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Beware of the Experts: Fakes, Fiction and Facts

beware experts ahead

Recently, everywhere I go, everywhere I look and every time I turn around — poof — there’s yet another IT/web development/web design/SEO/online marketing/[insert_random_area_of_expertise] expert.

Don’t get me wrong: I dig experts.
I follow them on Twitter. I like their facebook pages. I subscribe to their RSS feeds. I want to chain myself to their hip 24/7 so I can watch what they’re doing, how they’re doing it and so I can learn from them. If they are real experts, that is.

Now, after being in the industry for quite a while now, and after time and time again thinking I’ve seen and heard it all, there are two main things that never cease to amaze me:

1) – The ridiculous, outrageous, completely incomprehensibly stupid and preposterous statements and promises so-called specialists keep making; AND:
2) – That people STILL actually fall for it.

Well, here is why they fall for it:
While for me and fellow web-workers with the appropriate level of education and adequate experience (yes, I think both are required) it is generally fairly easy to spot a fake and/or a self-proclaimed guru; the general public, the unsuspecting Small Business Owner and therefore our beloved "expert’s" preferred target has almost no way to detect a fake.
They simply don’t have the necessary knowledge to determine if the talk they’re being subjected to has any substance, if any of the claims that are being made have any validity or if whatever product they get pressured into buying is of real value to them or if the service they need to "sign up for immediately before it’s too late and they get left behind" will be in any way beneficial to them or their (business) goals or if it will only fatten Mr. Guru’s wallet.

Especially in our technology-heavy field, I hear big words and acronyms being thrown around like they’re going out of style all the time.
The normal person however, the occasional web user (and the majority of people still fall into that category – believe it or not), has absolutely NO clue what they mean.
To me it’s nothing else but an intimidation technique with the goal to completely confuse the customer; to scare them by showing them how inadequate the little knowledge they might have is and that they have absolutely no way of surviving without joining the cult, immediately.

What I am trying to do in this series of posts is to give everybody out there little and hopefully valuable guidelines on how to spot a fake expert.

And while certain things are very specific to a certain area of expertise, there are some very steps everybody can take themselves and some basic questions everybody should ask their potential expert before signing anything, entering into a contract, or handing over any kind of sensitive information.

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