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					  <title><![CDATA[Are You an Advisor or an Adviser?]]></title>
					  <link>http://www.jabwebnews.com/blogs/2/Are-You-an-Advisor-or-an-Adviser.html</link>
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<p>Simple question right?&nbsp; Not so fast.&nbsp; Before we build a website for a client, I always pose this question but do not always get the same answer.&nbsp; So in the most&nbsp;unscientific way possible, I have concluded that the&nbsp;majority of US based,&nbsp;Independent Financial Professionals consider themselves to be Financial&nbsp;Advisors or Investment Advisors.&nbsp; According to the <a href="http://www.adviserinfo.sec.gov/IAPD/Content/IapdMain/iapd_SiteMap.aspx" target="_blank">SEC</a>, you are an Investment&nbsp;Adviser, but according to&nbsp;most <a href="http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/adviser" target="_blank">dictionaries</a> both&nbsp;Adviser and&nbsp;Advisor are acceptable.&nbsp; <br/><br/>Now you may be&nbsp;surprised to find that there is an ongoing debate on this subject (if you search the web hard enough you can find an ongoing debate on just about anything).&nbsp; In the UK or Canada, it's Adviser or Advisor, depending on who you ask, and in the US it's generally accepted that Advisor is the correct spelling.&nbsp; But why?&nbsp; It just may be that, over time, we've grown used to the spelling in the US, especially&nbsp;as it has been&nbsp;the dominant spelling used by&nbsp;large financial institutions.&nbsp; <br/><br/>OK, here's my point,&nbsp;&nbsp;what you call yourself is irrelevant when it comes to prospects finding you through the search engines.&nbsp; What matters is WHAT OTHER PEOPLE CALL YOU !!&nbsp; <br/><br/><br/><strong>Let's Check What Users Are Actually Searching For in Google.com</strong><br/><br/>Using&nbsp;Google's new Insights For Search Tool, we ran reports that show the relative numbers for both "Financial Advisor/Adviser" and then Investment Advisor/Adviser" for all&nbsp;Google searches within the finance category in the U.S&nbsp;for the last 12 months.&nbsp;&nbsp; <br/><br/><a href="http://www.google.com/insights/search/#cat=7&q=financial%20adviser%2Cfinancial%20advisor&geo=US&date=today%2012-m&cmpt=q" target="_blank">Click here to view the Financial Advisor/Adviser Report<br/></a><br/><a href="http://www.google.com/insights/search/#cat=7&q=investment%20adviser%2Cinvestment%20advisor&geo=US&date=today%2012-m&cmpt=q" target="_blank">Click here to view the&nbsp;Investment Advisor/Adviser Report</a><br/><br/>It is very clear that the actual science backs up my original theory.&nbsp;&nbsp;Here in the U.S you are genarally thought of as an Advisor.&nbsp; But&nbsp;1 out of every 4 people think of you as an Adviser!<br/><br/>Does this mean that you won't be found in&nbsp;Google when someone searches for "Financial Adviser in Delaware"...not necessarily.&nbsp;&nbsp;Google accounts for words with multiple accepted spellings.&nbsp;&nbsp; The real issue is your DOMAIN...&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If we consider the&nbsp;Google search reports we've run, 25% of users may be having trouble finding your website...or worse...are they finding someone else's?&nbsp; <br/><br/>OK, everyone in the room with the "Advisor" in their company domain name ( YourAdvisorFirm.com ) raise your hand.&nbsp; OK now everyone with your hand up, tell the class if have also registered the domain with the "Adviser" spelling?&nbsp; I think you get my point here.&nbsp; For a few bucks per year, you could be saving yourself some headaches down the road if another firm decides to buy that name or even if you loose a new client because they couldn't find your website.&nbsp; So do yourself a favor and search to see if the other domain is available.&nbsp;&nbsp;If it is, register it and have it forwarded to your existing domain.&nbsp; This is by no means a sales pitch...you can search and register domains with any of the major registrars ( godaddy.com, networksolutions.com etc ).&nbsp; <br/><br/>One major tip...if you search for the domain and it is available, you should register it right away if you want it.&nbsp; There are&nbsp;unscrupulous characters out there that have access to the public domain search database.&nbsp; Once they see that you've searched for the domain they will&nbsp;register it if you haven't...then they will try to sell it back to you for a boat load the next day!!</p>
<p>Feel free to&nbsp;put in your two cents on the issue but submitting a reply to this blog.&nbsp; We'll post the best replies in next month's newsletter.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Follow the Jab Design Team on Twitter!!&nbsp; @jabweb<br/><br/>Don't know what Twitter is yet?&nbsp; Don't feel bad, most people don't.&nbsp; But in our next Newsletter we explain why you need to start Tweeting.<br/><br/><br/>Jay Bellew<br/>Directory of Design and User Experience<br/>Jab Web Solutions Inc.<br/><a href="http://www.jabwebsolutions.com" target="_blank">jabwebsolutions.com</a></p>]]></description>
					  <author>no@spam.com (Jab Team  Administrator)</author>
					  <pubDate>Tue, 02 Jun 2009 00:00:00 EDT</pubDate>
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