Friday, June 29, 2007

LinX BoX

This Friday’s Top 3 interesting sites I visited this week:
  1. PriceSpider
  2. greenphone
  3. 23andme

This list is published every Friday and values originality. Submit your proposals for next week as comments.

And don't forget me at http://www.bynapse.com/.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Survive the confusion

There are 122,000,635 sites out there according to NetCraft and the key activities are now picture sharing, videos, blogging, forums, reviews, social networking and .. communities. It's a lot of place to lose yourself in and, as much as it looks crowded, it's only the beginning of the internet. So whom do you trust and whom do you turn to for advice when you're trying to make your way in cyberspace? How do you build your site and how do you promote it?

Ask yourself the following question : Do you trust brands or bloggers views over traditional marketing?

Can either of them be fully trusted ? The ultimate value of a web site has to be trust and probably that's what this new age of the internet is all about. Ten years of exquisite marketing campaigns can be thrown down the drain in six months by bloggers and forums telling a different story. Bloggers can be more honest and less censored than the "marketing message" that is often too polished. On the other hand, reviews are usually subjective and often don't offer the full understanding of the big picture. A Yahoo study found that 2 out of 3 regular social media users are advocates. Ford encouraged it's engineers to blog about how to make their engines better and got a lot of free and very reliable exposure while it developed a better engine. It's a total win for everybody and brands are moving marketing into the hands of professionals that speak about what they know. "Word of mouth" is powerful.

Social media brings exposure and gives you the actual pulse of the world. It also gives the marketers that same information and allows better targeting of the audience. Brands will always try to bring you in and make you switch, it's just a matter of choice and the multitude of sources of information is just the opportunity to provide a more comprehensive view.

Building or Tuning a website up these days may be a little frightening as the rules appear to be changing as we speak. The information moves from site to site getting commented on and being presented in ways only XML and aggregators made possible. Presentation of content is no more an essential part as you may read this post from any rss reader, my newsletter or a post on a social media site.

People don't go to portals any more, they demand a "come-to-me" environment and that is what aggregators, social networking pages, blogs and "web 2.0" applications stand for. To generate more confusion, more and more content is being user generated. The RSS feed icon illustrates probably the essence of what the web is about these days and new or updated sites should provide the feature as the important part is to be in the aggregated feed, on the screen, as the user picks the best-that-I-know-of content.

Bottom line, the time for canned content has gone. Portals are dead or mutating and news are delivered though aggregators rather than broadcasting companies websites, even if they usually originate there. Overhaul your site or start a new one thinking platform, collaboration, content sharing and reviewing. Let users create, move, tag and discuss as empowering them makes all the difference and provide core web services to open up to developers. Yes, your content will be scattered across the cyberspace and yet look how Flikr's name is present everywhere and pays nothing for it.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Web 2.0 websites for rookies

This age of the internet is all about decentralization.
Only a few years ago, during the “bursting of the dot-com bubble”, almost an entire generation concluded that the internet is over hyped and turned its attention elsewhere, thus leaving place to a new generation of technology and models to get center stage and turn the tables out in cyberspace. Web 2.0 does not mean there’s a new version of the internet out there, it’s not a technical specification. The term was promoted, according to Wikipedia, by O’Reily Media in 2003 and it’s explained in depth in the “What is Web 2.0” article.
The decentralization is the main concept that made the tables turn on the web and building a presence out in cyberspace these days has to consider the beneficial aspects of what took place. For marketers and brands, it’s still a headache, since the “portal” which was the key of the “first age” or “first generation” of internet communities is no longer the key to getting the word out. This time, the “consumer” is mastering its own universe and products and brands are orbiting around them. Bloggers and online communities go around constraints. It is human nature to avoid barriers and wherever one is encountered online, the stream goes around and ignores the constraint to a degree that may throw the site, brand or portal to internet’s shed and thus dramatically hurting its business. Blogging, social networking, search engines and friendly directories on the other hand are the new community and here is where “word-of-mouth” is happening and getting a recommendation about a product values more than all the publicity around it.
Excellent examples of Web2.0 websites are YouTube, MySpace, Flickr, Digg, Del.icio.us or Technorati to name a few and, of course, Google which probably represents to Web 2.0 what Netscape meant to the internet before the turn of the century. There is a wealth of information out there so when you start your web presence, know that you should consider it.
Not everything that has the 2.0 extension at the end is really about web 2.0 though. It’s a concept and an age of the internet and many are trying to take a profit out of internet rookies by selling web 2.0 related items. Just use your better judgment and look for reviews in those wonderful online communities. Joining these new and dynamic communities is exciting and fulfilling as it opens up, literally, the planet and connects you to whatever is actually making news out there.
There has never been a better and easier time to join and get connected and for a website publisher or webmaster.

I’ve put together this list of ideas to get you started. Please comment and add to this list so that the web can benefit from it.

  • Write a paragraph about what your website stands for and submit it to share sites like Digg, Reddit or Now Public. Bookmark your site on Del.icio.us and submit your site to StumbleUpon. Submit your following articles from your press section to those directories when you publish them on your site. If you’re writing for geeks, submit your site to Slashdot too. Here is a top 10 social bookmark links list from About.com.
  • Create a Google Group or Yahoo Group covering your site topics.
  • Create a blog and use it to be honest about your site or your interests. A blog is personal and the language used is less formal. You can actually write in a blog, responsibly but “off your company’s record”. Try using Blogger, Word Press or MySpace. I am also using Freewebs but I find Blogger to be the easiest to use. Now if you do that, you should join Technorati and claim your blog.
  • Submit your site to search engine friendly directories and DMOZ.org. This process should be free but it’s time consuming.
  • Most blogging directories offer Real Simple Syndication (RSS feeds) by default. You should use it for your site’s news section too. As soon as you have an RSS, submit it to feed aggregators like FeedBurner or Squidoo. Some of those aggregators offer you the possibility to send out a newsletter with the newest articles, automatically.
  • Test your site and make sure it appears correctly in all major browsers. We are living wonderful times for testing site appearance on different browsers and making sure that the site is compliant to W3C standards and looks good across browsers since Safari, the web browser used on Mac, is now available for windows too so you can have all the browsers on one OS to test with, unless you develop on Mac and you have IE5.
  • Use excellent portals like YouTube and Google Video to post video and Flickr, Photobucket or Picasa Web Albums to publish photos.
  • Search engines love XML sitemaps. You can submit that to Google webmaster tools and keep an eye on your site’s traffic with Google Analytics or the new set of tools from Yahoo, the Site Explorer.

Publishing advertisement and having high page ranking are good for the morale, but most visitors use ad-blockers and optimizing for search engines is a continuous job and there are professionals out there doing just that, keyword: “SEO Optimization”. Those are not the goals of the new websites and, if high page ranking helps, it does not guarantee popularity. For designers, digital-web offers a nice article about web 2.0 from the designer perspective.

I will not go into depths about what each of the sites mentioned above stands for. Research is probably the most enlightening experience one can have and I leave it all to you. Comment and add items to my lists and keep in mind that web 2.0 is all about social media, the consumer takes center stage, and that changes the world.

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Conquering website basics

The web site is your magazine. You are publishing a highly interactive collection of columns on any subject you can think of, providing that the web site sticks to a certain content category.
The webmaster is the publisher, the designer is the editor and paired with a SEO expert and a graphic artist, the few html pages that are bound to become “the web site” are off to the cyberspace.
Now that you got a publishing house and decided what content you site shall provide, a handful of design concerns are due to emerge in the process, and due to the ever evolving nature of the internet and the technologies involved, a great many will emerge after the publishing process has been completed. A webmaster is there for that reason, keep in touch with the present and prevent the website from being stacked up in internet’s shed and lose all its traffic.
Ah, yes, traffic. This is the gold of the cyber world. Domain names, pictures, content, mailing lists are assets and good content is the key of bringing people over. Just sign in for my newsletter and you shall find out why.

For typical commercial Web sites, the basic design concerns are:
• Design: determined by the content and its category
• Content: the most important piece of the puzzle, the substance of the website and the key to “Search Engine Optimization”. Content relevance to the goals and the targeted public is paramount to the success of the site.
• Usability: Just see how Google gets to be on top... with such a simple interface. For the visitor, the easiness to reach the goal (which is not necessarily contained in the “marketing pitch” the site was designed around) is essential to further referring the site, linking to it or just submitting articles to social directories like digg.com which in turn, generate the so much needed extra traffic (that you are trying to retain and convert to the goals of the site). Just check out the billions of dollars worth of free publicity Apple gets only from the upcoming iPhone or from AppleTV.
• Consistency: the site looks and feels in a consistent and professional way. The appearance should include a single style (try using stylesheets to create a standard look for various objects on the site) that flows throughout. There are a few keywords about the style : clean, decent, simple, emphasize content even if the content IS pictures or videos.
• Readability: after all, the TEXT of the site is what got visitors in, even for the site that sells desktop wallpaper.
• SEO: The graphic designer and the SEO expert don’t usually get along very well. Optimizing the site for search engines is crucial to visitors coming to check out the content. Graphics should complement the text and make it easier to read while providing a relaxing environment for browsing the site. The site needs good old text and plain links to get noticed by search engines.

A nice and easy way to get started and conquer the basic design question: “How should the site look like?” can be overcome by using a website template like the ones at http://store.templatemonster.com/?aff=badulescu. Web templates are great ice breakers in the process of getting a website on its way.
Make sure the template, if you buy one, does not make a hole in your pocket at this stage though, the site needs to bring at least enough money to survive on its own.
  

Friday, June 29, 2007

LinX BoX

This Friday’s Top 3 interesting sites I visited this week:
  1. PriceSpider
  2. greenphone
  3. 23andme

This list is published every Friday and values originality. Submit your proposals for next week as comments.

And don't forget me at http://www.bynapse.com/.

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Survive the confusion

There are 122,000,635 sites out there according to NetCraft and the key activities are now picture sharing, videos, blogging, forums, reviews, social networking and .. communities. It's a lot of place to lose yourself in and, as much as it looks crowded, it's only the beginning of the internet. So whom do you trust and whom do you turn to for advice when you're trying to make your way in cyberspace? How do you build your site and how do you promote it?

Ask yourself the following question : Do you trust brands or bloggers views over traditional marketing?

Can either of them be fully trusted ? The ultimate value of a web site has to be trust and probably that's what this new age of the internet is all about. Ten years of exquisite marketing campaigns can be thrown down the drain in six months by bloggers and forums telling a different story. Bloggers can be more honest and less censored than the "marketing message" that is often too polished. On the other hand, reviews are usually subjective and often don't offer the full understanding of the big picture. A Yahoo study found that 2 out of 3 regular social media users are advocates. Ford encouraged it's engineers to blog about how to make their engines better and got a lot of free and very reliable exposure while it developed a better engine. It's a total win for everybody and brands are moving marketing into the hands of professionals that speak about what they know. "Word of mouth" is powerful.

Social media brings exposure and gives you the actual pulse of the world. It also gives the marketers that same information and allows better targeting of the audience. Brands will always try to bring you in and make you switch, it's just a matter of choice and the multitude of sources of information is just the opportunity to provide a more comprehensive view.

Building or Tuning a website up these days may be a little frightening as the rules appear to be changing as we speak. The information moves from site to site getting commented on and being presented in ways only XML and aggregators made possible. Presentation of content is no more an essential part as you may read this post from any rss reader, my newsletter or a post on a social media site.

People don't go to portals any more, they demand a "come-to-me" environment and that is what aggregators, social networking pages, blogs and "web 2.0" applications stand for. To generate more confusion, more and more content is being user generated. The RSS feed icon illustrates probably the essence of what the web is about these days and new or updated sites should provide the feature as the important part is to be in the aggregated feed, on the screen, as the user picks the best-that-I-know-of content.

Bottom line, the time for canned content has gone. Portals are dead or mutating and news are delivered though aggregators rather than broadcasting companies websites, even if they usually originate there. Overhaul your site or start a new one thinking platform, collaboration, content sharing and reviewing. Let users create, move, tag and discuss as empowering them makes all the difference and provide core web services to open up to developers. Yes, your content will be scattered across the cyberspace and yet look how Flikr's name is present everywhere and pays nothing for it.

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Web 2.0 websites for rookies

This age of the internet is all about decentralization.
Only a few years ago, during the “bursting of the dot-com bubble”, almost an entire generation concluded that the internet is over hyped and turned its attention elsewhere, thus leaving place to a new generation of technology and models to get center stage and turn the tables out in cyberspace. Web 2.0 does not mean there’s a new version of the internet out there, it’s not a technical specification. The term was promoted, according to Wikipedia, by O’Reily Media in 2003 and it’s explained in depth in the “What is Web 2.0” article.
The decentralization is the main concept that made the tables turn on the web and building a presence out in cyberspace these days has to consider the beneficial aspects of what took place. For marketers and brands, it’s still a headache, since the “portal” which was the key of the “first age” or “first generation” of internet communities is no longer the key to getting the word out. This time, the “consumer” is mastering its own universe and products and brands are orbiting around them. Bloggers and online communities go around constraints. It is human nature to avoid barriers and wherever one is encountered online, the stream goes around and ignores the constraint to a degree that may throw the site, brand or portal to internet’s shed and thus dramatically hurting its business. Blogging, social networking, search engines and friendly directories on the other hand are the new community and here is where “word-of-mouth” is happening and getting a recommendation about a product values more than all the publicity around it.
Excellent examples of Web2.0 websites are YouTube, MySpace, Flickr, Digg, Del.icio.us or Technorati to name a few and, of course, Google which probably represents to Web 2.0 what Netscape meant to the internet before the turn of the century. There is a wealth of information out there so when you start your web presence, know that you should consider it.
Not everything that has the 2.0 extension at the end is really about web 2.0 though. It’s a concept and an age of the internet and many are trying to take a profit out of internet rookies by selling web 2.0 related items. Just use your better judgment and look for reviews in those wonderful online communities. Joining these new and dynamic communities is exciting and fulfilling as it opens up, literally, the planet and connects you to whatever is actually making news out there.
There has never been a better and easier time to join and get connected and for a website publisher or webmaster.

I’ve put together this list of ideas to get you started. Please comment and add to this list so that the web can benefit from it.

  • Write a paragraph about what your website stands for and submit it to share sites like Digg, Reddit or Now Public. Bookmark your site on Del.icio.us and submit your site to StumbleUpon. Submit your following articles from your press section to those directories when you publish them on your site. If you’re writing for geeks, submit your site to Slashdot too. Here is a top 10 social bookmark links list from About.com.
  • Create a Google Group or Yahoo Group covering your site topics.
  • Create a blog and use it to be honest about your site or your interests. A blog is personal and the language used is less formal. You can actually write in a blog, responsibly but “off your company’s record”. Try using Blogger, Word Press or MySpace. I am also using Freewebs but I find Blogger to be the easiest to use. Now if you do that, you should join Technorati and claim your blog.
  • Submit your site to search engine friendly directories and DMOZ.org. This process should be free but it’s time consuming.
  • Most blogging directories offer Real Simple Syndication (RSS feeds) by default. You should use it for your site’s news section too. As soon as you have an RSS, submit it to feed aggregators like FeedBurner or Squidoo. Some of those aggregators offer you the possibility to send out a newsletter with the newest articles, automatically.
  • Test your site and make sure it appears correctly in all major browsers. We are living wonderful times for testing site appearance on different browsers and making sure that the site is compliant to W3C standards and looks good across browsers since Safari, the web browser used on Mac, is now available for windows too so you can have all the browsers on one OS to test with, unless you develop on Mac and you have IE5.
  • Use excellent portals like YouTube and Google Video to post video and Flickr, Photobucket or Picasa Web Albums to publish photos.
  • Search engines love XML sitemaps. You can submit that to Google webmaster tools and keep an eye on your site’s traffic with Google Analytics or the new set of tools from Yahoo, the Site Explorer.

Publishing advertisement and having high page ranking are good for the morale, but most visitors use ad-blockers and optimizing for search engines is a continuous job and there are professionals out there doing just that, keyword: “SEO Optimization”. Those are not the goals of the new websites and, if high page ranking helps, it does not guarantee popularity. For designers, digital-web offers a nice article about web 2.0 from the designer perspective.

I will not go into depths about what each of the sites mentioned above stands for. Research is probably the most enlightening experience one can have and I leave it all to you. Comment and add items to my lists and keep in mind that web 2.0 is all about social media, the consumer takes center stage, and that changes the world.

Tuesday, June 05, 2007

Conquering website basics

The web site is your magazine. You are publishing a highly interactive collection of columns on any subject you can think of, providing that the web site sticks to a certain content category.
The webmaster is the publisher, the designer is the editor and paired with a SEO expert and a graphic artist, the few html pages that are bound to become “the web site” are off to the cyberspace.
Now that you got a publishing house and decided what content you site shall provide, a handful of design concerns are due to emerge in the process, and due to the ever evolving nature of the internet and the technologies involved, a great many will emerge after the publishing process has been completed. A webmaster is there for that reason, keep in touch with the present and prevent the website from being stacked up in internet’s shed and lose all its traffic.
Ah, yes, traffic. This is the gold of the cyber world. Domain names, pictures, content, mailing lists are assets and good content is the key of bringing people over. Just sign in for my newsletter and you shall find out why.

For typical commercial Web sites, the basic design concerns are:
• Design: determined by the content and its category
• Content: the most important piece of the puzzle, the substance of the website and the key to “Search Engine Optimization”. Content relevance to the goals and the targeted public is paramount to the success of the site.
• Usability: Just see how Google gets to be on top... with such a simple interface. For the visitor, the easiness to reach the goal (which is not necessarily contained in the “marketing pitch” the site was designed around) is essential to further referring the site, linking to it or just submitting articles to social directories like digg.com which in turn, generate the so much needed extra traffic (that you are trying to retain and convert to the goals of the site). Just check out the billions of dollars worth of free publicity Apple gets only from the upcoming iPhone or from AppleTV.
• Consistency: the site looks and feels in a consistent and professional way. The appearance should include a single style (try using stylesheets to create a standard look for various objects on the site) that flows throughout. There are a few keywords about the style : clean, decent, simple, emphasize content even if the content IS pictures or videos.
• Readability: after all, the TEXT of the site is what got visitors in, even for the site that sells desktop wallpaper.
• SEO: The graphic designer and the SEO expert don’t usually get along very well. Optimizing the site for search engines is crucial to visitors coming to check out the content. Graphics should complement the text and make it easier to read while providing a relaxing environment for browsing the site. The site needs good old text and plain links to get noticed by search engines.

A nice and easy way to get started and conquer the basic design question: “How should the site look like?” can be overcome by using a website template like the ones at http://store.templatemonster.com/?aff=badulescu. Web templates are great ice breakers in the process of getting a website on its way.
Make sure the template, if you buy one, does not make a hole in your pocket at this stage though, the site needs to bring at least enough money to survive on its own.