Archive for the ‘Project management’ Category

Wedding a Blog and a Website

Wednesday, January 20th, 2010

Vintage Wedding Postcard ~ Bride & Groom

[Photo credit: Vintage Wedding Postcard ~ Bride & Groom, on Flickr]

So you’ve decided to start a blog – good for you! Blogs are important ways for you to build a faithful following and enrich your site with valuable content.

But before you open up your first free Blogger or WordPress account, think about how that blog will integrate with your overall communications strategy and online presence. Websites and blogs should support each other, not compete. Too many efforts are siloed, the blog hanging off the side like an extra appendage, or vice versa.

A few ideas for integrating them more closely:

Publish blog entries directly into your website. If what you’re writing in the blog relates to your site, make it show up there. Vice versa, if you’re creating content within your main website that could be useful for your blog readers, republish.

Share tags.
Tags, or categories, can be shown on both website material and blog entries. Link them together.

Make the blog appear within the framework of your website. The Talance blog is actually on WordPress while our website is on Drupal. But we’ve made them look the same so you never really feel like you’re leaving our website.

Create a related links section
at the bottom of blog entries that refer back to related material on your main website.

Create a Feedback page
on your blog that links back to your website feedback page.

Socialize with Your Team

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

Many nonprofit organizations that are beginning to adopt Web 2.0 technologies consider them the “cool” part of their online communication. They look at them as a way to engage younger or larger audiences or to project an image of hipness.

But the reason social tools such as Twitter, Facebook and Flickr have become so popular is that they make it incredibly easy for people to work together. Yet, if you look at the internal structure of many organizations, you’ll see that they communicate with one another through phone calls, printed notes and in-person meetings. True, there’s no substitue for face-to-face communication, but social tools can make it much easier to share information among your workmates.

For example, every time we have a meeting at Talance HQ, we have our intranet chat open to facilitate sending links or snippets of documents back and forth. We open a bulletin board for every project so the whole team can communicate about it, and we have a record of everything that was said. Our wiki keeps track of standard procedures and methodologies so we can access them any time, and make revisions when necessary. We use these tools in the office and with our team members who live across the country, and we do it because it’s entirely practical.

The majority of our social tools are built into our website (you do have a CMS, don’t you?). It’s the perfect place to build out a business, because everybody knows your web address, and it’s all centrally stored and accessible online.

Think about what you can do to make it easier for your employees to communicate with one another, and then give them the tools they need. You’ll very well find your organization runs better just by opening up new avenues of communication.

21 Ways Volunteers Can Help with Your Website

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

AVP Volunteer 2

[Photo credit: AVP Volunteer 2 by yuan2003, on Flickr]

As any charitable organization knows, volunteers are superstars. They give love and expertise and don’t ask for a dime in return. They can be especially helpful if your organization has a website. Bearing in mind that an entire Web development project is long-term and requires dedicated knowledge and commitment that you’re better off hiring someone to do (upshot: it’s easier to fire someone whose work you’re not happy with), there are still plenty of other tasks you can assign out to people who want to help. Here are a few.

[BTW, did you read Engaging Volunteers in Your Marketing Efforts or Volunteers and Website Management?]

  1. Social networking cheerleader
  2. Add comments to blogs
  3. Contribute blog entries
  4. Participate in discussion on bulletin boards
  5. Data entry (i.e., cutting and pasting info into a new site)
  6. Website promotion
  7. Adding your website to directories
  8. Writing news updates about events
  9. Website literacy workshops
  10. Checking for dead links
  11. Updating old content
  12. Convert press releases for websites
  13. Usability testing (i.e., make sure everything works in a logical way)
  14. Bug reporting (i.e., look for and report errors or problems)
  15. Identify requirements for new development
  16. Browser testing
  17. Taking pictures for the website
  18. Formatting and uploading pictures
  19. Making videos for the site
  20. Uploading videos onto a service like YouTube or Vimeo, and adding them to site
  21. Help manage wiki

Anything we missed? Add your ideas below.

Healthy Website Checklist

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

This little gem has been hidden on the main Talance website, but we thought we’d bring it to wider attention. Use this checklist every three months or so to make sure your website is still up to date and healthy.

Site Content

  • All links work
  • All downloads work
  • All forms work
  • Contact information on homepage and accessible on every other page
  • Addresses organization’s goals
  • Has a favicon

Usability

  • All images have ALT tags
  • Custom 404/page not found page
  • Each menu has no more than seven choices
  • Home link in navigation
  • User-friendly page titles

Readability

  • Font size not too small
  • Wide margins
  • Good use of bullets, subheadings and bold
  • No underlines except for hyperlinks
  • High contrast text and images

Operation

  • Looks OK in most common Web browsers (IE, Firefox, Safari, Opera)
  • Uses limited Flash to comply with iPhone and iTouch
  • Images are sized correctly (i.e., big image not squeezed into small box)
  • Colors and images are consistent
  • Loads quickly
  • Looks OK in different screen resolutions
  • Looks OK with various screen color settings
  • URLs work without “www”

Security

  • Pages requiring SSL access are accessible only via SSL
  • No one has access to restricted areas that they shouldn’t have

How to Scrap Your Paper Bulletin

Monday, November 2nd, 2009

Tree of Light

[Photo credit: Tree of Light by JPhilipson, on Flickr]

If you’ve been thinking about how to scrap your paper bulletin (and you should be), but you’re not sure how to sell it to your members, take a page (virtually, of course) from this ad I spotted in InformationWeek:

InformationWeek
Worth more than the paper it’s printed on.

InformationWeek will be carbon-neutral within 10 years. As part of this commitment, four 2009 issues will not be printed – instead they will be available to our readers as interactive PDF downloads.

What’s more, we’re working with nonprofit organizations to protect and restore the world’s forests. InformationWeek will plant a tree for each of the first 5000 downloads of every green issue.

Please join us. To find out more or tell us what you think, go to informationweek.com/green

There’s so much I love about this campaign. First off, they realize that paper publications rank with junk mail in most households. No point in going directly to the recycling bin. Think about that the next time you stuff an envelope with your bulletin.

Secondly, they’re giving their readers lots of notice and letting them know these PDFs are “interactive” – added value and preemptive marketing! So start, notifying your members that you’re going digital, and tell them about the benefits of shifting to online pubs.

Thirdly, they’re planting trees. Who on earth would have a beef with that? Makes you want to go download a document. It’s good for the planet.

Finally, they’re providing more information and asking for feedback. I’ve talked with many organizations that say they absolutely cannot afford to let the paper bulletin go. But if they ask their members what they think, they often find they don’t care one way or the other.

This is a simple campaign, and one that can save you a fair bit of money too. By the time you save postage and printing, you can probably hire someone to help layout your digital version and attract more readers along the way.

Incredibly Useful Advice for Better Websites – from a Writing Pro

Friday, October 16th, 2009

"On writing well"

[Photo credit: On writing well, by picassina, on Flickr]

My digital life has caused me to reevaluate my bookshelves, groaning with books I hardly look at. When my local library posted signs asking for donations, I decided to purge. As I was filling boxes, I found one little gem I haven’t seen in years: William Zinsser’s classic book On Writing Well.

Journalism students know this as required reading in an attempt to learn the principles of cleaning up prose for newsprint. In my years as a journalist, I found it inspiring and refreshing to dip into now and again for advice on how to de-clutter my writing and simplify my words.

As I was thumbing through my copy the other day, I realized that if I replaced “writing” with “creating websites” – especially in the first few chapters – Zinsser’s book is chock full of fantastic advice for anyone looking to plan or maintain their website, whether it be creating design elements, planning pages or writing copy.

The best sites are those that don’t make you think. They’ve been refined so much that you find just what the website owner wants you to find, and you never have to hunt. Few sites suffer from being too simple. That’s exactly what Zinsser preaches in his book.

I recommend you check out a copy of On Writing Well to learn how to write better (useful advice anyway for business documents, blog entries, e-mails and the like), but I’ve taken a few golden nuggets from Zinsser’s book and tweaked them slightly for web building. Follow this advice, and your website will serve you – and your visitors – better.

  • The secret of a good website is to strip it to its cleanest components. Remove every element that serves no function … these are the adulterants that weaken the strength of a website.
  • If the web visitor is lost, it’s usually because the web builder hasn’t been careful enough. Perhaps a website is so excessively cluttered that the visitor doesn’t know what it means.
  • Constantly ask yourself: What is my website trying to say? Surprisingly, often people don’t know. Then look at what you have done and ask: Have I said it? Is it clear to someone encountering the site for the first time? If it’s not, some fuzz has worked its way into the machinery.
  • Web building is hard work. An easy-to-use website is no accident. Remember this in moments of despair.
  • Look for the clutter in your website and prune it ruthlessly. Be grateful for everything you can throw away. Is anything pompous or pretentious or faddish? Are you hanging on to something useless just because you think it’s beautiful?
  • Simplify, simplify.
  • 5 Useful and Free Web-Based Tools

    Wednesday, October 14th, 2009

    Free Web stuff has never been more available nor more overwhelming. It’s easy for a budget-conscious non-profit or other small organization to glom on to any of the thousands of freebie apps out there and out of eventual frustration, opt for a paid service.

    On the flip side, it’s easy to be deluded into thinking free services can do anything a paid service can do. That’s one mistake that can get expensive. It’s important to pull out the cash when it’s worth it. Even if you save a bit, it helps.

    I’m always scouting around for free services and use a litany every day. I can’t name them all here, but here are five of my faves that I turn to regularly.

    Free Apps

    1. Netvibes is a personal Web browser start page that corrals RSS feeds, news updates, to-do lists and more.

    2. Clicky is streamlined and easy-to-use Web analytics software.

    3. Remember the Milk is a cute, simple and effective way of managing tasks. Nice for keeping track of web projects.

    4. “Google Notebook helps you collect notes and information from the web for anything you might be doing—researching a trip, planning a purchase, or putting together a dinner party.” Useful when bookmarking won’t do.

    5. Fax Zero lets you upload and send faxes for free.

    Want more?

    Monique Cuvelier will be sitting on a panel about free and cheap online tools at the eBiz Symposium in Arlington, MA, on Friday, Oct., 23, 8:00am – 4:30pm. Hope to see you there!

    eBiz Symposium

    September Talance Newsletter: Healthy Website Checklist

    Monday, September 14th, 2009

    [This little gem is the text of issue our e-mail newsletter subscribers just received. Want a slice of this foryourself? Sign up now.]

    Hi, Friends.

    Websites, you know, are never done. They’re as close as you can get to living and breathing for something made of lines of code stored on computers around the globe. Trends change, organizations’ missions change and outside forces change too.

    One big outside force recently changed, namely Internet Explorer 8. Any time a Web browser receives a major upgrade, and people are encouraged to switch over, it means that old websites may no longer work properly. Even if you have chosen to let IE8 (which has its own host of problems) drift by without you, not all the people who are coming to your website have.

    It’s important to take the time on a regular basis to make sure your website is keeping up with the technology around it. It’s a job that requires regular tending, but we’ve made it easier for you by assembling the Healthy Website Checklist you can follow.

    http://talance.com/healthy-website-checklist

    Bookmark it or print it out so you remember to keep making sure your website still works.

    Of course, keeping websites ship-shape and Bristol fashion is one of our specialties at Talance, so give us a holler (888-810-9109 or use this form) if we can help breathe new life into your website.

    Your Internet pal,

    Monique

    New Launch: Rachel Coalition

    The Rachel Coalition provides services for victims of domestic violence, but its website was limited to a few informational pages and uninspiring design. Here’s how we helped.

    »Read more

    Blog Favorites

    The most popular recent posts on Talance Friendly Web Tools Blog. Make sure you’re reading http://talance.com/blog and get automatic updates of new articles.

    10 Things To Include on Your Synagogue Site – Now!
    Use this checklist to fine tune your website in a hurry.

    30 Ideas on How Congregations Can Use Twitter
    Not sure if Twitter is right for your congregation? Here’s how to decide.

    A Quick Website Tweak To Get More Donations
    It doesn’t take much to make it easier to receive donations.

    Reader Question: How Do People Find Me on Twitter?
    We answer a reader who was wondering how people keep finding her on Twitter.

    Small SEO Tweaks with Big Impact
    Help search engines list you more easily.

    Reader Question: What does WYSIWYG mean?
    Jargon beware.

    5 Painless Ways to Squeeze More from Your Website
    It doesn’t have to hurt to reap better rewards from your website’s performance.

    Emergency Guide for Lost Websites
    What to do if you lose your domain name.

    Need Some Help?

    Talance has helped clients launch scores of projects, ranging from websites to online newsletters to CRM projects. Please click here to schedule a time to talk about your next project or to request a proposal.

    Find Us Fast

    Read About Talance

    Receive the newsletter. Subscribe Now!

    Join Talance on Facebook.

    Follow us on Twitter.

    Don’t keep this good stuff all to yourself. Click that Forward button and send to a friend.

    How To Write Really Helpful Web Development RFPs

    Monday, August 17th, 2009

    Request for proposals rarely fill me with joy. More often than not they’re a source of confusion, business-speak and unfinished thoughts, which we have to sort through and make sense of so we can send a reasonable bid to an organization that wants a website.

    But last week I received an RFP from a non-profit that may have performed a Vulcan mind-meld on Talance. It was as if they had seen our new-client questionnaire and had preemptively answered all the questions I have at this early stage of a project. It filled me with delight (because I’m sad that way), and I know that it will make the project run smoothly, no matter who they choose to build the site.

    What made it so great? Here are a few stand-outs that you can incorporate in your next RFP to help your project move smoothly from inception to completion:

    1. Think it through.

    The clearest RFPs benefit from discussion and planning beforehand. Make sure you talk with your team to form clear ideas of what you want your website to be, and then communicate your wishes through the RFP.

    2. Write clearly.

    Some people think “RFP” and pull out their cryptic businessese thesaurus so they can load it with fancy words nobody really gets. Pretend you’re explaining what you want to an idiot. Trust us, we Web developers get more out of it that way.

    3. Plan your objectives.

    You cannot hope for a site that reaches your goals unless you know what they are before you begin. If you want to be the go-to guide for volunteering opportunities, write it down and make sure that every decision you make from that point forward feeds back into that goal.

    4. Order your objectives.

    Some objectives are must-haves, others are nice-to-haves. Rank yours.

    5. Go window shopping.

    Everyone has seen sites they love, whether they be your competition or a mega-commercial site like Amazon. Start keeping track of sites you like, and make notes on what you like about them.

    6. Know your branding.

    Unless they’re new, most organizations have gone through some kind of branding exercise in the past, where colors, logos and other standards were developed. If you’re not aware of what these standards are, start asking around. We just had to redesign a website whose colors and logo were completely wrong in an earlier version, because no one checked. Translation: expensive.

    7. Name your widgets.

    If you want any special functionality, like slideshows, animations, photo galleries – anything – write it down.

    8. Technical needs.

    If you’re bound to maintain your website in a particular format, you like a CMS like Drupal or you don’t have the staff bandwidth to do updates, cite these constraints. Also note if you need Web hosting.

    9. Name your budget.

    I know, I know. You don’t want to come right out and say how much you want to spend, but your Web developer really needs at least a ballpark. We receive calls from clients who have $400 to spend, and those who have $40,000 to spend. We can’t help everyone, but it saves everybody a lot of time if I can tell them up front whether we can or not.

    10. Make a schedule.

    Decide when you’ll accept RFP questions, submissions and make decisions. Also note any ideal launch dates.

    11. Contact information.

    Sounds elementary, but make sure your prospects know how to reach you if they have questions. We received a bizarre system-generated RFP a couple weeks ago that had no personal contact information and was so hard to read we couldn’t even consider responding.

    Laying this groundwork is incredibly useful for Web development companies like ours, but your staff will also thank you if you take the time to plan. Bonus: your funders will love you for eliminating money-wasting mistakes early on.

    Work-Ahead Tools for Twitter

    Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

    Twitter updates come as fast as you can draw a sharp breath, but they may not be as spontaneous as they seem. Thanks to a selection of scheduling services, you can create tweets ahead of time and post them in the future, while you’re busy with something else.

    Delayed tweeting isn’t the best strategy for building relationships with your followers (can you imagine having your half of a conversation an hour before you meet a friend for lunch?), but it can help when you want to deliver a message but aren’t able to.

    For instance, if you want to notify everyone about a new project you’re launching on a set day. You can schedule the announcement to go out while you’re busy setting up said project. Or say you’re at a conference getting ready to speak. You want to tell your followers you’re about to step on stage so they’d better bustle down to the conference room, but you need to give the live audience your full attention.

    Here are some tools you can use to set your tweets into the future: