Learn the art of self-promotion By Tom Burton Sydney Morning Herald Wednesday 17 May 2000 Who is Australia's number one Web publisher? Ecorp, Microsoft, Yahoo, F2, Telstra or News Interactive? Wrong on all counts. Taking a corporatist view - that is, who actually owns the sites, Australia's premier Web publisher is the Commonwealth of Australia. John Howard may not be your image of the trendy geek king. But through Canberra's majority ownership of Telstra, control of the ABC, and a series of category leaders, the Federal Government easily outguns all the big commercial Web publishers. In Telstra's case, the White and Yellow pages generate the big traffic, supported by its try-hard portal Telstra.com. The ABC may have slipped in the Web rankings, but still rates in the top 10 local Web publishers group. And through its various agencies, the Commonwealth has a series of category leaders in its own right. These include the number one employment site, jobsearch, its business support site, business.gov.au, and a series of utility sites such as the Bureau of Meteorology site, the Australian Tax Office site, the Bureau of Statistics site and the Australian Security and Investment Commission site. There may be some irony in the highly entrepreneurial Internet sector being dominated by government, but if Canberra ever took the view to run its sites as a network it would be a formidable competitor. Indeed, if the entire dot.gov community - including State Governments and agencies - got their act together they would give their much vaunted dot.com brethren a run for their money. Given they can't even agree on daylight saving that is unlikely, but the point still remains valid: the government sector is a huge player in the Internet space. It also suggests that governments need to better recognise their sites as significant assets. Starting with how they manage their site addresses, otherwise known as URLs. The URL is the brand and needs to be treated accordingly. Building brand loyalty means taking a consistent view about the URL. Yet many government sites suffer from a multiplicity of sub domains and sub-directories. The tax reform site for the introduction of the GST is a good example. The site is housed at taxreform.ato.gov.au. However, tax reform will come and go, so there is little point in branding a reform site separately from the permanent brand, in this case the Australian Tax Office site. In the commercial sector the practice would be to promote the mother URL, ato.gov.au, rather than confuse people with a long-winded URL which few will remember and which will have no legacy in terms of traffic afterwards. The same mistake is evident with the swimming trials now at the Olympic centre. The official site is being housed within Telstra.com. But the signage which is being promoted is swimtrials.telstra.com. As part of a mass marketing campaign it suffers from the obvious problem of being far too long to be picked up in television and other mediums. And as a brand it also dies when the event is over. Which means an awful lot of brand opportunity has been lost once the event is over. And even the Federal Government's media company, the ABC, falls into the same trap. One of the ABC's assets is its ability to use its broadcast outlets to market its site. Yet constantly the URL being promoted is a sub-directory. The Sydney metro radio outlet, 702 (aka 2BL) has been known to promote abc.net.au/local/sydney as its URL. Tom Burton is the online editor of smh.com.au. He holds Telstra and Fairfax shares. Source: Sydney Morning Herald Wed 17 May 2000 http://www.smh.com.au/news/0005/17/bizcom/bizcom02.html Patrick CorlissReceived on Wed May 17 2000 - 21:12:50 UTC
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