Notes From the Desk

Posts Tagged ‘Web Development’

Ultimate Ice Wraps Gets New Look

Monday, July 13th, 2009

Ultimate Ice Wraps

Early in July we launched the new Ultimate Ice Wraps website. Along with a new design, the Ultimate Ice Wraps shopping cart was overhauled and new features were added. A few of the new features are online gift card purchase, expanded search functionality, and a streamlined shopping experience.

The site was developed by Cow Dog Design, while Epop Studio created the design.

Ultimate Ice Wraps were developed by a group of former athletes, trainers, and coaches who were not satisfied with the current offerings in the cold care markets. Early prototypes were tested with several Division I college teams, prestigious rehabilitation facilities, and nationally recognized personal trainers.

Eternally Under Construction

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Sample Color VariationsThere is an animated gif out there from the late 90’s that I ran into while looking at a local church’s website. It is an animated gif with 3 bowing monks and below the monks it simply states “Eternally Under Construction”. The website was trying to make a small religious pun, but the underlying statement of a website being eternally under construction is how every company needs to view their website and it’s function within their business.

The brochure mindset is an idea that dominates business owners’ perceptions of what a website should be. A brochure is usually a tri-fold piece of paper that states some facts about the company and probably won’t be updated for a few years. While brochures are extremely useful and their place in marketing will never disappear, applying the same rules and thought process to your website is applying old school rules to a brand new beast and it just doesn’t work.

When starting out on the development of your website, you need to come in with the mind set that your website will be a living, breathing marketing tool that must grow and evolve over time. A website is not something you can build and forget about. Companies that take this approach to their website will quickly see their numbers dwindle.

Here are some quick tips on how to keep your site growing and evolving through time.

  1. Publish press releases or news articles on your website. Have a section on your home page for a link to the article so it is at your site visitors’ finger tips.
  2. If you can’t afford to redesign your website, alter the color scheme. Just like a room in your house, a fresh coat of paint can visually transform your website.
  3. Swap out your main home image once a month. This image is usually the first thing that catches a viewer’s eye.

The goal of these changes or others is to give visual clues to your site visitors that your site is up-to-date and evolving as your business or area of business evolves. If your site appears stale or stagnant, than people will think your company is stale or stagnant.

Not Your Average Website for a Not So Average Tavern

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

The Barking Goat Tavern Web SiteWe launched The Barking Goat Tavern website last week. This new site was developed by Cow Dog Design LLC to promote the new Castle Rock, Colorado tavern. The site design is by ClearMindGraphics.

Eric Warner founded The Barking Goat Tavern with the simple idea that great beer and great food CAN be combined in a casual environment. We have the best selection of draft and bottled beer in Douglas County. According to an old brewer and vintner saying, “It takes a keg of beer to make a good bottle of wine and a bottle of wine to make a good keg of beer,” and we offer a wonderful selection of wines, each available by the glass or bottle. The Barking Goat Tavern also has a full bar with a wide variety of spirits.

Leveling the Playing Field

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

The greatest thing about the World Wide Web is the way it levels the playing field for the little man. The web puts small businesses and Indie bands in direct competition with their larger counterparts. The bonus is that unlike TV ads or a traditional print ad, you don’t have to break the bank to compete.

Scott Terry, the lead singer of Red Wanting Blue, was talking about this subject in a recent interview. Terry commented on how bands utilize the web as a promotional tool. In the beginning everyone had their own website and would stencil it on everything from t-shirts to equipment boxes. Then with the success of people like Colbie Caillat making it big with MySpace, everyone switched from their own website to their own MySpace page and began plastering that address all over their equipment and shirts. Finally he expressed wonder of where all the self-promoting on the web would go next.

Right now we are starting to see the next phase of this self-promotion and brand identity cycle shake out with other social media options taking center stage. With all of the options out there where do you begin?

No matter what your company or group does on the web, if it is going to succeed you have to build your web identity on a solid foundation. That foundation is your website because you have complete control over the design, features, and content. This is the one place that is 100% your company. Social media sites like Facebook & MySpace are no substitute for a custom website. Social media sites only give the illusion of control, not real access to all facets of the site.

After you have laid the foundation of a great website, you should next integrate the features like a blog, online store and discussion forums. The days of hosting your blog, online store, or forum with a third party site (i.e. yoursite.blogspot.com) is over. There are too many full featured, easily customizable options out there to use a third party site. The URL for your blog, forum, or store should be yoursite.com/blog, anything else and you are really promoting the blog company and not your site.

Then there are the social media sites like Twitter, Facebook, and MySpace. What do you do about those sites? To put it simply, use them to your advantage. In my opinion every company should have a Twitter account, it’s too easy of a promotional option not to. When choosing social media outlets, choose wisely. If you can’t do it well, you shouldn’t do it at all. A forgotten or poorly utilized Twitter or Facebook page is quickly giving potential clients a bad taste in their mouths. Always be on the lookout for the next trend that fits your company and helps you reach your goals.

Finally, know that a positive web identity that pays its dividends isn’t something that happens on accident. It’s something you build and cultivate over time. To start, be sure to build on the solid foundation of a great website and grow from there.

5 Steps to Move Your Search Engine Optimization Forward

Friday, March 6th, 2009

Search Engine Optimization (SEO) is the tweaking of your web site that takes it from being listed as #350 on a google search to the top 20. What is the point of having a web site if no one can find it? Search engines like google.com and yahoo.com are always changing how they rank web sites, so you must constantly be working on your web site to bring it closer to the top of the list. Follow these 5 tips to help improve your ranking.
Search Engine Path

  1. Create a standard Site Map and XML sitemap: For those that don’t know, a site map1 is a page in your web site that lists every page of your web site in a single location. You may ask yourself “Doesn’t my navigation2 already do that for me?” Well, not really. For the most part navigation only shows the top landing pages. There could be many other pages inside each of the landing pages. While a spider3 will find those pages eventually, a sitemap is faster and you can guarantee a spider finds every page by using a sitemap, while it may not with just a navigation. Also, if your navigation utilizes flash or java script it is highly likely a search engine spider cannot follow the links in the navigation. I recommend everyone have both a standard HTML sitemap4 and a XML sitemap5. This covers all your bases. While a search engine like google prefers the XML sitemap, you still leave the possibility of another using the HTML sitemap if need be.
  2. Add your web site to relevant directories: For good search engine rankings you have to have inbound links6 to your web site, and a good way to start getting those is by submitting your site to relevant directories on the web. Submitting your site to dmoz.org or paying to submit your site to http://dir.yahoo.com creates that inbound link to your site. Don’t go crazy with this and paste your site in any directory or forum out there. If a search engine spider thinks your site isn’t posted in a relevant spot of a directory or forum you could get black listed, which just sets your site back months or years in SEO rankings.
  3. Create a unique title for each page: Often each page in a web site has the same title or no title at all. When a search engine lists a page of your site in the search results, it lists the page title with each entry. You don’t want your pages to come up Untitled or with a generic title that doesn’t answer the searchers’ questions. Give each page a unique descriptive title so the searcher knows instantly what they are getting.
  4. Add your business to google maps: People frequently use search engines like their local yellow pages. They often do searches like “Cincinnati Hair Salon” or “Sporting Goods Ohio”. When a search is entered in this fashion google will show local results at the top of the page.  To get your business to pop up here create a google account and then add your location to google maps.
  5. Let your web site marinate: While you should always be updating and working on your site, there is a limit. Remember it takes at least a month if not longer (up to 3 months) for your site to get indexed by search engines. Tweaking your text every day can be a waste of time. What you need to do is work smarter, not harder. Review your changes before they are made and implement them in bunches. Don’t chicken peck text changes or you won’t see the full results of your work.

1 Sitemap: Apage within your web site that has a complete list of links to all pages in your web site

2 Navigation: The main group of links at the top or to the left of a web site.

3 Spider: A program used by search engines to read the contents of your web site. And they follow the links on web pages to get to the next web page in your site.

4 HTML Sitemap: Is the same as an XML sitemap except it is created in the standard web code and is visually friendly for visitors to view on web sites

5 XML Sitemap (Extensible Markup Language): Code that allows web site developers to create custom code that displays the sitemap in clean and simple code for Search Engines to understand.

6 Inbound Links: Links from other web sites to your web site.

Animal Shelter of the Wood River Valley Site Launched

Wednesday, February 4th, 2009

Animal Shelter Wood River Valley

The Animal Shelter of the Wood River Valley site was launched today. This new site was developed by Cow Dog Design LLC to fit the growing needs of their shelter. The site design is by ClearMindGraphics.

The Animal Shelter of the Wood River Valley promotes companion animal welfare by providing temporary shelter for homeless pets, adopting them to qualified homes, and reducing animal abuse, neglect, and overpopulation through community education and spay/neuter services.