Corante

About this Author
CORANTE John Yunker is founder of Byte Level Research and author of the widely acclaimed book, Beyond Borders: Web Globalization Strategies and editor of Global By Design.

He has covered the emerging field of Web globalization for half a decade and has published a wide range of reports dedicated to best practices in Web localization and internationalization.
About this blog
Going Global focuses on the risks and rewards of expanding into new geographic and cultural markets, from Web globalization to international marketing to global usability.
Global By Design

The official newsletter of the Web globalization revolution.
Check out Jevon MacDonald on the "uncertain future of blogging"

Going Global

« iTunes: 19 Countries and Counting | Main | What Do Dell, HP, and Intel Have In Common? »

May 12, 2005

CMO Magazine: Lost in Translation

Email This Entry

Posted by John Yunker

I was happy to be quoted in a CMO Magazine article on the challenges of taking your Web site global. It's a must read for anyone in this field.

Here are a few good excerpts:

    "We learned that it was not just about taking the copy off our English site and translating it," says Match.com Chief Operating Officer Joe Cohen, who oversees the company's international operations and expansion efforts. He now understands that localizing a website is very different from translating it.

    "I'm at the point where I tell translators to forget the copy on the U.S. site," says Cohen. "I say, Let's talk about the meaning and the semantic message." Since that initial overseas push, Match.com has worked to strengthen ties with local marketing partners in the 35 countries where it now has local language sites in order to more effectively reach customers in those areas.

... and ...

    "In some markets, the level of quality given to the websites was similar to what you were seeing in the U.S. five years earlier," says Pattiann McAdams, Avon's executive director of North American e-commerce, who also works closely with localized Avon sites in other parts of the world. "In many markets, they treated the website more like a brochure than as a medium to maximize our message with graphics and animation."

This second excerpt really hits on the key issue I'm seeing these days. Companies have long looked at their overseas revenues as gravy and, as such, have largely overlooked the Web sites managed by their overseas Web teams. But now as overseas revenues are growing to the point where they're becoming a "main course" in and of themselves, these overseas Web sites are getting some much-needed attention -- and financial investment.

This article is definitely a must read.

Comments (0) + TrackBacks (0) | Category: Web Globalization



EMAIL THIS ENTRY TO A FRIEND

Email this entry to:

Your email address:

Message (optional):




RELATED ENTRIES
Why Is Web Globalization So Popular? Just Look at the Numbers...
Authors Thinking Globally
Successful Ecommerce in Four Seconds (or less)
Happy Bilingual Holidays!
Unicode 5.0: The Book
The Transcultural CEO
Happy Bilingual Holidays!
News Localization: Sometimes The Truth Hurts