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Web Forms that work

Fergal Coleman - Monday, March 30, 2009

Usability expert Gerry Gaffney recently released a new book called:

 "Forms That Work: Designing Web Forms for Usability".
On Amazon, Jakob Nielsen, the leading usability said:

"The humble form: it may seem boring, but most of your website's value
passes through forms. Follow Jarrett & Gaffney's guidelines, and
you'll probably double your online profits."

Gerry will join us in a webinar in the next few weeks to talk more about usability. if you are interested in hearing Gerry speak please let us know and we will send webinar info to you.

The book can be purchased on Amazon at http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1558607102/informdesign

Threats to Google

Fergal Coleman - Sunday, March 29, 2009
Threats to Google

Facebook for business

Fergal Coleman - Thursday, March 26, 2009
http://www.hubspot.com/archive/facebook-for-business/?

This is an introductory webinar on using Facebook for business. Excellent starting point for small businesses looking to maximise their use of social networking

Interesting MindMapping tool

Fergal Coleman - Tuesday, March 24, 2009
http://www.mindmeister.com

I just had a look at this online mind mapping tool - it looks excellent and very cost effective (starts with a free version). You can also import files from Mindmanager, share maps and much more I'm sure..

Skype Opening Up for Enterprise Customers

Fergal Coleman - Tuesday, March 24, 2009

from

http://gigaom.com/2009/03/22/skype-now-means-business-friends-the-sip-world/

Skype, a division of beleaguered eBay, is going corporate. The company today announced that it will play nice with corporate PBX systems that use Session Initiation Protocol (SIP). According to The Wall Street Journal, the Skype-for-SIP product will be introduced as a beta product and will be tested by a limited number of companies.

Details on how this service will work are still fuzzy — Skype, continuing its habit of playing favorites in the press, hasn’t really bothered to get in touch with those likely to ask tough questions. The Journal story talks a lot of about the market and competition, without getting into the specifics, except that it will be targeted at small and medium-sized businesses.

How is this new effort supposed to work? A speech by Digium founder and CTO Mark Spencer, the creator of Asterisk, at the recently concluded eComm conference gives us a glimpse of what this new effort might be. Spencer announced that Skype was now going to work with Asterisk.

It supports, of course, the usernames, encryption, end points, and it supports both talking to regular Skype names, any arbitrary Skype name, as well as talking to the SkypeIn, SkypeOut services. It’s really, the first practical Skype gateway from a PBX platform. It allows you to connect this really broad user base of people that are already using Skype, with Asterisk. If you think about Asterisk as a very pragmatic and practical platform for telephony, for business phone systems, Skype has been incredibly successful in the Voice over IP space because it’s been a very pragmatic solution for customers to be able to use.

As Spencer points out, this is really a marriage made in heaven. This product is called Skype for Asterisk. Spencer in his speech said that Skype is going to release “something called the Business Control Panel.”

Although it’s not implemented in the current Beta, Skype is requiring that the usernames you use to register your device with Skype, in other words, the ones you use with the Skype for Asterisk, will all have to be business control panel accounts, which I believe means you are not going to be able to use existing accounts unless you are somehow able to make them part of the business control panel.

A typical boneheaded move, making people sign up for yet another account. Maybe it’s a way to give an illusion of growth, making it easier for the company to be sold to a gullible buyer. WSJ reports that Skype had $550 million in revenues last year. It needs to grow that number fast, otherwise eBay won’t be able to get rid of the service. The megabillion-dollar purchase of Skype was a worse decision than the New York Yankees’ signing of never-playing pitcher Carl Pavano.

Buy-N-Shoot

Fergal Coleman - Sunday, March 22, 2009
http://www.buy-n-shoot.com/

Buy-n-shoot is a Melbourne-based company with the most comprehensive information on cameras. The site is loaded with reviews of the latest digital cameras and contains a tips section with some great advice on taking better photos.

The site is a good example of an optimised online business - the site gets thousands of hits every week and its ranks extremely well on Google for some of its keyworks and phrases!

A useful resource for anyone with an interest in photography!

Facebook and Barack Obama - Story of a people expert

Fergal Coleman - Thursday, March 19, 2009
From
http://www.fastcompany.com/magazine/134/boy-wonder.html


http://www.fastcompany.com/node/1207594/print

How Chris Hughes Helped Launch Facebook and the Barack Obama Campaign

Chris Hughes is having a philosophical moment. "I don't really know what 'community' means. And I never use that word."

We are in Washington, D.C., just three days before his most recent boss, Barack Obama, will take office. It is so bone-jarringly cold that even nestled over coffee inside a Starbucks, we can see our breath. I resist the urge to pat his nearly whiskerless cheek, or reach over to tighten his jacket against the frigid air. Such a baby face. But at the age of 25, Hughes has helped create two of the most successful startups in modern history, Facebook and the campaign apparatus that got Barack Obama elected. Both were dedicated to the proposition that communities, and the way we share and interact within them, are vitally important. As he recounts his two years as director of online organizing for the man who put community organizing on the map, the existential reverie is understandable. He doesn't know what community means? Really? "Well, I just never think of myself as being in the business of building an online community."

Hughes is a technology star whose business is people. At Facebook and in the Obama campaign, he has been plowing what he observes about human behavior into online systems that help real people do what they want to do in their real lives. He helped develop the most robust set of Web-based social-networking tools ever used in a political campaign, enabling energized citizens to turn themselves into activists, long before a single human field staffer arrived to show them how.

"Technology has always been used as a net to capture people in a campaign or cause, but not to organize," says Obama campaign manager David Plouffe. "Chris saw what was possible before anyone else." Hughes built something the candidate said he wanted but didn't yet know was possible: a virtual mechanism for scaling and supporting community action. Then that community turned around and elected his boss president. "I still can't quite wrap my mind around it," Hughes says.

His key tool was My.BarackObama.com, or MyBO for short, a surprisingly intuitive and fun-to-use networking Web site that allowed Obama supporters to create groups, plan events, raise funds, download tools, and connect with one another -- not unlike a more focused, activist Facebook. MyBO also let the campaign reach its most passionate supporters cheaply and effectively. By the time the campaign was over, volunteers had created more than 2 million profiles on the site, planned 200,000 offline events, formed 35,000 groups, posted 400,000 blogs, and raised $30 million on 70,000 personal fund-raising pages.

There were, of course, many players in the Obama victory, starting with the candidate himself. President Obama was not made available for an interview (not surprising given his new set of responsibilities). But Plouffe, sounding very much like the jubilant CEO of a super-successful startup, is clear: "We were very lucky that Chris gravitated to the campaign early." Indeed, a close look at Hughes's efforts and their impact on the campaign sheds new light on Obama's success at the polls -- in both the primary and the general elections -- and offers lessons for any enterprise seeking to tap social networking as a tool.

At first, online organizing was a stepchild within Obama's new-media operation. But after the loss in the New Hampshire primary, the volunteer networks that Hughes had built with his bare-bones staff "became critically important," says Plouffe. "When we turned to the community, they were there. We sent staff into Colorado and Missouri for caucuses, and the staff was already half-organized." The theme of the campaign, direct from Obama, was that the people were the organization. "We were there to support the people," Plouffe continues, "but that simply would not have been possible if we did not have a set of online tools that enabled us to do that. It wasn't just a tactic. Chris made that happen."

Continue the article....

2009 Digital Outlook Report

Fergal Coleman - Friday, March 13, 2009
The 2009 Digital Outlook Report from the Razorfish agency in the US makes for interesting reading.

Download the report below:

Digital Outlook Report 2009 - Razorfish Digital Outlook Report 2009 - Razorfish (6223 KB)


Social networking is a more popular online activity than email

Fergal Coleman - Friday, March 13, 2009
From:
http://www.cnet.com.au/software/internet/0,239029524,339295381,00.htm?feed=rss

The survey by market research firm Nielsen Online found that on average one of every 11 minutes spent online around the world is devoted to social networking and blogging sites.

The survey identified Facebook as the world's most popular social network with 108.3 million users, followed by MySpace with 81 million users. Far behind in third place was Classmates Online, with 19.7 million users; Orkut, with 17.5 million users; and LinkedIn, with 15 million users.

Facebook seemed to be the most addictive of the social networking sites with the average user spending three hours and 10 minutes online every month, the survey found. But Orkut had by far the highest penetration in any single country with 70 per cent of online Brazilians using the Google-owned service.

The survey found that growth in social networking was three times as fast as the pace of general online growth with much of that acceleration coming from the middle-aged.

The most popular age group with Facebook in terms of growth is the 35-49 category, which increased by 24.1 million people last year.

The category of men and women aged 65 and above moving to social networking grew by 7 per cent, while the 17-and-under category dropped by 9 per cent.

Skittles and Twitter - Brave Online Strategy

Fergal Coleman - Thursday, March 05, 2009

Skittles, yes the MARS confectionary,  launched a new homepage that is basically a Twitter frontent . See this article.
http://www.digitalbuzzblog.com/skittles-converts-home-page-to-twitter-search/

Its an incredibly brave strategy (foolish maybe!) but it shows how Twitter is the social networking tool "du jour"

It would appear however that they changed their mind overnight as the homepage is now a facebook page!

http://www.skittles.com/default.htm

Good to see a mainstream brand is prepared to try risky social networking strategies!


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