Registration process questine
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- monNom0
How likely is it that some random person visits the website and signs up for more information, while also not being in your target audience? Pretty slim I think.
If you just don't put the link to the register form in the website navigation, that's probably enough security. And that one guy who deviously finds his way in is probably a good lead anyway!
- sted-1
email, card with only the code for zynga:
'thecompany.com / #C-ZnVja21'
simple redirect matching the '#C-' part in the url to run a check on the active keys, if it's an active key delete the key and ask for an email address to send out some activation + to be able to ask actually for details or whatever u do.
- ben_-1
We had a problem like this recently with a client.
Opted for a landing page that had a really brief summary of the benefit to the person signing up, then what the program would be asking of them.
Users were invited to "submit" their company to the program which allowed the client to simply curate who could be involved and send a really nice form letter to the ones who weren't chosen this time around.
Seems to be working well so far.
- dbloc-2
password protect it. wend out the code/password
- monNom-2
if you really want to, you can give each user your email a unique one-time code.
ie:
user: Jane Doe
email:
uid: 35f5782642e9fa0f6cfff5a552e2ae97
(that's an md5 hash of the email)then on the link you put
http://www.ourcompany.co/registe…
and when your user submits the form, you take that url parameter uid and match it against your contact database.
- oh well. jane(at)doe.com, and you'll need to hover to see that link.monNom
- BusterBoy-2
I was thinking the easiest way, keeping in mind we'll be targetting some luddites may be just to have a subdomain...ie
http://register.thecompany.com
Makes them feel slightly exclusive. Fairly easy to navigate to.
Thoughts?
- dbloc-2
you can also send out an access code and make that a field in the registration as required.