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Customers
Don't Always Connect Where They Live
Pop Quiz: You have an international
website and you want to do business in Canada. But you
want to make sure your website delivers top performance
to your Canadian customers: speed, accessibility, as
well as proper functioning of digital certificates,
forms, password protections, shopping carts and more.
In which of the following cities would want a website
monitoring station?
Toronto, Canada's metropolis
Montreal, Canada's second largest city
Vancouver, Canada's third largest city.
Ottawa, Canada's capital and fourth largest city
Calgary, Canada's fifth largest city.
According to one of the world's top remote website monitoring
firms, Calgary is the best choice.
"Based on our research of major
Internet backbones in Canada and our existing client
locations, we see Calgary as a major point for Internet
connectivity in Canada," said Mr. Mazo of Dotcom-Monitor
Website Monitoring ( http://www.dotcom-monitor.com Dotcom-Monitor
website and network monitoring ). "Calgary is not
less important for Internet traffic than, let's say,
Toronto or Vancouver."
What makes this announcement special
is that almost half of Canada's population lives in
the Windsor-Quebec City corridor, including Montreal
and Toronto...some 2,000 miles from Calgary.
Dotcom-Monitor's new monitoring station
in Calgary is the second Canadian station by a major
international monitoring company. The other station
is located, more predictably, in Toronto.
"A Toronto monitoring station might
be the best 'marketing choice' to sell monitoring to
US or European client who know Toronto better, but we
believe we can cover more Canadian backbones in Calgary
than if we had chosen Toronto, and that means we can
deliver better service to webmasters seeking Canadian
customers," Mr. Mazo added.
Of course, Canadian webmasters will
benefit most from the Calgary monitoring station, since
it will help them ensure their website performance in
their home market.
But how important is remote website
monitoring to a website's performance and credibility,
when there are many software options, including free
downloads, available?
The answer is, "That depends".
Software can monitor from only one server in one location.
A local business, such as a hairdresser or a dry cleaner,
might not need monitoring from across the Atlantic,
since its entire clientele operates in the same region,
but it still needs "remote" monitoring, from
a different server than its own website.
A business with international clients
needs to know that the website is functioning 24/7 around
the globe. "Functioning" does not refer just
to uptime and downtime, which is what many software
packages monitor. A website is not functioning if clients
cannot access their passwords, or trans-Atlantic blockages
create time-outs or leave would-be customers deserting
slow shopping carts in frustration.
Mr. Mazo points out that in competitive
sectors, even content needs to be monitored to ensure
it has not been tampered with. He offers his list of
recommended website monitoring features at http://www.dotcom-monitor.com/website-monitoring.asp
and the list of his company service at http://www.dotcom-monitor.com/web-site-monitoring.asp.
But
he stresses that what is most important is that each
item be monitored from multiple locations, and that
those locations should be where website visitors connect,
not necessarily where they live.
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