Category Archives: Web Systems

So clever that you’re an idiot

It’s sometimes said that programmers only know three numbers: zero, one and infinite.

We live in a land of edge cases and abstraction. Either something doesn’t need to exist (zero), it does exist (one), or it does exist and can have multiple values (infinite).

We love to scale things up to infinite. If two objects or concepts are similar, especially if part of the code is repeated between them, programmers will abstract the similar functionality into a third object, and then inherit that functionality back into the two original objects. Given the chance, a young programmer might try to Read more »

Online Marketing and Competitor Analysis Tools

It can be really easy, when managing an organisation, to carry on with your business completely blind. Sure you have an idea, or even more of a feeling of what to do, but how grounded in reality are your decisions?

It’s really important to get that input. Common inputs are:
– Market research (to determine whether there’s enough demand before you dip your toe into the market, and what shape your product should take)
– Customer Feedback – How well did your product or service meet the expectations of the person who paid for it? This is invaluable
– Competitor Intelligence – What are the competition doing? While it can be dangerous to watch the competition too closely (you should pick an area and take the lead instead), it can be helpful before you get big to see what the land looks like from the eyes of those giants.

So today I’m just going to detail a few great tools you can use to get that competitive intelligence into your fingertips…

Read more »

Google+ Review

Just a quick review to cover Google +

Executive Summary: Look out Facebook, Google has polished the entire experience and added a few useful little additions of their own, integrated it really nicely into their current offerings, -and- they actually give a damn about user privacy.

Read more »

You are an expert.

Believe it or not, compared to your customers, you are an expert.  Sure they may have a PHD in astro-physics, but when it comes to your product, the reason they’re coming to you is because you are the resident expert in that field. So why is this important? It’s an absolutely fantastic marketing tool.

The point of marketing is not force customers to buy products they would really rather not have, it’s to educate potential customers on the existence and use of your product or service. Being the local go-to person can be incredibly useful to you however, because by getting the fact that you are an expert out into the public eye in your target areas, people are instantly aware of who you are, and they’re going to be aware that you can solve their problems. Just by helping people, 90% of your marketing effort has just been completed. Read more »

Who comes to your site and why?

One of the perceived problems with marketing through the web is the fact that you can’t see your customer.

For example, a business might spend a significant amount to put up a website, and even more resources in time to write articles as well as referring people to their site, never to know if that last customer was a result of their now increased web presence or if they simply looked them up in the yellow pages. Unfortunately for many this encourages a ‘blind faith’ in your website, and those of us who run businesses know that blind faith won’t get you far, facts and data are what make conversions.

Enter ‘analytics’.
For those unfamiliar with the term, analytics are research and statistics reporting tools that tell you everything about the people that visit your site including (but not limited to) their geographical location, whether or not they are a return visitor, which pages they visit, where they come from, and how long they stay. Now that we can watch what our visitors do on our websites we can design it to ensure maximum usability and sales.

An example of this could be an alternative medicine clinic and online store. While they have been making a reasonable amount of online sales, it seems to be random chance that determines whether they have a great sales week or bad one. What we know for sure, however, is that nothing is random. They have been handing out flyers and writing articles on their site consistently but don’t know which of these methods to concentrate on. With the installation of analytics the store could discover that majority of their traffic isn’t in fact coming through their articles, one’s on back pain in particular. Even more so, the people who come through the articles may be three times more likely to make a purchase than those who began at their front page (presumably visiting because of the flyers). It immediately becomes obvious that back pain is an issue that people are searching for online, and therefore one which is delivering the highest quality traffic to their site. They could then focus their time writing articles on that subject in particular, focussing in and making their marketing campaign more effective. Business managers and entrepreneurs have been doing this offline as far back as we can remember, and now online managers can do it with even more precision.

Most people who have heard about this technology tend to think that it is a tool only available in the highest end of websites, those that can cost tens of thousands of dollars. Once again, this isn’t true, it is simply that the best web designers are the ones who implement it correctly and the best managers who use it. The tool is in fact available free of charge through Google, and once set up is surprisingly user friendly.

There really isn’t any good reason not to implement some kind of analytics on your site, whether it be full conversion tracking or simply a head count to see which is your best quality traffic. As a rule we include it in every system that produce for a client and make sure they know how to harness the power of these statistics to use in their favour. Once you’ve tried it, you’ll never go back to the ‘dark ages’ of and guess work with internet business. It doesn’t have to be a black art. Welcome to a new market.

Did you like this article? Check out the free task management tool I’m developing at teamsgo.com. You’ll love the simplicity, and your colleagues will love how much more orgnised you are. http://www.teamsgo.com

What is a data warehouse?

Trends and buzzwords often come and go in the IT business. But a concept that’s becoming very popular and likely to stick is that of the ‘Data Warehouse’.

Business Intelligence – it’s not an oxymoron
The whole point of a data warehouse is to facilitate a very important process for upper management, the idea of gathering intelligence or information. The more intelligence or relevant information you can get into managements hands the more likely they are to make sound decisions that improve the value and revenue of the company (and hopefully improve your paycheck in the process!)

It can’t just be any information however, the key is for this information to be relevant to the kinds of decisions they’re making. As a simple example, if your company runs an online store they don’t want server logs, you want to be finding things like the average time a user spends on the store, the number of products browsed before buying, or maybe the percentage of people who abandon the checkout process after viewing the total price.

Read more »