Content is King, But don’t forget Usability

Content is absolutely KING when it comes to having a successful website. But you can go overboard. Too much content can result in poor website usability. That is not to say you cannot overcome some of the issues caused by too much content by grouping the content effectively, however even organizing all that content can only get you so far before you have completely lost your user.

So what do I mean by having too much content? Here is a fictional example company’s website based on a real example I have dealt with in my career.

Company Name: Joe Web’s Everything Store

Products/Services: Joe Webs Candy (Home Made Candy Sales), Joe Webs Fabrics (Upholstery and Sewing Supplies), Joe Webs Landscaping (Lawn and Garden), Joe Webs Comics (Comic Books Store).

Joe has a retail store which houses all of the above, a real mix of unrelated products and services. His prime money maker is the landscaping business, but does all of the other businesses to keep a steady stream of income coming in year round. He wants to finally take the plunge and get an online presence. He contacts a reputable company with a solid custom website design portfolio.

Despite the advice of the company he is working with, he is absolutely wanting to feature all of the businesses on the home page. Each business then goes into sub-page after sub-page featuring every possible photo and piece of literature that he has at his disposal.

In the end a website exist that looks like a cross between a coming soon/directory site and some sort of spam site. No direction whatsoever, if you were to stumble across the site you would have no idea what the site was for. And if you are like most users, you would not bother looking around to figure it out.

So where did Joe Web fail? He has heard that content is what people want. Content is what helps you rank highly on Google.

Well he forgot about K.I.S.S. Keep it simple stupid. Any website, whether business or personal, should have a central theme or focus. Something that when a new user arrives allows them to clue in immediately as to what the website is about and what it is trying to portray.

What should Joe Web have done instead? His core business is the landscaping business, this is his money maker. The website should focus almost entirely on this and be the one focal point on the home page and the sub-pages. Within his about us section would be the ideal place to mention the other services and products he is also involved in if it is absolutely necessary to even talk about them. If they are crucial to also be on the web and to have more real-estate then a mention on the about us section, then they should have their own separate websites. Going with the a bloated/all-inclusive site just kills the entire site and renders all sections ineffective, you are wasting your money.




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Custom Web Design Stages

For the past 2 months I have been working within the Custom Web Design industry, getting my first tastes of dealing directly with end customers in getting their custom designed online presence. Wow, what a roller coaster ride! But that is a post for another day.

There are many elements to getting a website online. Basically though you can break things down into 3 stages. This is what you can expect when working with my company and likely many others out there.

1. Comp/Mock-up stage: This is where we play with various ideas taken form the customer input and our own and come up with a Photoshop-made mock-up. Depending on the complexity, turn-around time on this is anywhere between 1 and 2 days.

2. Content gathering and site build: This is where we move ahead on an approved comp and build the website. We also look to the client to feed us as much content as possible. The site build takes anywhere from 5-7 business days. Getting content takes anywhere from hours to months :).

3. Site publish and ongoing maintenance: The website is published live with no less than 75% of the content. The site is then only requiring random maintenance on a monthly basis, content changes mostly. Clients can contact us pretty frequently on a monthly basis, any changes that are requested will be applied within 1 to 3 business days depending on complexity and how much is already on our plate.

My target for all my clients from start to finish is 30 to 45 days for the entire build cycle. That is from our first call to the site being online.

A non ecommerce website will costs you $785.00 up front and then $99.00 per month. Ecommerce cost you $985.00 up front and then $195.00 monthly. The monthly fee on both packages takes care of your website, hosting, domain name, privacy protection, and up to 10 email accounts.




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The Easy Way To Get A Wordpress Blog - SetupMyBlog.dropthemike.com

Service is all about providing a convenience to someone. A good service will make both the client and the seller happy. A service doesn’t have to re-invent the wheel. In most cases it just needs to fulfill a need that the client has.

I choose to pay someone to cut my lawn, not because I can’t do it myself, but because I rather spend that time with my still less than 1 year old son. I am happy, the guy who takes my money is happy.

A common question I get as a blogger is about setting up a Wordpress blog. Again and again I answer it. Well this week it dawned on me that maybe I could and should make a few dollars off of this. I know how to setup Wordpress, others don’t and don’t want to even bother learning how to. So its a win-win situation.

If you are interested in getting setup with your own blog without all the hassle, visit:

SetupMyBlog.dropthemike.com




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DTM Rocks: Soundgarden

This past weekend I was out with some friends at a house party and we were rocking away on Rock Band 2, which by the way is amazing. As we were going through the songs I saw Spoonman by Soundgarden. I was all over that, but two of the guys were like WTF is Spoonman. One of them is even a big rock fan who listens to the likes of Tool.

Once I picked my jaw off the ground I convinced them to give it a try. I could not believe they had not ever heard the song. Am I really that old? LOL. Anyway we rocked it out. It was amazing.

So for all of you who have never enjoyed the greatness that is Spoonman, enjoy. Also check out some of the other great Soundgarden tunes.

Pretty Noose

Jesus Christ Pose

Rusty Cage

Black Hole Sun




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Tucows launches YummyNames

Tucows (AMEX:TCX, TSX: TC) has just announced the launch of their YummyNames site, which lists domains from their portfolio of names for sale online. The company has before sold individual and groups of names directly and via various brokers and is now formalizing some of their offering under a new brand.

“YummyNames, the public face of our domain portfolio service group, provides an additional means by which to realize the value of our domain portfolio assets to drive continued growth for the Company,” said Elliot Noss, President and CEO, Tucows.

domain-names Tucows launches YummyNamesThere are “ten thousands of names” listed on the site; Tucows’ portfolio is estimated to contain more than 70,000 domain names. Sample names listed for sale are countryrock.com, divorced.com, lemons.com, listener.com, mygarden.com, thepub.com, tool.com and veggies.com. While the site stats that “These premium domains are priced starting at $500 USD”, it appears that none of the names has actually listed a fixed price at this point. Names are being offered for purchase or lease. The site lists previous clients such as: Bell Mobility, CanWest Global Communications, EMI Music, General Motors, Grand & Toy, Harlequin Enterprises, Johnson & Johnson,  Microsoft, Nestle and RBC Royal Bank.

The Tucows domain portfolio mostly consists of names that were not renewed by registrants, as well as domain names that were purchased as part of the Netidentity acquisition. S

[via Press Release]

(c) 2008 DomainNameNews.com

Visit our Calendar of Domain Industry Events.




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SEO Friendly Images

Here is a new Wordpress plugin that DropTheMike.com is testing out. Enjoy!

SEO Friendly Images is a Wordpress optimization plugin which automatically updates all images in your posts with proper ALT and TITLE attributes. If your images do not have ALT and TITLE already set, SEO Friendly Images will add them according the options you set. Additionally this makes the post W3C/xHTML valid as well.

ALT attribute is important part of search engine optimization. It describes your image to search engine and when a user searches for a certain image this is a key determining factor for a match.

TITLE attribute play lesser role but is important for visitors as this text will automatically appear in the tooltip when mouse is over the image.

Download

Installation & Usage

  1. Upload the whole plugin folder to your /wp-content/plugins/ folder.
  2. Go to the Plugins page and activate the plugin.
  3. Use the Options page to modify ALT and TITLE options.
  4. You are done, SEO Image does everything else

SEO Friendly Images options recognize two tags %title (post title) and %name (filename of the picture). By combining these two tags and additional words (photo, picture etc..) you can create relevant alt and title tags automatically for all images.

Here is a live example of the plugin (active on my blog). The image that has title and alt replaced with “%title” and “%name %title” respectively resulting in “SEO Friendly Image” for title and “example SEO Friendly Images” for alt.




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Tips To Increase Traffic Using Social Media

So are you always toying with new things to try and boost your traffic with little if any results? I don’t even know why I ask you this question, because I already know the answer for 95% of you.  Myself I have tried many, many tactics. Many were dumb ideas in hindsight and saw no return. A few though have in fact succeeded. Which falls right in line with some advice which appears to be universally shared amongst knowledgeable SEO professionals I have met over the years. If you stay persistent and toss up as many ideas as possible, your bound to hit one or two that work once and a while. Much like a baseball player who is considered good at what he does if he succeeds only 1/3 of the time.

Without much doubt, the most successful method of increasing traffic to my blog has been through the use of Social Media. I have been using a combination of Twitter.com, Facebook.com, and most recently EzineArticles.com.

*A word of caution, I strongly recommend you have a solid site content wise before you head down this path. Driving traffic to your site is useless unless you have compelling content to keep them there and keep them coming back.

1. Twitter.com - When I first started using twitter I simply followed people whom I already knew. This worked ok for a while. However I then got an idea on how I could leverage this as more of a tool to drive traffic. I did two things. First I used Twitterfeed.com to automatically post headlines of my latest blog posts to Twitter. Second I went out and scoped some famous “techie” twitter folk with lots of followers, I then started to add myself as a follower of as many of these followers as possible. The direct result is that I got many, many reciprocal follows. Best of all these are people who enjoy the type of material that I blog about.

Now on a daily basis my followers increase. Today I have 687 followers. I engage in conversation with them, I comment on their blogs if they have them, I also have setup link exchanges with some of them. all in all this is the biggest driver of traffic to my website.

2. Facebook.com - Within Facebook I have setup an RSS application that automatically shows my blog feed in my profile. That way anyone who visits my profile, can see my latest posts. This is limited to my immediate Facebook friends, about 334 in total.

In addition to this I have just setup a Facebook Fan Page where users can become a fan of DropTheMike and also can view the RSS feed there and meet other fans.

3. EzineArticles.com - This was recommended to me by a friend in the SEO business. I write and submit articles (minimum 250 words) which are posted to the site in an appropriate category. Site visitors can then read and re-distribute. The great thing is that you can embed links back to your site or blog.

Since doing these 3 items My traffic has been consistently going up and up. One benchmark I like to use is Alexa.com. Before starting these tree tactics I was around the 1 million traffic rank mark. As of today I am nearing 600,000.

Previous notable post on social media:

building-personal-brand-within-the-social-media-landscape/

online-marketing-budgeting-what-next/

entrecardcom/ (I am testing this again)




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That Was Easy

blogging That Was Easy

You don’t have to be real technical these days to get started on creating a pretty elaborate Web project. I say web project because I am trying to be as broad as possible. I am talking about creating a blog, a website, a community portal, a classified listings page, an ecommerce site, etc., etc. You don’t have to do a thing these days to install some of the more popular Open Source web scripts that exist. All you have to do is login to your Web Hosting Control Panel, find and launch Fantastico, and click on the scripts you want it to automatically install for you.

Fantastico is a commercial script library that automates the installation of web applications to a website. Fantastico scripts are executed from the administration area of a website control panel such as cPanel. Fantastico’s web site claims that they are installed on ten thousand servers, with a million users worldwide, which would make it the leading product of its type.

No need for you to configure databases, just worry about setting the admin usernames and passwords. Easy stuff.

Now if your web hosting company does not provide you with Fantastico, shame on them. Most hosts these days make it a standard part of their offering. Netenberg.com, the company behind Fantastico, lists the following as official partners of theirs. Though there are many more providers who, though don’t have a direct partnership, do provide Fatastico.

Beachcomber Creations
Bluehost
BurstNET
DedicatedNow
Defender Hosting
eUKhost
FastServers
FDC Servers
Gnax
HostDime
Hostforweb
Hosting Matters
Hosting Zoom
Hostmonster
Insider Hosting
iWeb Technologies
JaguarPC
Joe’s Web Hosting
Jvds
Knownhost
Layered Technologies
Liquidweb
Lunarpages
Midphase
Nocster
Rackforce
Sagonet
Serverbeach
Servint
Site5
SLhost.com
Softlayer
Spry
Superb Internet
Tailor Made Servers
ThePlanet
TotalChoice Hosting
WiredTree

For a complete listing of the web scripts Fantastico is currently offering click here.




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DTM Rocks: Metallica

DropTheMike.com is and always has been about my writing about and sharing some of my interest with a greater audience in order to meet like-minded people with similar interest. Now a lot of what I am passionate about is web and technology related. Another is music. Probably one of the first major  industries to be impacted by the changing web.

So going forward I am going to mix in the occasional music related post. Music is the soundtrack of our lives. Music provides us inspiration. Music makes us smile.

The first official DTM Rocks segment will start with a little band that you may have heard about. Metallica just released a new album (Death Magnetic), the first one in years that sounds more like their roots. More like the Metallica I loved growing up.

The first video (courtesy of Youtube.com) released for the album is for the song “The Day That Never Comes”.

If you’ve been living under a rock or you just want to check out some of your old faves, here are my picks:

The God That Failed

* The God That Failed I recently learned was written about the battle James Hetfield’s mom had with cancer. She died of cancer after refusing medical attention, solely relying on her belief in God to heal her. Hetfield felt that, had she not followed her Christian Science beliefs she could have survived.

The Unforgiven

One

Enter Sandman

Nothing Else Matters

Sad But True

Master of Puppets

King Nothing




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Alexa’s a TOOL!

analytics Alexas a TOOL!

In running a blog you need to continually benchmark yourself. Whether you use one or many methods of doing so is not important as long as you are consistent with the tools that you use. Myself, I use AWStats, Google Analytics, and Alexa.com. Oh and recently I also added to the mix WebsiteGrader.com although this is more of a consolidation of things like Google Rank and Alexa rank just to name a few.

As of this post, my rank on Alexa is: 693,06262

That places dropthemike.com in the top 2.17 % of all websites.

What other useful information does Alexa provide me?

How about where my users are from:

India10.0%
Canada8.4%

Being Canadian I am surprised that Canada is listed only as the third most popular source country for visiting my site. I can also see my traffic rank within specific countries. Apparently Dropthemike.com is big in Tanzania :)




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John Chow a sleazy *_blank_* salesman

When I first got into blogging, like many I stumbled across the blog of the famous John Chow. Famous for being a supposedly wealthy blogger as a result of his blog (s). At the time I did find some use in a number of his post. Some rubbed me the wrong way and left me thinking he must be bogus and just full of himself.

While I don’t question the fact that he has made blogging a main source of his income, I do question just how much he says he makes. But that is not the point of my post today. At the end of the day I do have some respect for the work he has done.

I visited his blog again for the first time in months and came across one of his latest post. This post reminded me of why I stayed away in the first place, he seems to push one “scam” after another. Sprinkled in between these scams he has some good post though, which is unfortunate, because I have and will continue to miss them due to hating to weed through the crap.

In his post he is essentially pushing a $400.00 “Traffic Secrets” course. Obviously he is getting some sort of bounty off this. The whole this looks like a sham.

I posted the following comment to the article.

“Looks like more BS to me. They will not get my hard earned cash. I don’t get how these types of programs actually have an legs or get any traction. The site looks like a scam, it looks like all the other scam sites.

Like with anything else, work hard, be patient and persistent, and you will eventually see results. It won’t be overnight like some will make you believe is possible. But in the long run it will be worth it and you will likely have a better understanding of both yourself and the running of your website.”

I checked today to see how much John Chow fanboy reactions I got. To my suprise I got none, in fact i saw other comments that more or less echoed what I said.

Read the entire post here: http://www.johnchow.com/the-next-level-with-traffic-secrets-20/




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DTM In Review - Cotton Rohrscheib - Web Design & Development - Pleth.com

It’s been nearly a year since DropTheMike.com launched. One of my early supporters and fellow bloggers was Cotton Rohrscheib. He was incidentally my first interviewee as well, and a favorite interview of mine. I figured that since my readership has grown exponentially since that initial interview was posted, I should re-post. So without further delay…

About Cotton:

Cotton is a veteran developer having worked on several hundred projects worldwide, ranging from small business to the Fortune 500. Today Cotton enjoys software development and website integration with all business models in mind. Cotton is also the President of Powersite and oversees New Software Development under the Powersite Brand for Pleth Networks. Cotton has served on numerous boards of directors and most recently as the President of a State Tourism Organization. He resides in Conway, Arkansas with his wife Donna and attends The Church Alive, where he is a Youth Leader in his spare time. Cotton also remains active in many aspects of the development community and interacts frequently in blogs and forums with other members of the development community. Something that a lot of people do not know about Cotton is that he is also an accomplished Artist and has had his works exhibited in various venues. Cotton is also currently studying photography and aviation as hobbies.

The Interview:

<Dropthemike> We crossed paths professionally several years ago, back in 2000 or so, when you were still in the early stages of your web design business Powersite Design, you also worked for a local hosting company in your area. Can you tell me what it was like during those early years for you?

<Cotton> I actually wore several different hats way back then, My primary gig was the IT Director at a large Conference Center, my primary function was to coordinate with the Big-Wigs for corporations who were chairing these large conferences. I worked with them to manage logistics, sound, and networking. We did a lot of distance learning via T1 line which was kind of pioneer thing in those days, broadband wasn’t a household name then. Utility Media, the hosting company you are referring to was actually started as a side venture by the management company that operated the conference center I worked for. When they learned that I had some prior programming skills (had written a few ag-related desktop app’s in the mid 90’s) they asked me to come on board as a designer / developer. The thing to remember is that this whole thing (Powersite) started out really small in it’s inception, we had like 5 clients at one time and I thought it was really taking off for us, ha. Over the course of the next two years or so we were actually doing some design, development, and hosting deals with our contacts from the Conference Business so our growth rate was probably above average to say the least. I started Powersite Design and handled 100% of the development work for Utility Media during those first few years with a skeleton staff of just myself and a few part timers that knew HTML, Flash, and Photoshop pretty well, I also outsourced a lot of programming. 100% of the sites we did in the beginning were just static sites with a little flash and Photoshop mixed in. All in all they looked pretty good and we gathered some state and national attention by winning a few awards along the way. We never advertised our business, it grew by word of mouth, that’s probably something I am most proud of when looking back at our business.

I continued on with Powersite for the next year or two until the Conference Center that I was being employed by decided to close their doors to pursue other interests. I was one of the few staff members that stayed on board for a short time to help tie up lose ends and I kept my office in the conference center and continued to service my growing client list, I think that by this time we had probably 200 or so accounts. Over the next few years I was able to grow my client base to several hundred clients in order to supplement my salary that was missing from the closing of the Conference Center. During that time I had a lot of great advisors that worked with me and offered up advice and innovative ideas that helped me to grow my business in a few different directions.

I began working with a few different ad agencies early on and had high expectations that I would see a lot of work from my relationships with them but that didn’t really pan out the way I thought it would, the bottom line is that a lot of ad agencies, even the larger ones, don’t have but maybe 20 or so clients they do business for. With margins being as small as they are in the development and hosting industry this didn’t really provide me the growth I was looking for. Another direction that I pursued was working with some larger development firms that were using PHP, ColdFusion, ASP, and Perl on client projects. I designed a lot of front-ends for websites that they handled the backend development for. While this move didn’t really give me as much cashflow as I would have liked at the time it was still pretty lucrative in that I had the opportunity to learn a lot about backend development for the web.

I am not for sure exactly when it happened but somewhere along the line the requests for small static websites just seemed to slow dramatically. 90% of the requests I was receiving for work seemed to revolve around dynamic site development. I dove headlong into learning Perl and PHP about this time and called in a few developers that were doing freelance work at the time to help me a long in putting together some pretty impressive sites, of course these sites had a much more impressive price tag on them which finally solved my cashflow problem. I had enough clients now that my marginal hosting residuals were finally starting to pay the bills.

<Dropthemike> Having been through the challenges of starting your own design company, do you have any advice for other young entrepreneurs in the field who are also looking to head out on their own?

<Cotton> My first advice would be for them to sharpen their skillset’s. Websites today aren’t so much about flash and fancy as they once were, today websites are more about functionality. Having a solid background in a programming language like PHP, ASP, or ColdFusion can go a long way. There are a lot of companies out there that can provide a product, most of which are out of the box type solutions, being able to innovate and bring your own coding skills to the table will help land some jobs.

Another suggestion for aspiring designers / developers would be for them to first define their own development process before ever going into business. Good project management skills is something that my Pleth partners, Greg and Stephen Smart bring to the table and it has helped us to grow considerably.

From the Business Aspect, I would recommend that any developer make sure that they don’t undervalue or underprice their services when bidding for a project. Getting a project by underbidding your competitors bid is great but be sure to leave yourself enough padding in your pricing to cover yourself through the lean times as well as to cover yourself for unforeseen requirements that a client may fail to mention on the front end, my partner Greg calls this “scope creep” and it can be one of the biggest profit killers out there.

<Dropthemike> At what point did you realize you could really make a go of this business? Was it a difficult decision for you to then put everything into the business as your primary source of income?

<Cotton> As I mentioned earlier, I had a pretty good gig initially when laying the groundwork to my development business but it soon went away. It was a little scary taking the leap to go into business for myself initially but prior to doing so I ran the numbers and made sure that I had a minimum amount of residual income to cover the necessities, (condo mortgage, car, food, etc.), I’m not going to say that it wasn’t tough making ends meet at the onset but I honestly can’t really remember being in that big of a cashflow crunch. I will say that there were probably some scary times. Fortunately, at the time I started my business I was still single and lived in a 1400 sq. foot studio / condo and had a very nice working arrangement when it came to office space.

<Dropthemike> Today you are also running your own hosting company (along with other partners), can you share with us why you decided to also get into that business as well? Was it something you always knew you would get into?

<Cotton> The opportunity came up in 2002 - 2003 for me to actually purchase one of my competitors that did development and hosting. Remember, at the time I was just doing development work and outsourcing all of my hosting to Utility Media. This purchase allowed me to jump into the hosting industry on my own and finally get my feet wet. Being the host and the developer has it advantages big time, don’t ever let anyone tell you anything any different. Having total control of my development and hosting environment allowed my skillset to really evolve.

I went on for a few years operating a fairly large hosting and development business with a staff of 3 folks, counting myself, another developer, and a lady to handle the accounting. It was a full time gig and I often times found myself working around the clock to make sure that projects came out on time and within budget for my clients. I wasn’t as discouraged with the time investment that a lot of folks would have felt I don’t think partly due to the fact that I was loving what I was doing for a living.

Along the way I had built a lot of close relationships with some of my clients, one of those relationships turned into paydirt for me. My current partner Stephen Smart, was tasked with managing the web presence for a large manufacturing client I had. He and I worked closely for a long time on a wide range of projects and the whole time I had in the back of my mind, “man, this guy is pretty detailed”, i honestly dreaded to see his number come up on caller id because i knew that he was going to want something in-depth added to their website. Our working relationship went a step further when he and his brother Greg came down for a visit one day while I was in the middle of one of my busiest weeks. They expressed an interest in what I was doing so talks began to take place about the possibility of us starting our own business. It didn’t take much to convince me that by this point I needed a lot of help managing my business, I was pretty far behind on client projects and I hadn’t touched my email in a day or two. Pleth was born!

Having been a developer for a while I knew exactly what I wanted in a hosting company. My partners and I built Pleth from a Developers Perspective and spared no expense in putting together our business model. We initially started working with a contact I had from my previous hosting acquisition to handle our network infrastructure but after a few months we decided that we weren’t progressing in the direction we were wanting so we severed our partnership with that provider and started building our hosting infrastructure at the Planet. Today we have continued our close working relationship with the Planet and are in our own Private Rack Environment at their Dallas NOC.

Today our typical client projects have a budget of around $10k on startup. If you would have told me this about 8 years ago I would have laughed at you but that’s the honest truth. We still from time to time when scheduling allows will take on a project with a smaller budget but I would say that this is our average project.

For more on Coton: http://www.cottonrohrscheib.com/blog/




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A greener Google.

Have you ever heard of Blackle.com? It is a custom version of Google.com. A custom version built to be more energy efficient. Energy efficient? Yes, by having the site be nearly complete black instead of white, your monitor uses less power. When you think of how many millions of people use Google, the savings must be huge!

How is Blackle saving energy?

Blackle was created by Heap Media to remind us all of the need to take small steps in our everyday lives to save energy. Blackle searches are powered by Google Custom Search.

Blackle saves energy because the screen is predominantly black. “Image displayed is primarily a function of the user’s color settings and desktop graphics, as well as the color and size of open application windows; a given monitor requires more power to display a white (or light) screen than a black (or dark) screen.” Roberson et al, 2002

In January 2007 a blog post titled Black Google Would Save 750 Megawatt-hours a Year proposed the theory that a black version of the Google search engine would save a fair bit of energy due to the popularity of the search engine. Since then there has been skepticism about the significance of the energy savings that can be achieved and the cost in terms of readability of black web pages.

We believe that there is value in the concept because even if the energy savings are small, they all add up. Secondly we feel that seeing Blackle every time we load our web browser reminds us that we need to keep taking small steps to save energy.

How can you help?

We encourage you to set Blackle as your home page. This way every time you load your Internet browser you will save a little bit of energy. Remember every bit counts! You will also be reminded about the need to save energy each time you see the Blackle page load.

Help us spread the word about Blackle by telling your friends and family to set it as their home page. If you have a blog then give us a mention. Or put the following text in your email signature: “Blackle.com - Saving energy one search at a time”.

Have a look at our energy saving tips page for ideas on steps you can take to save energy.

There are a lot of great web sites about saving energy and being more environmentally friendly. They are full of great tips covering the little things that we can all do to make a difference today. Try Blackling “energy saving tips” or visit one of the many great blogs dedicated to environmental awareness.




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Why Would Anyone Pay Thousands for a Domain Name?

By Wendy Kennedy

It’s not cliche to say that today every dollar counts. Times are tight — for some, times are very tight — and business owners across the country are looking at every dollar they spend to make sure they are getting the return they need from the money they invest.

So why then, in times such as these, would anyone be willing to pay thousands of dollars for a simple domain name? The answer is easy: because those simple domains (often called premium domains) can make a difference.

THE AGE OF THE PREMIUM DOMAIN

A premium domain is a domain that has been registered previously and is back on the market for resale (it’s like a used car lot for domain names … but these items have not depreciated in value — in fact, it’s quite the opposite situation).

You see, today there are about 76 million dot com names registered worldwide. That means the chances of finding a very intrinsic dot com (shopping.com, flowers.com) are slim. These names were snapped up years ago but now, these early domain registrants are increasingly willing to part with their prized domain names for the right price. Some of these sales live in infamy (consider Pizza.com that sold for $2.6 million in 2008 or Business.com that sold for $7.5 million in 1999) but the average premium domain price tag ranges from a few hundred to a few thousand dollars.

SO WHAT CAN A PREMIUM DOMAIN NAME DO FOR YOUR BUSINESS?

  • The Impact of the Instant Online Brand: First and foremost, a simple domain name gives your online business an instant brand. Premium domain names are generally easy to remember, easy to type and instantly associated with a product or service (Cars.com, Meat.com, Vodka.com). A business owner need not invest much to help potential visitors understand what they might expect to find on sites like these. The domain itself creates an instant online brand that continues to define your online business for as long as you have it.
  • More Traffic from Direct Navigation: Your instant brand will generate traffic from direct navigation. As surprising as it may seem to those of us who use Google multiple times per day — some internet users simply type what they are looking for into their internet browser address line (Shoes.com) … if your site resides at a no nonsense domain like this, you will reap the benefits of what’s called “direct navigation” (customers coming directly to your site because they typed you domain directly into their web browser) without spending one dollar on marketing your site.
  • Increased SEO ranking: Your domain names do have an impact on your search engine rankings, so the more basic and easily associated your domain name is with the product or service potential customers are searching for … the more likely it is that you’ll rank high in the search results. (Just type hotels into your Google search bar … I’ll bet Hotels.com is one of the first links returned).

About 80% of US adults are online (that’s an audience size that’s hard to reach through traditional offline marketing). What’s more, the brand you build online can keep working for you long after your catalog or most recent flyer has been discarded.

So the bottom line is: what may seem like an extraordinary expense on first glance is actually not so outlandish considering the benefits you could reap from the right domain name.

My advice for small businesses is not to count out your domain name when you’re planning your marketing spend. Compare the return you could receive with your other marketing efforts (online and offline) and do a little research to see if the right domain name is available for your business. (Register.com — and other domain registrars like us — have search tools to help you understand what domains are available to best represent your brand). At a time when every dollar counts, a premium domain might just be the best way to put your marketing dollars to work for you.

* * * * *

Wennedy Kennedy, Editor of Register.com Small Business Learning Center About the Author: Wendy Kennedy is the creator and editor of the Register.com Learning Center (an online resource site for small businesses). Wendy has also served as a consultant with over ten years of experience developing marketing and awareness programs with small businesses and entrepreneurs.




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Just one more reason to choose Firefox.

Firefox is always expanding its market share. They have a loyal following of which I am one. I have come across  a lot of “Get Firefox” type buttons and ads that loyal users post on their sites. While not anything officially sanctioned the below really got my attention.

Now I thought I would try my best to keep this from being a fluff post and thought I would actually post substantial information that informs while you enjoy the view.

Global usage share data from: Net Applications
Date Internet Explorer Netscape Mozilla Firefox Opera Safari Chrome
Q3 2008 72.22% 0.68% 0.09% 19.48% 0.71% 6.39% 0.26%
Q2 2008 73.81% 0.62% 0.11% 18.43% 0.71% 6.14%
Q1 2008 75.06% 0.62% 0.33% 17.35% 0.67% 5.78%
Q4 2007 77.37% 0.64% 0.09% 15.84% 0.62% 5.24%
Q3 2007 78.85% 0.76% 0.11% 14.69% 0.51% 4.80%
Q2 2007 78.76% 0.83% 0.15% 14.92% 0.46% 4.66%
Q1 2007 79.38% 0.77% 0.19% 14.35% 0.50% 4.70%
Q4 2006 80.69% 0.86% 0.23% 13.50% 0.56% 4.06%
Q3 2006 82.88% 0.88% 0.26% 11.89% 0.62% 3.30%
Q2 2006 84.03% 0.98% 0.32% 10.67% 0.57% 3.25%
Q1 2006 85.01% 1.09% 0.36% 9.77% 0.53% 3.10%
Q4 2005 85.88% 1.25% 0.43% 9.00% 0.54% 2.80%
Q3 2005 86.74% 1.92% 0.48% 7.97% 0.55% 2.24%
Q2 2005 87.24% 1.62% 0.59% 8.08% 0.52% 1.89%
Q1 2005 89.02% 1.89% 0.67% 6.17% 0.49% 1.70%
Q4 2004 91.35% 2.09% 0.80% 3.66% 0.51% 1.50%

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