Archive for March, 2007

March 20th, 2007 Group M Engineers Retains Ad Ventures

PRESS RELEASE
Group M Engineers, a prominent Van Nuys, CA architectural/structural engineering firm, recently retained Ad Ventures to design and develop their corporate branding and website presence. GME has tasked Ad Ventures to design an industry leading website for them, befitting the architectual design work they do for their own clients. Look for them soon in our website portfolio!.



March 20th, 2007 Ballard Transfer Co. Retains Ad Ventures

PRESS RELEASE
Ballard Transfer Co., a fourth generation family-owned businress, recently retained Ad Ventures to design and develop their first website presence. Ballard Transfer specializes in providing moving services to the medical, commerical and maritime industries. They do a whale of a job moving the big, the odd and the hard-to-move stuff. Look for them soon in our website portfolio!.



March 19th, 2007 “Tales From The Trail” e-Newsletter

Marketing Pointers, Funny Stories and Poison Ivy
So, why name our e-newsletter Tales From The Trail? Well, after 20 years in business, Ad Ventures has more than a few adventurous stories and good marketing tips to share - from the very helpful to the just downright funny. Stay on the lookout for the first issue, coming to your email box soon. If you haven’t signed up for Tales From The Trail yet, what are you waiting for?? Click here to sign up now!



March 19th, 2007 Do You Really Own Your Domain Name?

Here’s a real Poision Ivy story that will be featured in an upcoming Tales From the Trail e-newsletter. This actually happened recently to a client of Ad Ventures.

This client lost the domain name ownership for a new business division - and for all practical purposes, their total business identity - to an unscrupulous employee. Don’t let this happen to you!

Embarking on a new, web-based business channel, this company retained Ad Ventures to develop a corporate brand/logo for them. Once the logo was completed and delivered, our client discovered to their great surprise that the employee they entrusted to register their domain name had done so in his own personal name. Adding more poison to the ivy, the employee took the new logo, modified it slightly, and went into business for himself using their name, intellectual property and business plan! He was able to do this largely because of his “ownership” of the business domain name.

Ad Ventures helped our client to re-establish their copyright ownership to the logo design, but ownership of the domain name is a stickier matter.

When you sign up for a domain name, the domain registration company typically asks you for two contacts: the administrative contact which is usually the domain name owner (doesn’t have to be and often isn’t), and the technical contact which is either your website host, web master or web development company. Companies often allow the web development company to register their domain name. If you’re not careful, this may result in the admin contact and the tech contact being the same individual and the owner of domain name not being who you think.

The owner of the domain name is the one who paid for it and is listed as admin contact. Many of our clients are surprised to find out that they don’t own the domain name that they paid for because it was re-billed at a markup by a third party. The tip is you absolutely must ensure that a trusted member of your company is listed as the administrative contact for renewal notifications and to clearly establish ownership of the domain name. It is best if your company itself register and pay for the domain registration (rather than a third party) And then you can designate the technical contact and update that designation whenever you want.