rick Tanzo. Reprint rights granted so long as article, by-line and active links are reproduced intact.
Both Miles Galliford & Rick Tanzo are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Miles Galliford has sinced written about articles on various topics from Internet Marketing, E Books and Internet Marketing. SubHub provides an all-in-one solution to enable you to rapidly design, build and run your own content website. Publish for profit on the web.Website:
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