
Welcome to my personal website. My name is Gary Colman and I am a professional freelance web designer and proofreader based in north Norfolk, near Norwich. I offer a high quality and affordable web design service for individuals and small to medium sized businesses.
I have been working as a freelance website designer for the past ten years and 100 per cent complete customer satisfaction is my number one goal.
As well as creating brand new clean, accessible and fast-loading websites for people I also offer the following services; Redesigning existing websites, Internet marketing solutions, Search Engine Optimisation, Domain Name Registration, Website hosting, Content Management System (CMS) Websites (using Joomla), Graphic Design (logos, banners and graphics) Copy writing Service, Proofreading service and on-going website maintenance.
Whether you have an existing online presence or you are looking to get your own website for the first time I can help you and I am currently looking for new projects to work on. |
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Written by Gary Paul Colman
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Wednesday, 20 August 2008 10:11 |
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A guide to how to utilise Search Engines for your website, what Search Engine Optimisation (SEO) is and the ways in which it can be used. This guide will provide you with the basics on using Search Engine Optimisation in order to improve the traffic flow to your site.
For many people SEO is considered to be a part of search engine marketing. It is often used when people are describing a process for improving the amount of traffic that goes to a website from various different search engines. Many site owners will engage in using SEO in an attempt to obtain qualified visitors to their site. The quality of these visitors will often be measured by what specific keywords they are using in order to reach the desired result they want, such as making a purchase, or it could just be viewing or downloading a particular file, page or image. It may be that the particular visitor just requests some further information, or they sign up to a newsletter.
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Last Updated on Saturday, 04 February 2012 22:23 |
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What languages are supported by Joomla! 1.5? |
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Written by Gary Paul Colman
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Monday, 11 August 2008 01:12 |
Within the Installer you will find a wide collection of languages. The installer currently supports the following languages: Arabic, Bulgarian, Bengali, Czech, Danish, German, Greek, English, Spanish, Finnish, French, Hebrew, Devanagari(India), Croatian(Croatia), Magyar (Hungary), Italian, Malay, Norwegian bokmal, Dutch, Portuguese(Brasil), Portugues(Portugal), Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Svenska, Thai and more are being added all the time. By default the English language is installed for the Back and Front-ends. You can download additional language files from the Joomla!Extensions Directory. |
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Last Updated on Monday, 11 August 2008 01:12 |
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Website Promotion Made Easy |
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Written by Gary Paul Colman
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Sunday, 22 January 2012 09:54 |
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How free tips, tools, tricks and techniques can turn your website or ezine into a profit maker.
In this highly useful guide you will discover how this proven collection of smart tips, tools and secret techniques will boost your website traffic and increase your e-zine subscriber list.
Now, you may be surprised to hear this from me, but Traffic alone means absolutely nothing! Let me explain... Many people who sell their products online think that if they can get a lot of traffic to their site or sales page then they will make a lot of sales. However, these people are wrong! Here's why... When people click on a website (or sales page) they almost never purchase a product at first contact. Okay, maybe 1 in 100 may buy your product if you have a really irresistable sales page, but the majority of people will look at your page, click a few links and then leave your page forever. It's sad, but it is the plain truth...Now, how can you turn those one-time visitors into life long customers? Well, it's actually quite simple... you need to collect their e-mail addresses and add them to your newsletter or opt-in list.
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Last Updated on Sunday, 22 January 2012 08:03 |
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Only one edit window! How do I create "Read more..."? |
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Written by Gary Paul Colman
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Wednesday, 06 August 2008 19:29 |
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This is now implemented by inserting a Read more... tag (the button is located below the editor area) a dotted line appears in the edited text showing the split location for the Read more.... A new Plugin takes care of the rest. It is worth mentioning that this does not have a negative effect on migrated data from older sites. The new implementation is fully backward compatible. |
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Last Updated on Wednesday, 06 August 2008 19:29 |
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