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Five Keys to Look For When Searching for a Website Development Partner

August 17, 2011 by Raul Colon

photo credit by ~Brenda-Starr~

This is a guest post from my good friend Margie Clayman one of the most creative and complete online writers on integrating marketing and social media. I read her blog almost every day and I learn lots from all the great info she shares. 

I wanted Margie to share from her perspective what she looks for in a web developer and here it is:

By Margie Clayman

Along with just about everything else in the business world, websites have at one time or another been pronounced “dead.” There have been articles about how mobile will kill the internet, how websites won’t be needed anymore…you’ve probably seen plenty of those posts yourself.

For now though, websites remain an integral part of a company’s marketing scheme. A website is your Grand Central Station. Traffic from any part of your marketing campaign – advertising, PR, Social Media – can all be driven right to your website. You can tell your story there. You can sell your products there. You’re in charge.

Given all of that, designing a website that will really work for you is absolutely essential, and not everyone has the skill to create sites that are productive for the company. There is the aesthetic, sure, but there’s also the navigation, the SEO aspect, the copy, and the actual skeleton of how the site will be used. To do it right, you’ll need help. But how do you pick the right person or company to help you get your website to the highest quality point possible? Here are some pointers.

  1. Make sure they’re interested in learning about your businessThese days, if a consultant of any kind comes into your business and says, “You don’t need to tell me anything. I know it all!” Kick them out right away. Because here’s the thing – they don’t know about you. They don’t know about your customers. Make sure your website partners take a real interest in learning about how you interact with your customers, what you want to provide to your customers online, and how you feel your customers want to interact with you online.
  2. Look for a variety of skills: A lot of times, a website developer will be excellent at one particular thing, but they will have a big learning curve when it comes to other kind of work. If you’re just looking for a website for right now, that can be okay, but if you want to develop a long-term relationship with a website developer, you need to make sure they will be willing to evolve along with the technology. Will you need an e-commerce site someday? Will you need special forms programmed into your site? These are things your website partner should be able to help you with over the long term.
  3. Look for Social Media experience: These days, a website developer really needs to have at least a passing familiarity with how Social Media works. In particular, they need to know how to do things you might want to do to enrich your visitors’ experience. For example, your website partner should know how to add a Twitter feed and/or badge to your site, or perhaps a link to your Facebook fan page. They should know how to incorporate a blog with your corporate site. If you say Twitter and your prospective partner looks out the window to see the pretty bird, you know you have a problem.
  4. Familiarity with Google Analytics or other analytics programs are a must: We are living in the era of accountability. Once your website is up, you’re going to want to make sure you can track how it’s performing and whether other channels are successfully driving traffic there. A website is increasingly becoming a moving target, and analytics is (so far) the single best way to evaluate what works and what doesn’t. A web developer with experience in or knowledge of analytics programs, including the basic step of installing tags onto your site, is basically a necessity today.
  5. If they don’t know what SEO stands for, keep looking: A web developer likely will not be the person who optimizes your website, but they should be able to communicate effectively with whomever is optimizing your website. They should understand how to name pages effectively, what meta tags are and how to develop pages so that there are keyword rich h2 tags. They should also be open to updating copy as you add more keywords into the mix. If the eyes glass over as you discuss this stuff, you’re going to end up in big trouble.

So there are five key things to look for when you’re searching for a website developer. Whether it’s a single person or a firm, you need to make sure that you impress upon them the importance of these items, along with anything else that is important to you and your customers.

Did I miss something important? How do you select your web development team? Let’s talk about it!

Learn More About the Author

Margie Clayman works for Clayman Advertising, Inc., a third-generation Akron, Ohio marketing firm. Margie is a proponent of carefully planned Social Media marketing, she’s passionate about fully integrated marketing.

Follow him on twitter @margieclayman

 

Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized, Web & Blog Design Tagged With: Guest Post, Margie Clayman, SEO, Web & Blog Design

Identifying Other Lines of Service that Complement Your Current Ones

August 4, 2011 by Raul Colon

As a small business we are always trying to find ways to be lean enough to make changes to keep our business running in different business cycles.

We are constantly changing our menu offering in areas where we might be able to serve our old clients better and attract new clients. Some of these new services pop up as ideas when we listen to our clients and audience.

Our First Client

Our first translation services customer for was John Jantsch (Author of Duct Tape Marketing and The Referral Engine: Teaching Your Business to Market Itself – affiliate link). John needed some legal documents translated from English to Spanish. Thanks to our friend @mark_hayward we where able to identify the opportunity and find a resource in our network of partners that could deliver a quality legal document translated in Spanish.

I did use my good friend Chris Brogan as a reference for that small job, and Chris identified the opportunity of offering translation services from English to Spanish and vice versa. This was a great idea since we offer services where we communicate and create content in multiple languages.

Implementing the Idea

After weeks of planning, identifying resources, and getting things in order, I can gladly say that we executed on Chris Brogan’s advice by adding translation into our services menu.

Thankfully we have great resources as friends and supporters of CIMA IT Solutions.  This increases the opportunities for us to serve our clients better and helps us build our business organically.

How do you identify when a New Service is needed?

Do you keep your service menu fresh?

by Daquella manera

Filed Under: Blog, Small Business, Uncategorized

Turned Our Website into a Bilingual One

August 3, 2011 by Raul Colon

A few weeks ago I finally decided to translate my corporate website and make it a bilingual website.

I would love to do that with my blog but I don’t have the time to translate most of the content. I also know that I don’t have access to someone reviewing my work day by day with strong Spanish grammar knowledge but I had to give it a try and so far we have had very positive results.

The benefits of creating a Spanish site mirroring my English corporate website has brought me some results already. I have been contacted by possible clients in Mexico that read some of the posts we wrote in Spanish and are interested in seeing how I can support some of their efforts remotely.

I have also been able to create traffic for my site significantly. People are finding the content I have written in both languages on the search engines and are stopping by my site to find more information. I am in the process of translating a few more posts so I can fully leverage the benefit of Google finding content on my site for people searching for relevant services for their specific needs.

I would have never guessed how effective it was to have my site in both languages. We are about to close our first big deal due to one post that we created on the site.

Are you missing out on customers because they prefer to search for content in Spanish or another language?

If you need us to help you, please let us know how we can help you with moving your site to a multi-lingual website.

 

Filed Under: Blog, Uncategorized, Web & Blog Design Tagged With: Translations, Web & Blog Design

CIMA goes along for the ride with Food Truck Freak in Chicago

July 20, 2011 by Raul Colon

As we write this, we are craving some of the Vegetarian options on some of the food trucks that can be located with the FoodTruckFreak.com .  I have to say that we are more than happy to be part of this awesome concept.

We want to thank Alex Levine for choosing CIMA IT as her business partner to help people in Chicago find their favorite food trucks. The website, in its Initial Phase, has the following:

  • Profiles of Food Trucks with
    • Yelp Reviews
    • Facebook Like Box
    • Foursquare Check Ins
    • Latest Tweets
    • Next Stop on Schedule
  • A Food Truck Locator
  • Truck menu
  • A comment area so people can leave their opinions on each food truck.
  • Blog with reviews of food trucks and experiences.

There are many extras to be added to the site. So if you are in Chicago or are planning to visit, stop by the site and take a look at the options these great culinary artists present to the public on wheels.

With just a few days as a live page, FTF has been mentioned in three news articles; one from London and two from Chicago:

Food Trucks are in gear to stay : Writes about how some people in the Food industry think that Food Trucks have come to a lull or will see its demise soon but sites like FTF prove otherwise.

 

Food Truck Freak helps you find trucks without Twitter Fuss : Writes about how FTF’s site has a feature that allows you to know where the food truck will be located in advance instead of guessing or checking twitter.

Stop the Twitter Stress! Find all your favorite Food Trucks the Easy Way : Writes about how FTF’s site aggregates and facilitates finding your favorite food trucks in one spot.

Our best wishes to @alexklevine and the rest of the FoodTruckFreak.com team.

 

 

Filed Under: Blog, Clients, News and Press, Small Business, Uncategorized Tagged With: Clients, Restaurants

Reinventing the Wheel or in this case the Circle

July 18, 2011 by Raul Colon

One of the main concerns individuals who are not early adopters have with Google Plus is the fact of having to build your contacts again. I really think that Google needs to analyze how to make this process as simple and effective as possible to get more people to jump on board.

Google does provide the option of including contacts you may know by using contacts in your gmail. In my case I have used Gmail for so many things since I started using in 2003. I have many contacts on Gmail that I have only spoken to once and have no direct contact with. I use to copy my emails from other efforts into gmail so I have thousands of contacts, which I think would be very spammy if I sent them a request so they could join me in Google Plus. There are other contacts that I probably don’t want to connect with. In the past I have had issues using gmail contacts to connect in social networks so I will not use this function again.

If Google had a way to connect your Facebook & Twitter contacts the same way Facebook and now Twitter connect with Gmail contacts, that might help with the process of building your contacts on Google Plus. Since Google Plus is still in beta, it might launch a cross platform tool to alert your friends on Facebook and Twitter to come and join you on Google Plus.

In the meantime here are a few things you can do to bring your contacts over from other platforms and even your blog.

Get your short Google Plus Nickname.

Go to http://gplus.to and insert your Google + ID Number and choose a Nickname. For example, mine is http://gplus.to/raul . This makes it easier when sharing your profile with other people so they can connect.


Share Your Profile on Social Channels

Share your Profile nickname on Twitter, Facebook, and LinkedIn or any other social channel so people know where to find you.

[blackbirdpie url=”http://twitter.com/#!/rj_c/status/93072557783261184″]

Include it in Your Email Signature

If you have a blog I would include the blog url in the email signature if you want people to connect with you in Google Plus. Make sure you include it in your email signature.

Change your Avatar

Many of us changed the avatar on Twitter and Facebook with the “I have Moved” Image. I modified the I Have Moved version of my avatar and included my Gplus Nickname so people could find me on Google Plus.


Add a Widget or Badge to your Blog

If your blog works on WordPress you can easily integrate Google Cards into your WordPress blog as a widget. With some PHP knowledge, integrate it into any part of your WordPress site.


If you are interested in learning more about the plugin visit: http://plusdevs.com/google-wordpress-plugin/

My first weeks in Google+ I have had such great conversations with a small group of new people I met. I found it worth moving over and waiting for the rest to come along.

If you need any invite feel free to Contact me I will gladly send you one.

photo credit by p22earl

Filed Under: Blog, Google Plus, Uncategorized Tagged With: Google, Google Plus, Wordpress, Wordpress Plugins

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