Left Brain or Right Brain?

No, not my brain people..everyone’s brain! So what does the brain have to do with web design?  Everything actually!  You see, people deal with all the information coming to them in different ways.  Some prefer reading, while others prefer watching.  Some like detail and precision while others like pictures and examples.

Being a designer myself, it’s no surprise that I prefer pictures/videos/audio when I want to learn or read something interesting.  I have a strong affinity for video, pictures, and audiobooks - thats just how I like to be entertained. I have friends and clients, on the other hand, that prefer reading/writing and seeing detail and precision. They don’t mind wading through graphs, bar charts, and lots of detail - it makes their brain juices flow.  That would drive me nuts after a while, but for them, they are like a pig in mud (or like a fat kit on a Smartie).  I just don’t like detail, minutae, and reading bland text when I am trying to learn or entertain myself (thats probably why I never did well in languages/science and school in general).

As you might predict, the focus this newsletter is a bit of a departure from the standard.  I am going to show you how to take advantage of this knowledge and create content on your site that appeals to both “lefties” and “righties” and everyone in between.

Brains and Web Design

For you, how you prefer to read and learn is unique to you. Creating a web site only from your point of view is a mistake - there is a good chance your site won’t fullfill the needs of all of your visitors. Everyone reads information in different ways and so your web site should cater to all audiences equally.  I often see this with clients where some are lefties and love detail and writing and don’t care much for pictures/video (often labeled “rich content” by the righties), while others are righties and want video/sound/pictures and usually scan web pages rather than reading every paragraph in full. Once you understand that everyone reads in different ways, you can take advantage of this and create content that serves both brains equally.

As a good starting point, every web page of your site should have at minimum:

  • Summary and Detail for the Lefties (thats all they need)
  • At least one picture (for the Righties)
  • Bonus if you can: Video of something relevant
  • Super Bonus if you can: Audio narration of the web page by the author
  • Super Duper Bonus if you can: Video narration of the web page by the author

I recommend to clients that they add audio narrations of the web page because there are always a few creatives in the audience that will prefer to have content read to them.

Brains and Your Typical Visitor

We can go a step further and propose that the type of audience visiting your site can pre-determine the type of content you should offer.

For example, if you sell custom-made jewellery, its safe to assume that most of your customers lean to the right.  As a result, you will see sales increase if you have big pictures, audio and video and focus on satiating the needs of the right-brain. If you own the jewellery store but are a natural leftie, it becomes even more imperative that you depart from your focus on detailed writing and trust that less words and more pictures will work.  A lot of the cloting retailers have picked up on this technique, like LandsEnd, Gap, and Mexx.  In fact, LandsEnd starts every major category on their site with pictures and no written content at all which tells me the design team (righties) are running the show there.

Another example is Real Estate agents.  Here you could get brains from all walks of life and so you need to be cautious not to focus too much on written content (as a lefty) or too little written content (as a righty).  You need to satisfy both brain types. Knowing, however, the type of brain you are dealing with as a real estate agent could help you sell more homes.  If you are dealing with a right brain, go for the virtual gallery and big photos.  If you are dealing with the right brain, make your first contact a detailed financial comparison of homes in the area.

Tickle all brains equally

The best way to see the results of ensuring your site serves all audiences is by example.  I am going to use a Business Consultant and show how a site map might look like.

The Left brain site owner might create a site map that looks like this:

Home
Coaching
- Coaching Program
- Coaching FAQ
- Coaching Fact Sheet
Packages
- Startup
- Small Business
- Established Enterprise
Client List
Contact

The right brain might create a site map that looks like this:

Home
Coaching
- How I coach
- Coaching Videos and Audio
- Coaching FAQ
- Coaching Events and Training
Client
- Case Studies
Contact Me
- Chat Live

In both examples thus far, neither web site map is complete.  When you combine the two, you get :

Home
Coaching
- Coaching Program
- FAQ
- Video/Audio clips
- Coaching Fact Sheet
- Coaching Events and Training
Packages
- Startup
- Small Business
- Established Enterprise
Client List
- Happy Clients
- Case Studies
Contact
-  Chat Live

See how combining the two is much more complete and seems to serve all brains equally?

Obama vs McCain

OK, so I might as well jump on the bandwagon and contribute my piece on these two future world leaders (eyes rolling).  Here we go!

Studies seem to show that when speaking, lefties are more planned and consistent and don’t use hand gestures or body signs to convey their message. Righties are more intuitive, think on their feet, use their hands often, and sometimes are looking into the distance to help visualize.  Lefties are more likely to be concerned about the content of a speech while righties put energy into the style and emotion in which the speech is given.

Based on this alone, I would venture to guess that McCain is slightly more left brain oriented.  He has stated that he doesn’t enjoy public speaking and usually ends up with a “monotone” and bland or forced speech style.  He has proven that he isn’t comfortable winging it and making it up creatively as he goes along.  Obama, on the other hand seems more right brain oriented (a more natural public speaker). You can see this in action when Obama is interviewed where he will use hand gestures and is able to answer random questions with ease.  He has a more natural style of communicating.  I would say its no accident that he leads in initial polls - its not his political campaign but his brain thats doing all the winning :)

Fortunately for the lefties that have watched the candidates, both have superb speech writers that ensure the left-brain oriented message content is communicated clearly and precisely.

Still Struggling?

If you aren’t sure about what kind of visitor comes to your site, or would like more precision (lefty eh?) on your site content strategy, feel free to shoot me an email and I can help you out with more in depth info.  Don’t forget as well, to visit my links on the right hand side for quizzes and questionnaires that can help you identify your brain type.

Links for Righties

Ah.. my confidants.. my friends.. I am just like you!

  • Joost - Watch great movies in high definition online
  • Ted - Amazing videos from the world’s best in academia and design
  • Cooliris - Great way to search for images online
  • WindowShop - Shop at Amazon with Pictures and Audio (NEW!)
  • Reuters, CNN, and CBC -  watch the news, don’t read it
  • BlinkX - search ALL online video here
  • TVTonic - Software to watch TV online

Links for Lefties

Sorry lefties.. you are on your own. I just don’t have links that are specific to your brain type.  How about a change of scene and see what the righties like above eh?

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Call to Action is “a strong calling you invoke to make your customer perform an action”.  It’s a critical tool for selling but most web designers don’t understand it.  They ignore it for wimpy reasons:

  • The client should write this..I don’t know anything about blue widgets
  • Who cares!  If the design is great, people will buy cause they love the image dropshadows!
  • We just love designing, don’t ask me about content.. ugh!
  • Maybe I should hire an SEO from India/China and outsource this..hrm.. or that fat guy with a beard
  • Call to Action is so 2001..it’s old… I make web2.0 sites now
  • I just build it man, I don’t put you at the top of Google.
  • Client’s won’t pay me to write

To all designers: Wrong! Wrong! Wrong!  Don’t be a wimp.  Guess what though?  Call to Action should NOT be the ultimate goal - even though our clients think so.   Instead, we should focus on understanding the sales process and how people buy, and put that into simple terms for our clients. We need to teach clients about the fundamentals of selling.  I know what you are thinking: “Oh god, ONE more thing…”. Don’t worry.  I am going to make this easy for you.

I have been listening to an Anthony Robbins product called Power to Influence recently and I believe if you teach clients some of these basics of selling, the “call to action” becomes self-evident:

  • Create a want
  • Buying means pleasure
  • Not buying means pain
  • An undisturbed web site visitor will NOT be persuaded to a call to action
  • Persuasion is the process of getting your customer to clearly associate their most desired feelings or emotional states to your product or service
  • People don’t buy products, they buy an “emotional state”
  • People do more to avoid pain then they ever do for gaining pleasure
  • People buy for emotional reasons, and rationalize with logical reasons
  • Ask for a committment using positive and negative motivation (everyone thinks differently)
  • Ask for a committment
  • Get commitments throughout the sales process

See whats happening?  Don’t just think about the “call to action”.  Instead, realize that if you clearly understand the sales process, you won’t even need a fancy “call to action” at all.  In other words, If your website is written properly and the content is thought through, visitors will be ready to buy, even before they see the “Buy Now!” button.

In simple terms, the way you can integrate this into your business is to do this:

  1. Identify the top 10 pains you can remove for your customer
  2. Identify the top 10 pleasures you can provide for your customer
  3. Write all the areas of your site to ENGAGE customers with text, audio, and video
  4. Ensure you have a smooth commerce/subscribe process.  Remember: keep the barriers low.

Don’t just put calls to action on your home page either.  Think where your web sites visitors might be:

  1. Home page because thats always a key starting point from new visitors
  2. Your Services/Products page because customers want to learn more
  3. Your Contact page because some customers are at least ready to commit a little time
  4. Your FAQ page because some clients want more detail
  5. Your Portfolio page because some clients like to think in pictures/video
  6. Your Testimonials page because some clients like to know others are happy
  7. Your Case Studies page focusing on specific problems/solutions and pain/pleasure

The call to action is always an important part of your Sales and Marketing program.  It’s even more important online:

  1. Customers can leave your site easily
  2. The more your product/service is like a commodity, the greater the available choice online
  3. Entry costs for your competitors are getting lower
  4. Most web sites don’t think about this, so thats an advantage for you

How about designing your web site to create customer interaction or tiny committments throughout each page/area of the site?  When you involve/engage the web site visitor, you create committment. For example:

  • Create an interactive “pain-picker” or “pleasure-picker”
  • Give more content as customers give more personal info
  • Let customers profile themselves with rich/photo/video web forms
  • Satiate the customer appetite with some initial feedback or product sample
  • Integrate video and audio into your commerce cart
  • Provide a 30-second video at the end of your commerce/questionnaire process

Need more info?  I highly recommend that you absolutely read or listen to Anthony Robbins Power to Influence.

Good luck and remember: Call to Action is King!

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Wow!  Just got an email from the Senior Producer at CTV and she informed me that one of the videos I uploaded using http://myvote.ctv.ca will be on TV today! Wooo.. This is both exciting and scary!  I hope I don’t hear any negative feedback about these.  A few days back, I submitted videos to all the party leaders.  You can see lots more user-submitted videos at http://myvote.ctv.ca

Harper needs Reality TV

Liberals should just talk about the Issues!

Green “Shaft” plan

Jack Layton’s first message

Elizabeth May and the Taxi

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I’m putting together a mockup for a client at the moment and was looking for some design ideas and inspiration for colors, palettes, tones, etc.  The client is a dentist and I really want to create an amazing design for the dentist this time.  Here are my criteria:

  • Pastel, Spa, Water colors
  • Clean un-cluttered design
  • Healthy feeling
  • Clean/Crisp
  • Well placed content

http://kara.allthingsd.com
All Things Digital

All Things Digital

http://www.spainteractive.com/web_design.htm
Spa Interactive

Spa Interactive

http://www.oasisdentalspa.net
Oasis Dental Spa

Oasis Dental Spa

http://www.hemmingwaymd.com
Hemmingway MD

Hemmingway MD

http://www.goodmanmd.com
Goodman MD

Goodman MD

http://www.cliftonsmiles.com
Clifton Smiles

Clifton Smiles

http://www.drgerbercosmetic.com
Dr Gerber Cosmetic

Dr Gerber Cosmetic

http://www.perrydentalhealth.com
Perry Dental Health

Perry Dental Health

http://www.serenedentalcenter.com
Serene Dental Center

Serene Dental Center

http://www.myfamilydds.com
My Family DDS

My Family DDS

Need more insipiration?  the designs at Tyson Steele really are very good!  I really love his work.

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Hi Everyone! It’s me again: Mayur the designer. First off, I want to thank you all for taking the time to read and respond to my last newsletter. I recieved great feedback with many comments and support - even a few calls from UK and abroad! Some of you asked for more substance and content. This issue, I definitely delivered. Just like Obama, you wanted change.

This Issue: How web design actually works, and SEO in simple terms

This issue, I will walk you through my web design process briefly covering the 5 steps I complete with clients. It’s a bird’s eye view of the process, but still packed with lots of detail. Of interest to many of you, the last step about SEO offers an easy to understand explanation: i’ts just like finding great Sushi.

On all projects, there are dozens of technical details I take care of behind the scenes that you don’t see - or need to. The whole process from start to finish looks like this:

  1. Picking a great domain name
  2. Choosing the right hosting and email service
  3. Getting the right editing solution
  4. Making a slick, customized theme
  5. Getting your SEO on a roll
These 5 steps are a really brief overview of the whole process. If you have experience launching a web site, you likely got involved in the project during step 4 - the design of your theme. Most web designers will take care of steps 1-3 for you as part of their solution. Another way to look at the above process is like this:
  1. Positioning - the right message, colors, domain name, calls to action, and delivery mechanism
  2. Building - the design of your message via web site or other
  3. Marketing - the post-launch activities like SEO, online advertising

Finally, my favorite links at the end of this newsletter are all about the back to school season. I have some great sites for the kids this month for speed reading, finding cheap textbooks, saving money, great music for studying and more. I am also sharing online tools that I love and use. Some I visit on a daily basis like Mailbuild, Freshbooks, Google apps, Google analytics, Google alerts, CrazyEgg and Flickr. Others are great gems for photo and video editing, web site user tracking, todo lists and more.

Pull up a chair, sit back and enjoy the Newsletter this month.  I hope its exceeds your expecations!

Step 1: Everything starts with a smart address

One of my first conversations with clients is about domain names. Creating the right domain name isn’t about what’s easy for you, it’s about thinking like your potential customer. Your customer needs to easily find you, identify some unique relationship with your domain name, and be able to remember it easily for return visits.

The easier your domain name is to remember, the more likely they will tell their friends and visit your site again. Bad strategies like weeard spellingg, numb3rs, hy-phens, hard to remember extensions, all work against you. Keeping the domain simple, using words describing your product or service, using .com whenever possible, keeping the number of words low, avoiding plurals, and using the most commonly used words describing your product or service all work in your favor.

How your domain sounds when spoken is equally important. When you tell a friend your domain name (or your friend tells someone else), they must be able to spell it without your help.  Just think about all the phone conversations you are likely to have about your web site.  You shouldn’t have to say “b for bob, d for david, s for sam, f for frank, 1 - the number one” etc.  If spelling mistakes are impossible to avoid or it’s too late for you now, register multiple domains covering all the phonetic possibilities and have them all point to your web site. It’s easy to do, and the small extra expense is better than having a frustrated customer not find you when they are ready to buy.  Sometimes, in rare circumstances, the right choice is NOT to change your domain name. My domain name, as an example, is difficult to mis-spell (say “red primary” out loud) but it doesn’t follow all of my other rules (common words, what people search for, etc).  I won’t change it today, because it has been around for a number of years and I have built up significant “online equity” at this point.  Changing domain names for me today would be a step backward.

You should always register domain names yourself. If problems occur with your hosting company or domain name ownership, you don’t want to be held ransom to the identity you worked so hard to build. It’s a lot easier for you to make changes to your domain name if its under your own control.  If the registration is done correctly (yes, it is easy to do it incorrectly), nobody can take your online identity away from you. Don’t ask your web hosting company or web designer to do this for you - many offer it as part of their service package. The domain should be in your name, held under a high security registrar lock, registered with your street mailing address (helps to prove ownership if your primary email is unavailable), and have you listed as the primary administrative and registrant contact (a third type of contact on a domain name, the Technical contact, doesn’t have to be you).  If you are unsure about ownership of your existing domain name, just send me an email and I can tell you the appropriate steps to take.

My recommendation for registering and moving domain names is directnic.com. I use them for all my domain registrations today and have my clients use them as well. With directnic.com, you won’t run into any domain ownership issues. Directnic.com doesn’t do Canadian .CA domains so visit namespro.ca for equally great service. If you wish to use a domain registration company other than my recommendations, make sure you can manage your own DNS records. Custom DNS capability will give you easy access to Google Apps (mentioned further down).

Step 2: Choosing the right web hosting service

Once the domain is registered, you need to have a place where web pages can be served to the public. All web sites today have a host that provides this service. Good web hosting companies will:

  • Easily handle lots of traffic
  • Create backups on a regular basis
  • Have multiple connections to the Internet for redundancy
  • Promise near-zero downtime or outages
  • Ensure their systems are up to date, patched, and virus-free
  • Employe perimeter defense systems to keep hackers out

In the hosting world, you get what you pay for. Not all hosting companies are the same and not all carry a track record of fast service. Many low cost domain registration companies like Godaddy.com and Shaw provide free hosting but they are unlikely to offer all the features I mention above. Low cost or free hosting companies are also less likely to provide a quick response to solve your issues. Think of hosting like insurance: quick response and service are crucial when you run into problems.

My recommendation for quality hosting companies MediaTemple, GoGrid or Nextmill.  They are worth every penny for the small extra expense. If you still don’t think premium hosting is for you, ask yourself this question: Can you afford to have your site down after spending thousands on a marketing campaign and working hard to get visitors to your web site? Are you ready to risk losing online visitors for the cost of a weekly lunch? Would you like to know right away when your site is down? If any of these questions are important to you, then premium hosting is something you shouldn’t skimp on.

Free email, calendar, and online documents

Hosting is only one more piece of the puzzle. Nearly all hosting companies offer free unlimited email accounts and web access.  There are better options though. Thanks to a great service from Google called Google Apps you can have a branded email address like you@yourname.com. This free email service comes with

  • Multiple email accounts and addresses
  • Great virus scanner and spam blocker
  • 10gb for each email account
  • Lots of mailing lists and Auto responders
  • iPhone and Blackberry interfaces for checking email
  • Online Calendar, Online Documents, and Chat.

All of these free services are branded with your own email address and look much more professional than an @gmail or @yahoo address. For a small extra fee, you can also get email audit control, enhanced security, desktop synchronization, company-wide email signatures, and much more. If you aren’t happy with your current email system and have a domain already, you can switch to Google Apps without much trouble. Visit http://www.google.com/a or give me a call.

Step 3: A great content solution

Once your domain is registered and your hosting and email services are running, you need to start looking for the right content editing software. I have found with every web project to date, the ability to edit content quickly and easily is crucial for my clients. As a result, I’m always looking for great content management tools and software. Adding new, good quality content to your site on a regular basis is one of the secrets to better search engine results.

imageMy preferred web site content solution is a combination of powerful software that sits on your server, and some dandy software that sits on your desktop (the desktop software is optional, but it makes editing a lot easier). On the web server, I install Wordpress. Wordpress is the “Hummer” of content management systems. It runs huge sites like Techcrunch, Engadget, New York Times, CNN, and NASA (see a list of more sites here). It’s superbly designed and architected, completely ready for SEO, and is actively developed software that’s improving all the time. Even though sites like NASA use Wordpress, it’s just as popular for small business sites too. You can see a few examples of my Wordpress installations for clients here, here, here and here.

image Wordpress comes with a complete suite of back office management tools for creating pages, blog posts, news entries, videos, images, embedded items and much more. The back office tools that come with Wordpress run right inside your web browser (Chrome, Firefox, Internet Explorer, and all the others) so you can edit your site from anywhere in the world. It can even recieve new content by email or be edited from your iPhone.

image The other piece of dandy software I mentioned earlier is optional desktop software that replicates a lot of what Wordpress can already do. The software is great because it lets you include maps, photos, and videos into your content more easily than the Wordpress running inside your browser. For Microsoft Windows, the highly acclaimed Windows Live Writer is very popular. It has many plugins that provide cool tools like inserting PDFs and Powerpoints, Image editing and more. Windows Live Writer is free and is improving all the time. Best of all, its designed by Microsoft so it looks like Microsoft Word which makes learning to use it a breeze. For an in-depth review of Windows Live Writer watch video one, two, three and four. For you Apple users, Marsedit for the Mac is the way to go and has nearly the same features as Windows Live Writer.  If you don’t like either of my recommendations for desktop blogging software, there are more options.

Step 4: Your brand and unique style

image

Once your site has Wordpress installed, it must be styled and branded to fit your business theme, colors, and images. Out of the box, the default theme (seen above on the left) is completely naked, un-styled and missing lots of essential features like menus and sub-menus, your color palette, your logo and brand identity, your photos, a better search, background colors, a newsletter subscription box, web statistics, and so much more. The visual experience between a designed theme and the default theme can’t be compared. Left unbranded, your site will not drive visitors to do business with you. With a custom designed theme, visitors will pull up a chair and stay on your site for a while. Designing a custom theme isn’t an instant process (like picking from a menu). I spend a lot of time designing your graphics, bringing in your photos, playing with ideas, and injecting my design skills to make it fit just for you. Just like a custom-tailored suit gives you the edge, a custom designed them will make you stand out from your competitors.

Step 5: After the site is online, it’s ready for SEO

SEO means “search engine optimization”. It’s the process of making your sites clearly visible to Google, Yahoo and other search engines. Many SEO consultants offer guaranteed top 10 Google placement without much effort on your part. Back away slowly from these hollow promises. The process of SEO is nothing like buying a domain name or getting a hosting account. Instant-on top 10 ranking is bound to last just that long too: an instant.

To understand the right strategy for top 10 ranking, you first need to understand how search engines work.

Think of search engines like this: If you ask many people for their favorite Sushi restaurant, you will see a trend develop. Many will mention the same restaurants over and over because of the great food and nice atmosphere. You are likely to do business at these favorite restaurants, and chances are you will tell others about your positive experience too. As a result of the collective referrals and recommendations, better restaurants become more popular. This increasing popularity is termed “organic” in that it will happen naturally from positive recommendations.

The exact same thing happens on the Internet: Google surveys web pages to determine which web sites get mentioned the most. They survey continuously, with many computers, 24 hours a day and visit pages more than once to look for changes. The computers run mathematical equations that analyze web pages looking for text, images and links.  The links are harvested and compared to all the other web pages they track reaching a trillion pages recently. Google engineers constantly tweak and improve the mathematics and algorithms to account for all types of links, even bad ones (site and comment spam, link baiting, etc). They have people dedicated to ensuring spammers are watched closely too. Due to this ever-improving formula, and the flood of new pages created every day, Google has achieved greater accuracy over time. Today search has become more precise and reliable. Less popular sites and spammers rank lower so that you aren’t caught into a virus trap or link bait scheme as often as before. Google has a majority share of the search market due to their simple search interface and sophisticated search algorithm.  It’s an impressive accomplishment for a company that didn’t exist 10 years ago.  Amazingly, Google is still staying search is nowhere close to being solved.

So what happens to restaurants where quality drops?  Well, the first thing that occurs is that you hear it by word-of-mouth.  If you tell one ore two friends about the poor review and they do the same, the restaurant sales will suffer and that’s exactly the outcoume to expect for bad food and poor service.  Restaurants can fight negative publicity with mass advertising and new customers, but that’s not a sustainable strategy long-term. It’s important, as well, to remember that not all recommendations have the same value. Newspapers, food critics, and magazines are a more reliable opinion than casual rumours and word-of-mouth.  Thus, when picking a restaurant, the qualifications of the reviewer matters as much as the quantity of all reviews made.  For web sites and their Google ranking, the same approach is applied to search. The quality of links and where they come from matter as much as the quantity of all links they find.  It’s not good enough to have 1000 web sites all mentioning your web address if those web sites don’t have much traffic  (by the way, some SEO consultants try to sell packages that do this). Popular web sites where many users gather lend a greater credibility to how links should be ranked vs spammers strategies, link baiters, and dead pages which lend a lower credibility to their ranking. Sometimes, overly aggressive SEO tactics can even get you blacklisted or penalized by search engines.

So far I have said SEO and search engine positioning is like finding a great restaurant.  There IS one very important difference.  With traditional advertising, if you want people to do business with you, you tell friends, family, your local community, and the consumer audience through mass advertising.  This approach is typically un-targeted (or poorly targeted) in that you need to tell a lot of people - most not ready to buy - before making a sale.  Real estate agents do this kind of mass advertising with bus bench ads and pizza joints do this by sending out menus to everyone in their area.  Most people seeing these ads aren’t ready to buy and probably won’t remember you when they are ready to buy.  Online Marketing is different because you have control over how your site appears to search engines.  For example, if you had a web site selling yellow rubber duckies with information about types of rubber, duck bouyancy, and the color consistency of your ducks, Google would be likely to show your web site if someone searches for “yellow rubber duckies”.  People will find you because your web site has what they are searching for.  Paid advertising works in a similar fashion by letting you control which keywords you want your business to display with: you can specify which keywords should trigger your ad. Traditional vs Online marketing is like floodlights vs laserbeams - one is simply better at pointing.

All of my discussions on linking thus far should give you insight into at least one strategy: popular web sites (preferably for your target market) are places you should spend time and participate, and post your web address to (so Google knows about it).  The more your web site is mentioned, the more likely Google will reward you with inclusion and high rankinginto their search index.

Ready to get started with your web project?

I’m ready! Start your web project right now by asking me for a FREE quote! I can take all the fear about starting a web site:

  1. You don’t need to be a web or computer expert
  2. You don’t need to know anything about design
  3. You don’t need to spend a fortune to get started
  4. You don’t need to commit to a 5-year contract
  5. It’s easier thank you think

Sneak Preview of upcoming newsletters!

I couldn’t possibly cover ever aspect of web design this newsletter - my collective experience goes back more than 10 years. Expect future newsletters to include topics like:

  • The correct way of building a brand
  • In-depth domain name analysis
  • my SEO toolbox and an Interview with a pro
  • What are Tags?
  • What makes a great designer
  • Picking perfect color palettes
  • Effective and catchy writing techniques
  • How to really make money online
  • Saving time every day with great web apps

Are one of these topics of special interest to you? Please let me know. I’m always ready to change gears and focus on the issues that matter to you.

How about telling your friends?

Hey, they might actually want find this newsletter useful! How about forwarding it to them or tell them to visit my site at www.redprimary.com

Links, Links, and more Links!

Back to School links for the kids!

Business and Productivity

  • Never forget anything ever again.  Type, Talk, or Photograph a thought with your PC or Mobile for FREE using Evernote
  • Defending your rights online, look for theft and plaigarism of your content with Copyscape
  • Bookkeeping can be a pain. Send out invoices in a flash on Freshbooks
  • Download, categorize and graph all of your personal finances with Mint
  • Easily deliver e-newsletters like this one with Mailbuild
  • “Brandify” your email, calendar and documents with Google Apps
  • Once your photos are online, there are some pretty slick things you can do with them. Start by putting photos on Flickr
  • Take the pain out of video conversions with MovAvi
  • Do videos edits like the pros without software using Jumpcut
  • Automatically fix old home videos for free with FixMyMovie
  • Life moves too quickly to write down every little detail. Do it easily with Remember The Milk
  • Use your phone to convert messages into text with Jott
  • Get a free, lifelike remote assistant with the incredible IWantSandy
  • Google will tell you when they find something new with Google Alerts
  • Convert images on your phone to searchable PDFs with ScanR
  • Send files that are too big for email with Sendspace
Web Site Analytics
  • Do you know who is visiting your site? You can with Google Analytics
  • Monitor your site visitors with stunning data using CrazyEgg
  • See stuff about your website you didn’t even know with Quarkbase (here is mine)
  • See how you score with search engines on WebsiteGrader
Still want more links?  Checkout the top 100 Web apps of 2008 at Webware
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My First Newsletter Ever!

Hello Friends, Family, and Business Partners.  Thanks for taking the time to read this newsletter.. my very first one ever!  I’m sending this to you share some history about where I’ve been, share some current news, and let you know about my plans are for the coming year. Feel free to share you thoughts about this issue by clicking here.

 

The new redprimary.com

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I have consulted under this name for a number of years and updated the site this weekend to showcase my design work with web sites, business cards, print, logos and more.

Visit the site and tell me what you think!

 

Recent clients

I wanted to mention some projects I have completed this year.  To all my clients: "Thank you for giving me the opportunity"

 

Links this month

As a small business owner or someone just learning about the web, there is just so much out there.  Its easy to get lost in all the noise and I’m not immune either.

Here are some handy links I have uncovered just for you:

Technology and Web

Local News and Politics

Makes you think

Make sure to share your opinion with me by clicking here!

 

Did you enjoy this email?

If you liked this email, let me know by clicking here.  If I get a good response, I will be send a fresh copy every month or so!

Thanks for reading!

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So, I’ve started to learn about podcasting since I have a client, pannakaria.com. Ken Robinson would say she thinks when she talks.  She isn’t much of a blogger in the traditional sense and I don’t blame her one bit – typing your thoughts out is so much slower than a person’s thought process. It also doesn’t help she types slowly.

Anyways, there is much to learn about podcasting. I know the fundamentals and that you can use a podcatcher to have it appear automatically on your blog.  I’ve been thinking about using a richer way of communicating with clients.  In my Google searching, I found this fantastic video about podcasting from the creative folks over at commoncraft.com

Enjoy :)

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I first wrote about my experiences using Google apps in December 2006.  Its been 18 months and I am still very happy with it.  I have since moved any new clients to Google Apps (www.google.com/a/) and its been great.  Google apps is a service where you can have your own custom branded email, calendar, documents, etc.   Basically everything Google provides for free under their free calendar, documents, gmail branded service is available in a branded version also.  The only requirement for the service is that you own (or at least have DNS control) over a domain name.  Best of all, the basic service doesn’t cost you a penny and you are free to move away at any time by changing your DNS entries. Premium service options that the consumer-oriented free version doesn’t have (like enhanced email auditing, etc) are available also.

As a Google apps users, its very important to realize that all of your Google services will now have a special URL.  Its a URL accessible in a few different ways.  Preferably your web designer can setup DNS entries so that links like .com">.com">.com">.com">http://mail.<yourdomain>.com gets you to your Google Apps email account, and .com">.com">.com">.com">http://calendar.<yourdomain>.com gets you to your Google Apps Calendar, etc.

 

Regular @gmail accounts

Google Apps accounts

Email gmail.com or mail.google.com mail.google.com/a/<yourdomain> or mail.<yourdomain> assuming your DNS entries are correct

(eg: for me its http://mail.redprimary.com)

Calendar calendar.google.com calendar.google.com/a/<yourdomain> or calendar.<yourdomain> assuming your DNS entries are correct

(eg: for me its http://calendar.redprimary.com)

Documents, Sites, etc follow the same format as above.

 

Few realize that the link for accessing their calendar and documents is inside their email as shown here.  You will see these links both in your free @gmail or in your free @branded email.

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One other thing I always do to make my client’s lives easier is putting a link on their web site so they can access their email without remembering what the address is. See below for some examples.

www.vibrationgym.com

vibrationgym.com

www.pannakaria.com

pannakaria.com

www.cobaltaviation.com

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www.burnabyhomelesstaskforce.org

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A lot of my clients don’t know the basics of Google Calendar, so I found some links to videos that may help.  Just click the play button below!

And, if you are feeling particularly ambitious with your Google Apps solution, have a look at your Google Documents as well :)

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Hope you find this post useful!  If you do, leave a comment below!

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I had a first looks session with a new client, Myra Gonzales from www.mystylesense.com,  using Wordpress recently.  I suppose because I have used Wordpress for some time now, I take it for granted how easy it is to use.  I thought listing a few videos would be useful to explain some of the basics about wordpress

Enjoy!

 

Wordpress Pages and Posts Part 1

 

I also have all my customers use Windows Live Writer as well which is a great piece of software

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