On July 1, Google is making some security updates to the Chrome browser that could affect the way your website looks to viewers. See this article for an explanation. When someone uses the Chrome browser to go to your website, you want it to have this "secure" label in the navigation bar: Before July 1, 2018, if you do not have SSL enabled, viewers using the Chrome browser may see this exclamation point label. After July 1, 2018, if you do not have SSL enabled, viewers using the Chrome browser may see this "not secure" label. This change will only affect the look of the navigation bar, and it won't stop people from viewing your website. I recommend that you take care of it, though, because the "Not secure" label is a bad look. What to do:
Make sure to have your site's webmaster enable SSL so that Chrome viewers see the "Secure" label. If you maintain your own website, using the website builder platform, "Weebly", there are instructions here for how to do this. It's not a complicated procedure.
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Don’t think of your marketing as an expense; because it’s not. It’s an investment, and it should be budgeted for like an ongoing investment plan. Businesses that treat marketing as an expense don’t budget ahead for their marketing campaign. To make matters worse they view it as an optional expense - if things are tight in a given month, the marketing budget gets cut. This approach leads to inconsistent results There is no such thing as expensive advertising, as long as it works. If the ROI is ten-to-one, it doesn’t matter whether the ad cost $100 or $10,000. The trick is to learn what works for you and to keep doing it steadily, in the same way you fund your 401k, IRA, or retirement account. The marketing investment is just one more cost of doing business, like rent and other overhead, and is reflected in the prices for your products and services. It shouldn’t be treated as an afterthought, since it is the starting point of the relationship between you and all the potential new customers in your community. |