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Great Ideas

Seriously Cool Rap Music Video - About Design, Coding and SEO (Huh?)

Thanks to Eric for posting this video on his Digital Design Diary site.

Mo Serious brings us a seriously cool video about website design, coding and SEO principles, all set to rap music. Who would have thought? I’m in love with this guy - he’s a genius.

Posted on Tuesday, July 15th, 2008 by Trisha Cupra

Last modified: July 15, 2008 at 4:12 pm

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Throw-away email addresses - your best friend or worst enemy?

refusalYou find yourself at a website that looks interesting, but just not completely trustworthy. The website’s owner is offering you an enticing freebie - a special report that claims to contain the elusive solutions to your most painful problems.

But you’re worried about handing over your email address in order to get the download link. If you sign up for the freebie, by default you also end up subscribing to their mailing list. You already get enough spam, and who knows how much junk will flood your inbox if you enter your email address and click that shiny ‘Subscribe’ button?

The answer is to use a free throw-away email address from 10 Minute Mail. It’s your email inbox’s new best friend. The email address lasts only just long enough for you to get your download link. If you like the special report enough, you can would then feel safe enough to subscribe to the site’s eZine or RSS feed. If it’s a load of doggy poop, at least you haven’t sacrificed your inbox to the spam gods.

BUT…

What if you’re one of those website owners who use a downloadable freebie as an enticement to subscribe to your eZine? Isn’t the disposable email address your bitterest enemy? Are you hating me for recommending a service like 10 Minute Mail? Please don’t. I have some tips for you (and for myself, as I plan on doing exactly this).

  1. Make sure your website projects a polished and professional image. Avoid the common web design mistakes. I’m thinking along the lines of multi-colored text, yellow highlighting, and lots of exclamation marks and gratuitous emphasis!!! But simple things like not using enough ‘white space’ in your layout - especially around the margins, choosing hard-to-read fonts, and cramping up the elements on your page also hurts. Look as professional and trustworthy online as you are in ‘real life’.
  2. Under-promise and over-deliver. Avoid sounding too hyped-up and ‘too-good-to-be-true’ in your content. Be specific and truthful about what you have to offer.
  3. Convince your visitors that your eZine is also a fantastic resource, not just a sacrifice they have to make to get your freebie. Your visitor should believe that signing up for the freebie plus the eZine is a double blessing (rather than dreading that the eZine is the ugly old chaperone that puts a real damper on your date with the drop-dead gorgeous super-model).
  4. Include links to your website and to your eZine subscription form in your freebie. It should be a ’standalone’ marketing tool in its own right. Not only could your visitors use a service like 10 Minute Mail to avoid getting your eZine, but subscribers who really enjoyed the freebie might pass it around to their friends (that would be a great thing - it’s called ‘viral marketing’), and bypass the subscription process. You want to make it easy for them to get on your subscriber list now that they feel safe enough to do so.

I know of a success coach who tried to stop people from passing around his free eBooks because he wanted everyone to subscribe to his eZine first. He made a point of saying that if you shared the free eBooks with your friends, you were engaging in copyright violation and piracy.

I reckon he shot himself in the foot. Who wants to email their friends a link to a subscription form instead of just sending the PDF file? I’d feel embarrassed.

Encourage people to spread your freebies around - just make sure your freebie brings people to your site and persuade them that your eZine will be genuinely useful and interesting to them.

What do you think?

UPDATE: Since writing this post this morning, I’ve started watching an interesting marketing video on the subject of providing incentives. It has some surprising test results when comparing one test webpage with another.

Creative Commons License photo credit: fazen

Posted on Tuesday, July 15th, 2008 by Trisha Cupra

Last modified: July 15, 2008 at 6:26 pm

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How to deal with Problem Clients - A very tempting solution

Ashes of Problem Clients JarWhat should you do with problem clients? I keep mine in a jar… Just kidding.

On a serious note, here are some things you can do to avoid problem clients in the first place, no matter what kind of freelance work you do:

  1. Don’t under-charge. People who are stingy with their money ironically want much more than they paid for. If you charge a fair price, you will attract fair clients. Don’t rip yourself off.
  2. Set your boundaries at the beginning of the relationship. Clearly define what is included in your quote, and charge extra for anything extra. Know in advance what you’re prepared to do when the client wants revisions or changes to your agreement, and make that clear right up-front.
  3. Divide the project into small steps, and charge the client step-by-step. You don’t move onto the next stage until the client signs off and pays for the previous stage. You won’t need to offer a money-back guarantee, you won’t have huge debts to collect, and it’s the least risky arrangement for both you and the client.

Kevin Boss wrote an article about what he learned from his early stages of being a freelance web designer. Thanks to him for including the Ashes of Problem Clients jar in his post.

Posted on Friday, June 13th, 2008 by Trisha Cupra

Last modified: June 13, 2008 at 10:50 am

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Area 404 - Lost in Cyberspace… What do you think of the Error Page?

I’ve been working on my 404 error page - you know, the page you get when you click a broken link or type an address in wrong. Don’t you hate it when that happens?

Lego space men
Creative Commons License photo credit: Gaetan Lee

So what does that have to do with space men and gorillas? Take a look and see. Let me know what you think.

Visit Area 404

Want to know more about how to create a 404 error page in WordPress?

See Are You Losing Readers From Your 404 Page?

Posted on Tuesday, May 20th, 2008 by Trisha Cupra

Last modified: May 21, 2008 at 10:23 pm

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How to find free photos online for your About Page’s Graphic Profile

This entry is part 2 of 2 in the series
Create a Graphic Profile Montage for your About Page

collected images This is Step One of how to create a Graphic Profile for your About Page.

It’s time for me to work on my About Page. I’ve decided to tackle creating my Graphic Profile, and write a tutorial on how to do it at the same time.

The first step is to collect all the photos you need for your montage. The photos have to be of things that you’re passionate about. ChiQ has 14 items in her Graphic Profile. If I want to create a Jigsaw Puzzle effect, I need to have 6 or 20 photos to have one for each piece. I think a 6 piece puzzle isn’t enough for a Graphic Profile, so I’d have to go with 20.

So, my plan is to aim for 20 photos of things I feel passionate about. And to get them from free sites, where possible.

I’m going to show you where I’m going to get my photos from. There are two free photo sites that I often use: Read more . . .

Posted on Sunday, May 11th, 2008 by Trisha Cupra

Last modified: May 14, 2008 at 2:58 pm

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