Vice President of Newfangled.com, Writer for PRINT and F+W Media, blogger, infrequent designer, reader, science fiction enthusiast...

My latest article for Newfangled is up:

How to Do More (with Less) with Your Website

Just after the end of the recession—in September, 2009—I wrote an article titled Doing More with Less about the various ways that you could continue to improve your website without spending much. Given what was happening in our economy, the topic seemed pertinent, if not downright obvious. After all, just because money was tight didn’t mean that online business could shut down entirely. We needed to find ways to move forward that were within our means. But at that time, I had no idea that the recession had actually officially ended in June. I, along with the rest of America, had to wait until September, 2010—over a year later—to find that out from the National Bureau of Economic Research that the recession was over!

Today, we’ve been clear of the recession for over a year and a half, and yet budgetary concerns have not gone away entirely. Our experience with the recession was chastening, and after an extended period of austerity, it doesn’t seem like we’re going to be returning to our days of big spending just yet. In fact, recent surveys in our industry show that one of the biggest challenges that agencies face in 2011 is an expectation to do more for their clients with less. On that note, the Creative Industry Outlook report released by FunctionFox for 2011 showed that 58% of respondents expected their firms to maintain their current size in the coming 12 months, yet 60% expect an increase in revenues compared with 2010. That sounds like the majority are expecting to do more this coming year, but not necessarily with more.

But even if you don’t share that outlook, my guess is that you’d still be interested in finding low-cost ways to get more value out of your website. Who wouldn’t? So, with that, I’d like to share with you five different ways that you can do more with less with your website…

Read the rest here >

Posted at 11:46am and tagged with: web-development, planning, web, web-design, web, web-content-strategy,.

My latest article for Newfangled is up:
How to Do More (with Less) with Your Website Just after the end of the recession—in September, 2009—I wrote an article titled Doing More with Less about the various ways that you could continue to improve your website  without spending much. Given what was happening in our economy, the  topic seemed pertinent, if not downright obvious. After all, just  because money was tight didn’t mean that online business could shut down  entirely. We needed to find ways to move forward that were within our  means. But at that time, I had no idea that the recession had actually  officially ended in June. I, along with the rest of America, had to wait  until September, 2010—over a year later—to find that out from the  National Bureau of Economic Research that the recession was over! Today, we’ve been clear  of the recession for over a year and a half, and yet budgetary concerns  have not gone away entirely. Our experience with the recession was  chastening, and after an extended period of austerity, it doesn’t seem  like we’re going to be returning to our days of big spending just yet.  In fact, recent surveys in our industry show that one of the biggest  challenges that agencies face in 2011 is an expectation to do more for  their clients with less. On that note, the Creative Industry Outlook report released by FunctionFox for 2011 showed that 58% of respondents  expected their firms to maintain their current size in the coming 12  months, yet 60% expect an increase in revenues compared with 2010. That  sounds like the majority are expecting to do more this coming year, but  not necessarily with more. But even if you don’t  share that outlook, my guess is that you’d still be interested in  finding low-cost ways to get more value out of your website. Who  wouldn’t? So, with that, I’d like to share with you five different ways  that you can do more with less with your website…
Read the rest here >

My latest article is up…

Your Website is Not For You!

You know that old gag where the husband gives his wife a bowling ball for her birthday? Or the much-reviled (but sadly true) stereotype of the overzealous soccer parents who are one outburst away from joining the game themselves? Each of these are classic examples of what happens when you make the mistake of thinking that something meant for someone else is all about you.

You’ve probably seen this happen plenty at work, too. I call it “client narcissism.” It manifests itself in many ways, but here’s an easy one: your client, a retailer, is spending weeks working out the details of the “About Us” section of their website, which they insist should be the second option in the main navigation. Instinctively, you sense that prioritizing that kind of inside information is off-point, but you don’t exactly know how to clue your client in. You could be blunt:

Sorry, but tell the Vice President of such-and-such that the customers probably care just as little about who he is as he does about the sneakers his company sells.”

Right, try that one out if you’re comfortable with shedding a client or two. But if you want to keep your client—or better yet, continue to develop your consultative position with them—you’re definitely going to need to try something a bit more subtle and strategic.

Read the rest here >

Posted at 4:43pm and tagged with: web, web-design, planning,.

My latest article is up…
Your Website is Not For You!
You know that old gag where the husband gives his wife a bowling ball for her birthday? Or the much-reviled (but sadly true) stereotype of the overzealous soccer parents who are one outburst away from joining the game themselves? Each of these are classic examples of what happens when you make the mistake of thinking that something meant for someone else is all about you. You’ve probably seen this happen plenty at work, too. I call it “client narcissism.” It manifests itself in many ways, but here’s an easy one: your client, a retailer, is spending weeks working out the details of the “About Us” section of their website, which they insist should be the second option in the main navigation. Instinctively, you sense that prioritizing that kind of inside information is off-point, but you don’t exactly know how to clue your client in. You could be blunt: “Sorry, but tell the Vice President of such-and-such that the customers probably care just as little about who he is as he does about the sneakers his company sells.” Right, try that one out if you’re comfortable with shedding a client or two. But if you want to keep your client—or better yet, continue to develop your consultative position with them—you’re definitely going to need to try something a bit more subtle and strategic.
 Read the rest here >

…something I’m working through in the book. I think we take this for granted…

Posted at 8:16pm and tagged with: WEB,.

This is one cartoon-ized reader letter received by Slate cartoonist and writer James Sturm, who quit the internet and is writing about it the old-fashioned way…

Posted at 9:00am and tagged with: web,.

This is one cartoon-ized reader letter received by Slate cartoonist and writer James Sturm, who quit the internet and is writing about it the old-fashioned way…

Cool! (via)

Posted at 12:22pm and tagged with: video, the-future, web,.

Posted at 11:03am and tagged with: quote, Information-Overload, web,.

Over the last several years, the Internet has evolved from being a distraction to something that feels more sinister. Even when I am away from the computer I am aware that I AM AWAY FROM MY COMPUTER and am scheming about how to GET BACK ON THE COMPUTER. I’ve tried various strategies to limit my time online: leaving my laptop at my studio when I go home, leaving it at home when I go to my studio, a Saturday moratorium on usage. But nothing has worked for long. More and more hours of my life evaporate in front of YouTube. Supposedly addiction isn’t a moral failing, but it feels as if it is…

But essential online communication has given way to hours of compulsive e-mail checking and Web surfing. The Internet has made me a slave to my vanity: I monitor the Amazon ranking of my books on an hourly basis, and I’m constantly searching for comments and discussions about my work…

About a month ago, I started seriously thinking about going offline for an extended period of time. I weighed the pros and cons, and the pros came out on top. Yes, I want to be more present when I am around my kids and not be constantly jonesing to check my e-mail. But I also need to carve out some space for myself to make new work.

Disconnection is the new counterculture.

H.G. Wells, on the world brain, in 1937

That settles it! Wells invented the internet, not Gore!

Posted at 4:22pm and tagged with: the-future, quote, internet, web, the-past,.

“…innovators, who may be dreamers today, but who hope to become very active organizers tomorrow, project a unified, if not a centralized, world organ to “pull the mind of the world together”, which will be not so much a rival to the universities, as a supplementary and co-ordinating addition to their educational activities - on a planetary scale…There is no practical obstacle whatever now to the creation of an efficient index to all human knowledge, ideas and achievements, to the creation, that is, of a complete planetary memory for all mankind. And not simply an index; the direct reproduction of the thing itself can be summoned to any properly prepared spot…The whole human memory can be, and probably in a short time will be, made accessible to every individual. And what is also of very great importance in this uncertain world where destruction becomes continually more frequent and unpredictable, is this, that photography affords now every facility for multiplying duplicates of this - which we may call? - this new all-human cerebrum. It need not be concentrated in any one single place. It need not be vulnerable as a human head or a human heart is vulnerable. It can be reproduced exactly and fully, in Peru, China, Iceland, Central Africa, or wherever else seems to afford an insurance against danger and interruption. It can have at once, the concentration of a craniate animal and the diffused vitality of an amoeba.

This is no remote dream, no fantasy. It is a plain statement of a contemporary state of affairs. It is on the level of practicable fact. It is a matter of such manifest importance and desirability for science, for the practical needs of mankind, for general education and the like, that it is difficult not to believe that in quite the near future, this Permanent World Encyclopaedia, so compact in its material form and so gigantic in its scope and possible influence, will not come into existence…”

From Bruce Sterling:

You see how stupid that looks? Well, that’s how stupid THIS looks, circa 2025.”

Posted at 9:01am and tagged with: the-future, the-past, web, design,.

From Bruce Sterling:
“You see how stupid that looks? Well, that’s how stupid THIS looks, circa 2025.”

The “Mad Scientist” Blogger

Many of our agency friends have been blogging for a few years now, but it’s been about as effective a strategy as attending a networking mixer; most companies know instinctively that they need to be there, but they just don’t know exactly why, what they will bring to the conversation, or what they’ll do with the experience. As a result, many agency blogs are pretty unfocused. Some are mostly “neat stuff” aggregators, while others are “innovationspeak” engines running on the Taco Bell model—you know, same words, different combinations. Few actually know what they’re about.

This month’s upcoming newsletter is going to be about how to improve your blog—make it accurately represent your firm, educate your prospects, and generate new interest in what you offer. In the meantime though, I’ve been thinking about a way that some agencies have used their blog that I call the “mad scientist” strategy. Let me explain…

The Iceberg Theory


This image comes from my presentation on writing for business called Professional Writing
for the Unprofessional Writer
.

First, I need to apply the iceberg theory—the idea that good writing should only reveal about one eighth of a writer’s knowledge of the subject—to your blogging strategy. Peter Turchi, in his book, Maps of the Imagination: The Writer as Cartographer, quotes Hemingway on the concept of the “literary” iceberg:

I always try to write on the principle of the iceberg. There is seven-eighths of it underwater for every part that shows… If a writer of prose knows enough about what he is writing about he may omit things that he knows and the reader, if the writer is writing truly enough, will have a feeling of all those things as strongly as though the writer had stated them… [But] if a writer omits something because he does not know it then there is a hole in the story.
- ERNEST HEMINGWAY

A corporate blog should reinforce this idea. I believe that the value of a blog is in the long-term relationship that is built between it’s author and readers. Blogs take a cumulative approach to tell an ongoing story with many short posts. They are relational. When someone subscribes to a blog, they are making a commitment to getting to know you—one they can break at any point (and are likely to) when a blog loses or never develops focus. The story that is told by a blog, though, is one that, when looked at in retrospect, leaves an impression of the writer’s interest and expertise on the reader. At any point in time, I can look at some of the blogs I read regularly and have a sense for who the authors are and what they’re about. The seven eighths of the “iceberg” are in that impression, while the one eighth is in each individual post. This is why a blog that is focused tightly by a firm’s positioning will be more effective that a “generalist” blog. It will slowly describe that positioning through posts that cover thoughts about practice, new ideas, application of expertise, and the like.

But What About…?

There is an exception to this; you may already be thinking of one. What about those bloggers that write so often that their blog is more of a written document of their thinking—as expansive of or peripheral to their core discipline as it may be—than a deliberately considered marketing tool? There are many, many bloggers like this; you might describe their blogs as “unfocused.” In fact, the blogs I look forward to reading most are blogs of this kind. But that’s because they arefocused, just not in an immediately discernible way. I call the authors of these blogs “mad scientists” because their creative license, freedom to experiment and ask “dumb” questions, latitude, and diversity of content reinforce my perception of them as profound thinkers, which in turn reinforces my trust in the quality of their firm’s work. They probably don’t talk about work they’ve done as much as work they want to do. They probably talk about tomorrow more than yesterday. They don’t use much marketing language. And they never try to sell “innovation.”

Design is one of those disciplines that must aggregate knowledge from a wide range of other disciplines in order to properly inform its execution. In turn, good designers are deep thinkers and lifelong students of other areas of knowledge. So it tends to be the case that every good firm has a “mad scientist” on staff, either in a particular person or personified by a stated and supported core value of practice. This person’s thinking influence the kind of client a firm attracts, the kind of work it does, and the kind of people that come there to work. A person who fits this description should probably be one of your active bloggers because the ongoing story they tell will be an extremely valuable one to the perception of your firm as a thoughtful, cutting edge practice with a vision to guide its clients into the future.

Examples

Here are a few people I read that fit in with the “mad scientist” description (in no particular order other than how they come up in my feed reader): David SherwinJack ChengPaul Isakson,Russell DaviesJonathan HarrisMichael BabwahsinghSteven Frank, and Craig Mod.

Posted at 11:39am and tagged with: blogging, writing, design, web, web-content-strategy,.

The “Mad Scientist” Blogger
 
Many of our agency friends have been blogging for a few years now, but it’s been about as effective a strategy as attending a networking mixer; most companies know instinctively that they need to be there, but they just don’t know exactly why, what they will bring to the conversation, or what they’ll do with the experience. As a result, many agency blogs are pretty unfocused. Some are mostly “neat stuff” aggregators, while others are “innovationspeak” engines running on the Taco Bell model—you know, same words, different combinations. Few actually know what they’re about.
This month’s upcoming newsletter is going to be about how to improve your blog—make it accurately represent your firm, educate your prospects, and generate new interest in what you offer. In the meantime though, I’ve been thinking about a way that some agencies have used their blog that I call the “mad scientist” strategy. Let me explain…
The Iceberg Theory
This image comes from my presentation on writing for business called Professional Writingfor the Unprofessional Writer.
First, I need to apply the iceberg theory—the idea that good writing should only reveal about one eighth of a writer’s knowledge of the subject—to your blogging strategy. Peter Turchi, in his book, Maps of the Imagination: The Writer as Cartographer, quotes Hemingway on the concept of the “literary” iceberg:
I always try to write on the principle of the iceberg. There is seven-eighths of it underwater for every part that shows… If a writer of prose knows enough about what he is writing about he may omit things that he knows and the reader, if the writer is writing truly enough, will have a feeling of all those things as strongly as though the writer had stated them… [But] if a writer omits something because he does not know it then there is a hole in the story.- ERNEST HEMINGWAY
A corporate blog should reinforce this idea. I believe that the value of a blog is in the long-term relationship that is built between it’s author and readers. Blogs take a cumulative approach to tell an ongoing story with many short posts. They are relational. When someone subscribes to a blog, they are making a commitment to getting to know you—one they can break at any point (and are likely to) when a blog loses or never develops focus. The story that is told by a blog, though, is one that, when looked at in retrospect, leaves an impression of the writer’s interest and expertise on the reader. At any point in time, I can look at some of the blogs I read regularly and have a sense for who the authors are and what they’re about. The seven eighths of the “iceberg” are in that impression, while the one eighth is in each individual post. This is why a blog that is focused tightly by a firm’s positioning will be more effective that a “generalist” blog. It will slowly describe that positioning through posts that cover thoughts about practice, new ideas, application of expertise, and the like.
But What About…?
There is an exception to this; you may already be thinking of one. What about those bloggers that write so often that their blog is more of a written document of their thinking—as expansive of or peripheral to their core discipline as it may be—than a deliberately considered marketing tool? There are many, many bloggers like this; you might describe their blogs as “unfocused.” In fact, the blogs I look forward to reading most are blogs of this kind. But that’s because they arefocused, just not in an immediately discernible way. I call the authors of these blogs “mad scientists” because their creative license, freedom to experiment and ask “dumb” questions, latitude, and diversity of content reinforce my perception of them as profound thinkers, which in turn reinforces my trust in the quality of their firm’s work. They probably don’t talk about work they’ve done as much as work they want to do. They probably talk about tomorrow more than yesterday. They don’t use much marketing language. And they never try to sell “innovation.”
Design is one of those disciplines that must aggregate knowledge from a wide range of other disciplines in order to properly inform its execution. In turn, good designers are deep thinkers and lifelong students of other areas of knowledge. So it tends to be the case that every good firm has a “mad scientist” on staff, either in a particular person or personified by a stated and supported core value of practice. This person’s thinking influence the kind of client a firm attracts, the kind of work it does, and the kind of people that come there to work. A person who fits this description should probably be one of your active bloggers because the ongoing story they tell will be an extremely valuable one to the perception of your firm as a thoughtful, cutting edge practice with a vision to guide its clients into the future.
Examples
Here are a few people I read that fit in with the “mad scientist” description (in no particular order other than how they come up in my feed reader): David Sherwin, Jack Cheng, Paul Isakson,Russell Davies, Jonathan Harris, Michael Babwahsingh, Steven Frank, and Craig Mod.
Jaron Lanier

Posted at 12:04pm and tagged with: web, the-future,.

The basic idea of this [new social] contract is that authors, journalists, musicians and artists are encouraged to treat the fruits of their intellects and imaginations as fragments to be given without pay to the hive mind. Reciprocity takes the form of self-promotion. Culture is to become precisely nothing but advertising
MIT researcher David Dalrymple’s answer to the question, “How is the Internet changing the way you think?”

Posted at 9:03am and tagged with: web, digital-literacy,.

Before the Internet, most professional occupations required a large body of knowledge, accumulated over years or even decades of experience. But now, anyone with good critical thinking skills and the ability to focus on the important information can retrieve it on demand from the Internet, rather than her own memory. On the other hand, those with wandering minds, who might once have been able to focus by isolating themselves with their work, now often cannot work without the Internet, which simultaneously furnishes a panoply of unrelated information — whether about their friends’ doings, celebrity news, limericks, or millions of other sources of distraction. The bottom line is that how well an employee can focus might now be more important than how knowledgeable he is. Knowledge was once an internal property of a person, and focus on the task at hand could be imposed externally, but with the Internet, knowledge can be supplied externally, but focus must be forced internally.

Posted at 12:08pm and tagged with: web,.