WordPress is the CMS of choice

September 3rd, 2009

I started with my first blog about 4 years ago on the blogger platform (from Google). I eventually tried them all including: Tumblr, Typepad, and blogs and forums using the Joomla CMS platform—I eventually moved to WordPress. What makes one better than the other and how does someone know which one is right for them? One thing I always look for is a large user base, not because we want to design with what everyone else out there is designing with, or the platform they are developing on—but usually open source platforms with a lot of people using them accelerate it’s effectiveness and widen the range and availability of modules and plug-ins—as well as push the software or platform to move ahead much more quickly in it’s effectiveness, and also to offer a huge amount of support from other users, developers and designers out there.

wordpress-logo

Due to the fact that WordPress is open source, many say that it is not the best choice for a serious project due to insecurity – but we feel quite the opposite. To prove these points are not worthy, below we list and show you that WordPress can be used for serious projects and big brands that go big in scale (including The Wall Street Journal, Sony, and Ebay) :

http://ebayinkblog.com/

http://ycorpblog.com/

http://www.thefordstory.com/

http://blogs.wsj.com/

http://electronicsblog.sel.sony.com/sony/default.aspx

http://stylenews.peoplestylewatch.com/

http://www.nytimes.com/ref/topnews/blog-index.html

http://www.benjerry.fr/blog/

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Here is a great article on creating your own theme for WordPress. A theme for WordPress is the starting point for a web designer or web developer and the framework to the web design.

http://www.adobe.com/devnet/dreamweaver/articles/creating_wordpress_theme_with_dreamweaver_pt1.html

A simple article highlighting and explaining the SEO ( search engine optimization ) importance and qualities inside of WordPress

http://wpbloghost.com/blog/wordpress-search-engine-optimization/

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Wordtracker SEO Blogger is a plug-in for Firefox that opens alongside your blog entry as you are editing it to aid in finding the right keywords for your article. (perfect for interactive copywriters, web designers, and business professionals)

http://labs.wordtracker.com/seo-blogger

There is also a service and application to help you evaluate, export and compare your keywords. I have not tried this package and there seems to be an abundance of these types of applications out there, however this one looks very good

http://www.wordtracker.com

Here is an article by Pingdom – rating the different blogging platforms – WordPress being at the top of the list

http://royal.pingdom.com/2009/01/15/the-blog-platforms-of-choice-among-the-top-100-blogs/

WordPress, in our experience, is by far the best solution out there for the small blog that is shared among friends and the super-huge serious full-blown websites that require a content management system with thousands of built-in options and inherently search engine friendly!

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There’s An App For That – iPhone

August 31st, 2009

Almost everyone that I know, young and old—whether employed by a large company or running their own small business—a web designer or web developer or someone who owns an iPhone or not…we’ve all had an idea for a new iPhone app.

Easy to develop iPhone applications with the low price from Apple to become a developer and download the SDK—it is actually tougher than we think, to come up with that app that will sell one million times. But maybe just talking about the iPhone and making a video about it will result in viral numbers and can amplify your brand or online presence. That’s exactly what happened here [ title: LEAKED New iPhone commercial ]

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Making Social Media Work For Your Business

August 30th, 2009

If you own your own business and your trying to find a perfect marketing strategy (I am not sure if one exists) — it has a lot to do with diversity and balance. Stick solely to traditional marketing strategies and you will find yourself potentially missing an enormous demographic. Try to milk the internet for all it is worth and you will find yourself completely overwhelmed by the number of tools and application available for internet marketing. Using social networking sites between traditional and internet marketing strategies… could make a huge difference in your business without overwhelming you altogether.

1. Creating a Strategy. Your competitors have already created a strategy for using social media, so chances are you are already behind. This means thinking intentionally about how to use social media instead of randomly opening an account here and joining a group there. Spend some time determining the kinds of sites available and evaluating what role they might have in your marketing strategy. Then make a plan to use them consistently and effectively. If you just go with the flow you will be wasting your time and effort.

2. Brand Building. Social media marketing is like having one enormous billboard advertising your company. Everything you post, every tweet you write, and every comment you make should be treated as a chance to show your audience what your business is all about, what you value, and what you stand for.

The first step to consider is creating a business blog. Chances are you have employees who are already involved in social media in one way or another, so ask them to post some articles to the blog. Make sure your blog entries include things that will help you promote your brand.

3. Choose Wisely. Do not feel like you need to use every single social media site available. Stick with a few and spend time using them to your advantage. Choose sites that help you connect with your target demographic, that help you show off the components of your business that interest potential customers, and that will be most helpful in connecting potential customers to your business.

4. Find the Right Balance. Social media is so popular that it might initially be difficult to find the right balance between it and traditional marketing strategies. In the end, they should all work together to serve your business effectively. Start with LinkedIn and create a business profile where you can post testimonials and make connections with your customers. Then create a Facebook group tied to your industry or product.

Finally, use Twitter to create a community of those with interest in your industry. Connect traditional strategies with online strategies by printing your Twitter ID on business card and make a place on your website that shows visitors where they can connect with you using social media.

5. Mobility. Many platforms allow you to communicate in real time by downloading applications to your phone. Imagine what you could do as a business owner attending a conference. Sharing with your readers what you are learning, as you learn it, is a great way to build rapport with and interest in your customers.

Overwhelming or not—young people are exchanging information and making decisions based on social media sites. If you are interested in connecting with them as they age, procure more discretionary income, and spend money on things that interest them, then you need to find a way to connect with them now. And you need to make sure you are defining your business online rather than waiting for others to define you in your stead. Get connected online and spread your message and reach many people online.

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An Old Way to place ads in a New World

August 27th, 2009

There’s one area of your site that if a web designer or web developer include it, users have no choice but to engage, if they wish to continue with the task they’re trying to complete. That would be the CAPTCHA, other wise known as that annoying, (often times barely legible) word you have to recreate in a box, so that the site knows you’re human.

So if the user is already engaging with this, why not make it an ad? That appears to be Microsoft’s mentality, as it has proposed exactly that with a patent application. The concept is simple. It works just like any other CAPTCHA, but it shows you a picture of a product (the Xbox 360 in an example from Microsoft) and asks you to type the name of the product you see.

xbox-360

Todd Bishop at TechFlash points to this and actually another mention of this concept from as long as four years ago, at Ad Lab, which simply presents the concept, showing logos for Tide and UPS.

Clearly this is a concept that has been around for some time, but you don’t see it very often, and you have to wonder why that is. There’s no question that the CAPTCHA is intrusive, and perhaps brands won’t always want to be associated with that kind of advertising, but in reality, it’s not the ad itself that is intrusive. It’s the step of completing the CAPTCHA form, which is already there. If it’s already there, you might as well utilize that space for some further benefit.

What Designers and marketers would not want to do is start displaying more CAPTCHAs specifically for the purpose of advertising. That’s where things could go sour. On the other hand, a user might not know the difference, and could reach the conclusion that you’re just throwing an intrusive advertisement at them.

It is an interesting strategy—and I like it and I would take a picture rather than those hard to decipher CAPTCHAs any day. There is no click value to this from the advertising standpoint, but the brand value is definitely there.

Source: Web Design Library

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