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First steps in CMS

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

It’s come to the crunch: Your client – whose project briefs tend to be about as fickle as Paris Hilton choosing shoes for a Friday night party – wants a new website. While not huge, this one feels like it could end up going that way. What do you do?

A – Go for a bespoke method of development because you know there will be changes, adjustments, additional pages and that’s the way you know best, or

B – Install a popular CMS (content management system) and simply configure it and style it?

This scenario faces almost every designer and developer. The option I used to pick was A, mainly for the flexibility and because my CMS knowledge wasn’t the best. Things have changed though and now I feel comfortable routing for option B.

A good CMS is robust, flexible and fast, and it automatically gives you an administration section that you can configure for a beginner to use – thus down the line, if your client decides they want such a feature, it is there ready and waiting.

Learn your CMS before taking the plunge
Knowledge and experience, however, are a must. You need knowledge of the “if something goes wrong, can you fix it?” sort. This is what separates the men from the boys; the last thing you want is something going wrong and that you aren’t equipped to sort out.

Experience with a CMS is vital. You need to go through those difficult stages where those annoying errors are happening or you need to do something specific and it’s like reading the bible backwards in order to achieve your end result.

So while you may be an A-type person now, longing to become a B, from experience I would recommend always ensuring beforehand that you have used your chosen solution in a non-mission critical capacity, and that you have (or are aware of) all the desired plug-ins and custom fixes you’re likely to need to reduce problems.

By Neil Berrow

Reedus Design DJs play Donde Fatima

Tuesday, September 1st, 2009

Little known fact: Reedus Design partners Jason Reed and Phil Morse have both had previous careers as club DJs. For one night only, they’ll be dusting off the vinyl for some laid-back bar grooves and summer house, old and new, at Donde Fatima, CC Guadalmina, San Pêdro de Alcántara, Spain, on Wednesday 2 September 2009, from 9pm.

If you’re local, why not pop in for a glass of wine and a catch-up…

Free web clinics extended to the autumn

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Following the success of our free Friday web clinics in August, we’ve decided to extend the offer into the autumn. If you are or know a business that happens to be local to us here on the Costa del Sol, pop into our Guadalmina offices (local 89, opposite Supersol) and we’ll give you a free audit of your website and 10 recommendations to get it working harder for you.

It’s no obligation, and you can act on these recommendations yourself, use your current web company or just go away and research further – it’s your chance to get some free expert advice.

Call us on 902 955 536 for an appointment.

For media-rich websites, Flex has got the legs

Friday, August 28th, 2009

Websites are fast becoming a haven of media-rich content. Long gone are the days of plain and basic text, with information now being delivered using video, audio and animation.

Adobe’s Flex framework is fast becoming the “daddy” of media-rich website design. The ability to create beautiful-looking websites with Flash-style interactivity is hard to ignore. It’s a true “mash up” with the ability use HTML, CSS, ActionScript, JavaScript, PHP and ASP, to name but a few supported scripting technologies.

Some great examples of websites created in Flex include Grooveshark, the FWA Theatre and Volkswagen UK. These types of site are where I believe the internet is really going, featuring interfaces that allow you to interact by “dragging and dropping”, enabling “on-the-fly” data importing. “Intelligent” and user-driven, these interfaces are capable of reacting having determined who you are and what you are looking for.

Web applications that are developed using Flex also have the ability to run on desktops via the Adobe AIR platform, placing themselves on users’ front doors, with such flexibility and unique features that it’s easy to see the benefits Flex has to offer to even the most basic of websites.

If I were a betting my man I would put my money on this hound, as I think Flex is going to run and run.

By Neil Berrow

For more information visit: http://www.adobe.com/products/flex/

Five ways to make money from your website

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Is your website doing nothing for your company, social club or organisation? Consider these five suggestions to get it back up to speed…

Virtually every business, social club and non-profit has a website nowadays.  Even individuals are more likely than ever to have blogs or home pages. But very few of these sites actually make any money.
Yet there are a whole raft of things that the smart business owner, club chairman, charity organiser or individual can do to get their website working hard for them. Here are five ideas:
1. GIVE FREE STUFF AWAY TO GET NEW LEADS
This is so simple to do and doesn’t cost loads of money, because you don’t actually give anything physical away. Yet it may just land your company a new client or open up another business network for you.
The basic premise is to give away knowledge in return for the chance to talk to the potential client.  For instance, say you are an alarm fitter. You therefore know more than most about home break-ins.  So you write a pamphlet, “10 Easy Wins To Prevent You Home Being Burgled”. You then get this nicely designed and made into a downloadable file, and pop it on a page on your website.
Here’s the trick: To get to the goodness, your visitor has to fill in their name and email/phone.They get something for free, you get new potential lead, and it all costs next to nothing. People are happy to give their details if they think the freebie is non-commercial and of genuine worth.
2. CARRY ADVERTS ON YOUR WEB SITE
Even been browsing the net and seen those little panels of “Ads by Google”?  This type of in-page advertising is easy to set up (you just open an AdSense account at Google then get your web designer to incorporate the ads unobtrusively somewhere in your page) and you get paid every time someone clicks on them. You’re not going to get rich from this (unless your site is www.bbc.co.uk…) but for certain types of website – those offering local event info or blogs, for instance – they are a complementary fit and the money you make is for doing absolutely nothing.
3. SELL YOUR PRODUCTS ONLINE
Not so long ago, selling products online meant an expensive online store. While stores have plummeted in price, you can now dip your toe in the water for even less – absolutely nothing, in fact –  by simply signing up at PayPal and adding a “Buy with PayPal” button to any product description on your existing website.
The clever stuff doesn’t even happen on your website – PayPal whisks your customer off to a credit card page, they pay, then PayPal drops them back on your site. You just pay a small percentage to PayPal for handling the transaction for you.
4. SELL SOMEONE ELSE’S PRODUCTS ONLINE
Does your cycling club (for instance) have a web page? Then why not sell bikes from it? You just add a link to an online bike shop’s site (one that has an affiliate programme), and anything they sell from your lead earns you a percentage. Sometimes, even just providing the lead gets you a payout! Most big companies who sell anything online have these affiliate programmes (Amazon is the most famous) which can be really lucrative if you can convince people to click.
Or you can take it a step further and set up a “shop” online, the twist being you never see the products you sell. A classic 21st-century business, all you are doing is putting the seller and the buyer in touch with each other. As far as the buyer is concerned, what you’re selling comes from your “shop”.  Your job is simply to pass the buyer’s details to the seller, who sends the item out and provides all after-sales support, delivery, returns etc on your behalf – and under your brand. Find the right product and a reputable merchant to partner with and you can make handsome markups without lifting a finger.
5. MAKE SURE YOUR WEBSITE DOESN’T SUCK
Just by making your website fit for purpose from a client’s point of view, you will make money over most of your competitors, simply because most sites fail to do so. Here two tests to try:
1. Count the number of time the word “we” is used in your text compared to “you”. If “we” wins, you’re not customer focused! Customers care about themselves, not you. It is time to rewrite your text.
2. The “rule of sevens”. This states that it should be completely clear what a company does from looking at its website both for seven seconds, and from seven feet away. Try it! If your site fails, it is confusing visitors, and – time-poor creatures that they are – they will hit “back” and go to a site that doesn’t make them work. Is your site like this? Then it’s definitely time for a redesign…

Virtually every business, social club and non-profit has a website nowadays.  Even individuals are more likely than ever to have blogs or home pages. But very few of these sites actually make any money.

Yet there are a whole raft of things that the smart business owner, club chairman, charity organiser or individual can do to get their website working hard for them. Here are five ideas:

1. GIVE FREE STUFF AWAY TO GET NEW LEADS

This is so simple to do and doesn’t cost loads of money, because you don’t actually give anything physical away. Yet it may just land your company a new client or open up another business network for you.

The basic premise is to give away knowledge in return for the chance to talk to the potential client.  For instance, say you are an alarm fitter. You therefore know more than most about home break-ins.  So you write a pamphlet, “10 Easy Wins To Prevent You Home Being Burgled”. You then get this nicely designed and made into a downloadable file, and pop it on a page on your website.

Here’s the trick: To get to the goodness, your visitor has to fill in their name and email/phone.They get something for free, you get new potential lead, and it all costs next to nothing. People are happy to give their details if they think the freebie is non-commercial and of genuine worth.

2. CARRY ADVERTS ON YOUR WEB SITE

Even been browsing the net and seen those little panels of “Ads by Google”?  This type of in-page advertising is easy to set up (you just open an AdSense account at Google then get your web designer to incorporate the ads unobtrusively somewhere in your page) and you get paid every time someone clicks on them. You’re not going to get rich from this (unless your site is www.bbc.co.uk…) but for certain types of website – those offering local event info or blogs, for instance – they are a complementary fit and the money you make is for doing absolutely nothing.

3. SELL YOUR PRODUCTS ONLINE

Not so long ago, selling products online meant an expensive online store. While stores have plummeted in price, you can now dip your toe in the water for even less – absolutely nothing, in fact –  by simply signing up at PayPal and adding a “Buy with PayPal” button to any product description on your existing website.

The clever stuff doesn’t even happen on your website – PayPal whisks your customer off to a credit card page, they pay, then PayPal drops them back on your site. You just pay a small percentage to PayPal for handling the transaction for you.

4. SELL SOMEONE ELSE’S PRODUCTS ONLINE

Does your cycling club (for instance) have a web page? Then why not sell bikes from it? You just add a link to an online bike shop’s site (one that has an affiliate programme), and anything they sell from your lead earns you a percentage. Sometimes, even just providing the lead gets you a payout! Most big companies who sell anything online have these affiliate programmes (Amazon is the most famous) which can be really lucrative if you can convince people to click.

Or you can take it a step further and set up a “shop” online, the twist being you never see the products you sell. A classic 21st-century business, all you are doing is putting the seller and the buyer in touch with each other. As far as the buyer is concerned, what you’re selling comes from your “shop”.  Your job is simply to pass the buyer’s details to the seller, who sends the item out and provides all after-sales support, delivery, returns etc on your behalf – and under your brand. Find the right product and a reputable merchant to partner with and you can make handsome markups without lifting a finger.

5. MAKE SURE YOUR WEBSITE DOESN’T SUCK

Just by making your website fit for purpose from a client’s point of view, you will make money over most of your competitors, simply because most sites fail to do so. Here two tests to try:

1. Count the number of time the word “we” is used in your text compared to “you”. If “we” wins, you’re not customer focused! Customers care about themselves, not you. It is time to rewrite your text.

2. The “rule of sevens”. This states that it should be completely clear what a company does from looking at its website both for seven seconds, and from seven feet away. Try it! If your site fails, it is confusing visitors, and – time-poor creatures that they are – they will hit “back” and go to a site that doesn’t make them work. Is your site like this? Then it’s definitely time for a redesign…

By Phil Morse

This article was written by Reedus Design for Essential magazine, Marbella, and was published in September 2009.

Reedus helps a communications company brush up its image

Thursday, July 16th, 2009

When your business is communication, you can’t afford to appear amateurish and you certainly can’t have a website that’s out of date or lacking relevancy.

So when Wordville needed some changes doing urgently to their existing site, they came to us on a recommendation. They’d heard that as a business-focused web company, we understand that waiting weeks for simple changes to happen on your site is just no good, and that we make it part of our deal with clients to offer not only free consultation but also prompt attendance to changes and improvement to their sites.

We worked with Wordville to flesh out their requirements, came up with a plan and executed it promptly and effectively for them.

This is what Lucy George from the company had to say about our work:

“Reedus helped Wordville with its website, reacting at break-neck speed to our amendments, and making our rather vague plans into something tangible. For a communication company we can’t afford to look bad and Reedus helped us polish up our own image online.”

Visit the Wordville website