Tag Archives: company

A Cheap Design versus a Professional Website Design

Website design and development has a remarkably broad coverage or scope when we talk about the knowledge of the person doing it. Website development does not only cover areas like graphics, design and web development but also other related topics such as hypertext, software, documents, World Wide Web, images, sounds, servers and other programs needed for it completion. The web design group who are to create the website must be knowledgeable and have a background in web development, management, business accounting, programming, and computer science.

The job of web design and development must undergo careful visualization, preparation and planning. The person who performs the entire task in web design is a web designer. An excellent web designer can present any image of text in an organized manner that can please the one who will see the website. In connection to the topic, the graphics design company must have web hosting, website design and SEO as a part of their services because the combination of the three services ensures the effectiveness of the website that was created to market our business.

Also, the design of our website will determine if the person browsing the website will buy or not. A successful online businessman often hires a reputable web design company that can help them gather leads for their business. A big percentage of the population today refers to search engines if they want to look for something or if they want to get answers to their queries. Most researcher open the link that mostly appear on the first page of a search engine. In this regard, a terrific SEO is also necessary.

If we hire a graphics design company, it is preferable that we choose the one that offers SEO or Search Engine Optimization just like how it was mentioned above. Search Engine Optimization using the right keywords is responsible in putting the website to a higher rank in any search engine. It is also vital for us to know and compare a professional website design from that of a very cheap website design. Once we know the difference, we can decide what design we truly want for our business.

A website that is created and developed professionally by a credible and reputable graphics design company may become more expensive compared to a very cheap web design service. Aside from the difference in prices, they also differ in features, settings as well as with the level of effectiveness when it comes to advertising or marketing our product or services. The price of a cheap website design often costs less than $500 but to have an excellent and professional web design you need to go far beyond that price.

In addition, a professional website design can be the perfect marketing tool for the business because of its completeness in facts or information. A cheap web design might be the cause why visitors will go away due to incomplete details regarding the product that we are selling. In some cases, the website itself is not easy to navigate or not user-friendly. A professional website gives answers and solutions to the visitor’s dilemma. A very cheap web design might just add frustration to a person because their time has been wasted.

In summary, there is an enormous difference between a very cheap website designs to a website that is professionally designed. Whatever we plan to choose between the two, it is extremely valuable also to check on the background of the web design company that you will hire. There are those companies today that promises to give us an excellent and professional design but once we pay them they do not give out their very best to provide what is due to us. So it is also necessary that we take it seriously. Whenever we hire a web design company who will give us a true custom made design.

Your Company Is Falling Prey To Unseen Attacks! Can't Someone Stop Them? (Page 1 of 4)

There are literally thousands of malware variants in the wild of Cyber Space and any one of them could take down your company, steal your identity or the identities of all of your customers!

We are all aware of the multitude of solutions being offered to counter these attacks, so the question arises: while CSOs and CTOs together with their teams of professional security and systems engineers defend the enterprise armed with the multitude of tools available to them, how is it that this threat continues to grow?

Those tasked with company security and charged with trying to find safe harbor for their company’s information and infrastructure have to deal with the unarguable fact that information assurance has not improved.

Two decades after the introduction of the PC and the Internet, computing prevalence has made every company a target of invisible attackers with intent to do harm.

These attackers are no longer the “script kiddies” of the past. They are organized, funded, trained, and in no mood to be deterred. While the role of CSOs will forever be entrenched in the global business economy, there are new approaches emerging which will put them back in control of their infrastructures. New technologies are now providing systemic answers to the problem of malicious software (malware), both present and future – technologies like Savant™.

Savant Protection™ has leapt ahead of traditional approaches by taking a far more encompassing view that accounts for the realities of present day chaos by introducing Savant, the first solution which eliminates the spread of any known or unknown malware without the need for inoculations, scanning, or rules. This new approach passively protects a computing system from new attacks regardless of strategy.

Gone are the days of corporate-wide outages due to previously undiscovered vulnerabilities. With Savant, the days of spread are over. Companies are now recognizing that while they concentrate on daily business, cybercrimes are being plotted by “technically sophisticated” teams driven to infiltrate and exfiltrate the enterprise.

A recent study conducted by Braun Research on behalf of IBM reflects this new reality, the results of which were drawn from 600 CIO’s located both domestically and internationally;

“The IBM survey reveals that 84 percent of IT executives of U.S. businesses believe that organized criminal groups possessing technical sophistication are replacing lone hackers in the world of cybercrime. The threat from unprotected systems in developing countries is a growing challenge, according to almost three-quarters of respondents.” 1

The problem is that these attackers know more about a company’s system flaws better than the company itself. How can this be possible? The answer is a bit unnerving in its simplicity; the invaders are consumers.

The products companies employ to build their hard and soft infrastructures are readily available for purchase or download by anyone, at any time. The hackers clearly have the advantage. They have the drive, motive, and time to create new intrusion approaches. Approaches, as of yet, unknown.

Your Company Is Falling Prey To Unseen Attacks! Can't Someone Stop Them? (Page 1 of 4)

There are literally thousands of malware variants in the wild of Cyber Space and any one of them could take down your company, steal your identity or the identities of all of your customers!

We are all aware of the multitude of solutions being offered to counter these attacks, so the question arises: while CSOs and CTOs together with their teams of professional security and systems engineers defend the enterprise armed with the multitude of tools available to them, how is it that this threat continues to grow?

Those tasked with company security and charged with trying to find safe harbor for their company’s information and infrastructure have to deal with the unarguable fact that information assurance has not improved.

Two decades after the introduction of the PC and the Internet, computing prevalence has made every company a target of invisible attackers with intent to do harm.

These attackers are no longer the “script kiddies” of the past. They are organized, funded, trained, and in no mood to be deterred. While the role of CSOs will forever be entrenched in the global business economy, there are new approaches emerging which will put them back in control of their infrastructures. New technologies are now providing systemic answers to the problem of malicious software (malware), both present and future – technologies like Savant™.

Savant Protection™ has leapt ahead of traditional approaches by taking a far more encompassing view that accounts for the realities of present day chaos by introducing Savant, the first solution which eliminates the spread of any known or unknown malware without the need for inoculations, scanning, or rules. This new approach passively protects a computing system from new attacks regardless of strategy.

Gone are the days of corporate-wide outages due to previously undiscovered vulnerabilities. With Savant, the days of spread are over. Companies are now recognizing that while they concentrate on daily business, cybercrimes are being plotted by “technically sophisticated” teams driven to infiltrate and exfiltrate the enterprise.

A recent study conducted by Braun Research on behalf of IBM reflects this new reality, the results of which were drawn from 600 CIO’s located both domestically and internationally;

“The IBM survey reveals that 84 percent of IT executives of U.S. businesses believe that organized criminal groups possessing technical sophistication are replacing lone hackers in the world of cybercrime. The threat from unprotected systems in developing countries is a growing challenge, according to almost three-quarters of respondents.” 1

The problem is that these attackers know more about a company’s system flaws better than the company itself. How can this be possible? The answer is a bit unnerving in its simplicity; the invaders are consumers.

The products companies employ to build their hard and soft infrastructures are readily available for purchase or download by anyone, at any time. The hackers clearly have the advantage. They have the drive, motive, and time to create new intrusion approaches. Approaches, as of yet, unknown.