Archive for October, 2009


Testing Your Website In Multiple Browsers

Posted October 29th, 2009 by in Web Design, Website Development

The long running problem:

One of the common problems facing web designers today is not so much the design and creation of the site itself but rather ensuring it displays correctly in all of the popular web browsers. Many issues can affect the way a designer creates a site, in some cases ambitious ideas and features have to be scrapped to make way for a “safe” approach making sure all browsers can display a page without errors. This blog post will hopefully provide you with an insight to the problems of cross browser compatibility and possibly a solution that could help you create a design that looks great and works in all browsers.

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Social Media Ad Spend set to Increase Again

Posted October 28th, 2009 by Stephen Harvey-Franklin in Advertising, Social Media Marketing, Social Networking

E-marketer reported that advertising spend on Social Media  Social Media is expected to increase by 10% each year.

Marketers will be responsible for spending some $2.35 billion on Social Media Advertising (globally) in 2009 (representing a 17% increase over the previous years.

2010 will see another increase in social media advertising spend to $2.6 billion, which will rise by 2013 to $3.5 billion. (more…)


Social Media and Customer Service On-Line

Posted October 27th, 2009 by John-Paul in Advertising, Online Marketing, Social Media Marketing

Yesterday I wanted to speak to Vodafone about upgrading my contract.  I personally didn’t have the time to go through the automated phone service before eventually being put on hold which seems to be the normal course when phoning them.  I thought the quickest way was to send an e-mail asking my question, but this also seemed to have issues.  Their website was having problems and kept crashing on the Contact Us page.  So I thought I would try contacting them through Social Media.  I found the official Twitter page, sent my message and within 30 minutes they had sent me a personal e-mail answering my question and my new phone arrives tomorrow!

Your online brand is extremely important to monitor and manage. Having negative listings in the results of a search engine could be enough to have prospects steer away, leave your existing customers in a state of panic, and damage your brand.

The Effects of Bad Customer Service On-Line

Let’s take a look at United Airlines, angry passenger created a music video about his guitar being broken during a trip using the airline.  Dave Carroll, a Canadian Musician spent almost 12 months trying to get compensation from United Airlines but when he received no response he decided to write a song about how they broke his guitar.  The video was uploaded onto YouTube wand has now had almost 6 million views to date.

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Not only did this video go viral in nature, but even doing a search in Google for United Airlines showed the video on page one of the search engine. So with 5,791,610 views, 36,456 ratings, 27,567 users adding this video to their favourites, and 2,240,000 monthly searches in Google for the term United Airlines, this simple 4-minute, 36-second video clip reputedly cost United Airlines millions.

An Example of Good Service

Dell is another good example, they now use Twitter not only to let people know about deals but also to interact with customers.  Recently a customer used Twitter to complain about the difficulties of getting through to the company by phone, Dell responded to the customer immediately and resolved the query allowing the customer to leave positive comment on-line.

Summary

Social Media is not really something you can set up and forget.  You need to monitor, listen and participate.   The challenge is finding the time to respond to threads and tweets.  Knowing where to start is half the challenge, LinkedIn, MySpace, YouTube, Twitter and Facebook?  The list goes on and on and it is important to understand that different social networks attract different types of people.

Social Media is now being adopted by more and more companies as part of their customer relations and is set to continue to grow in 2010.  The use of Social Media is changing the way companies manage and monitor their brands, with positive and proactive communications companies are able to protect their brands.


Banning Bad Bots Using The global.asa File In Classic ASP

Posted October 23rd, 2009 by in Security, Website Development

Bad bots can cause problems for your website. They can submit spam to your forum or blog, spam your contact form, or just use up your valuable resources such as bandwidth and CPU. If you use Classic ASP this article will show you how to ban bad bots from your entire website using the global.asa file.
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Google Introduces Enhanced Goals in Analytics

Posted October 23rd, 2009 by John-Paul in Analytics, Online Marketing

It has been a popular criticism of Google Analytics for some time now that it didn’t allow the creation of more than 4 separate conversion goals. All that changes today with the introduction of a range of new goal functionality.

Google Analytics now allows for the creation of up to 20 Goals per profile. In addition to expanding the number of goals available, Google has also expanded the types of goals available, to include ‘threshold’ goals for time on site per visit and pageviews per visit.

Tracking goals/conversions is a key performance indicator which can provide highly valuable data enabling you’re website to reach its fullest potential. If you are not currently tracking goals, you should start today!

Goal Sets

Google Analytics now allows goals to be organised into 4 sets. Each set containing up to 5 different goals. These sets introduce a new way for the additional goal data to be accommodated within the Google Analytics Reports.

Goal Types

Previously a goal was typically defined as a pageview that resulted from the completion of a valued action on a website. For example the checkout completion page following a successful online sale. Now goals can be based on actions which do not relate to the viewing of a page. Goals can now be based on how much time a visitor spends on the site or how many pages the visitor visits.

i) Time Based Goals
Time based conversions are triggered after a visitor has spent a certain amount of time on a website. A goal can now be configured to register a conversion when a user has spent a specified amount of time on a website. Interestingly time based goals can now also be configured to register conversions if a user leaves a site before a certain amount of time. This can be useful if you wish to set a goal up as a failure metric.

ii) Pageview Based Goals
Another new goal type is pageviews per visit. In a similar fashion to time based goals, a conversion is triggered when a visit exceeds a certain number of pages. Like time based views, pageview based goals can also be triggered by virtual pageviews.

iii) URL Destination Goals
Traditional goals have been renamed URL destination goals. These goals can still be constructed using regular expressions, head match or exact match to identify a page that represents a particular conversion. Now with the availability of up to 20 goals you can easily measure all of those micro conversions (RSS subscription, email signup, reaching a product page, downloading white paper… etc, etc, etc). And yes, you can still use a virtual pageview as a URL Destination goal.

Funnels

Google has spent some time updating the funnels interface. Funnels are still limited to 10 steps. The big question is, do we still need funnels now we have the ability to setup up to 20 goals. The answer is unquestionably yes! Funnels provide a nice visualisation of critical processes and in particular abandonment rate.

Summary

If in the past you have been tracking lots of goals through different profiles, you may want to consider consolidating these goals into one profile. The benefit is you can have all your conversions in one interface allowing much easier analysis.

A key point to remember is visitors can only convert at each goal level once per visit. This is the way it has always been and is likely to remain.

Creating new goals will not modify your historical data, only future data. So all newly created goals will only track future traffic!


Product Pages – Don’t Forget Descriptions

Posted October 22nd, 2009 by Chrisi Reid in Usability, Website Development

Having an online store that can be open all day, every day to take advantage of customers who want to shop from the comfort of their couch can open up new marketing possibilities for many businesses. But when designing that store, it pays to remember that the products must generally sell themselves. As a website developer, you should always ensure that the tools site owners need are available in your site’s product management system. (more…)


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