TypePad AntiSpam Launches

May 30th, 2008 by Darren Rowse

Typepad-AntispamAfter my post a few days back about my love hate relationship with Akismet I was pleased to see Six Apart announce another option for bloggers looking to stem the tide of comment spam - TypePad AntiSpam.

While I’m yet to try it the reports coming in about it are good so far. It’s free (Akismet costs for a commercial license, it has plugins for MovableType and WordPress, it’s open source, and it’s compatible with Akismet (so you can run them together).

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How to sell advertising on your blog and NOT piss off your readers

May 30th, 2008 by Chad Randall

CUBA PLANE HIJACK 1.  Don’t hijack the page.  Full page takeovers are even more obnoxious and intrusive than pop-ups.  At least most pop-ups can be blocked.  Never force someone to view an ad.  Everyone should have the choice to view or ignore any advertisement, anywhere. 

2. Don’t use sound.  Banners should for the most part not make noise of any kind.  Unless perhaps it is a movie trailer ‘AND’ the user has initiated the action.  This means that they have either rolled over it and/or clicked on it.  If not, don’t play sound. EVER.  If you site using flash embedded with sound, remove it.  Nothing makes a user close a site faster than music blaring. (Except maybe un-intentionally opened porn at the office)

nascar 3.  Don’t go NASCAR.  Pick a set number of banners and stick with it.  Don’t just keep adding banners because you can sell them.  6-8 should be max.  If you have to make more money, up the price instead of adding more.

4.  Don’t sell pop-ups!   These should have been wiped from the web years ago.  They fucking piss everyone off.  They are visual spam. They suck, bottom line.  Don’t use them.  Period.

5. Don’t pretend they’re not ads.   Doing a paid review on your site is an advertisement.  If you were paid, it is an ad.  Disclose it.

More reading:

Top 5 most annoying Internet ads of all time

The world of annoying ads


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Technosailor.TV: Saturday Nights at 9pm

May 30th, 2008 by Aaron Brazell

After a few weeks of messing around and getting comfortable in the video streaming game, we’ve had a lot of fun and a good deal of attention. It’s been fun. I’ve learned some things too - namely that these things can easily go over three hours if there’s no structure.

So, I’ll be streaming every Saturday from 9-11pm (eastern).

The format I’m going to play with will be:

Mixx Minutes
My new favorite local company, Mixx, has some great stories. This will resemble the Diggnation show without Kevin Rose, Alex Albrecht or Digg. ;-) I’ll talk these stories over with you all as we goo, so get your webcams and uStream logins and passwords all brushed off.

Special Guest
Don’t know who this is yet - but open to suggestions. Who do you want to see? Otherwise, I’ll find someone interesting on Twitter. :-)

Audience Conversations
The rest of the show will be a mish-mash of audience topics and conversations. The end of the show always gets the most fun. Last time, I pitched Andrew Hyde on a business model he stole and created VCWear from. ;-)

So, come on by on Saturday night. It’s bring your own beverages - let’s have a good time.


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Last Day of School

May 30th, 2008 by Christina

Mixed bag on this one - the pro side - I get to sleep in tomorrow!  The negative side - wtf do I do with the kids for 3 months while I work?  I think were gonna join the Aerofit so they can swim and play a lot, and I can work mobile-y.  Guess all those fit people working out while Im sitting down pounding away on the keyboard will make fun of me. :)  Darcie, what to do?? )

I just got the cutest email from Noah’s teacher:

Somehow with Noah crying, Michael crying and many others, about leaving today, I totally forgot to give him his report card. 

Poor Noah was still blubbering when he got home this afternoon.  Oh the joys of 3rd grade - those were the days.  Ahhhh!!


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It’s 5 O’clock Somewhere. In Case You’re on a Deadline

May 30th, 2008 by Aaron Brazell

For all the times I rant about PR pitches around here, I actually do get some good ones. Generally, these pitches are timely to me or my audience and are respectful in how they ask for press.

Thus was the case today when a guy named Sergei [last name withheld for privacy] emailed me about a web based project management tool called 5pm. His hook for this pitch (at least what caught my attention) was:

It’s a new web 2.0 tool that we launched recently. 5pm is an online
project management application that looks different from anything else
on the web in this category, but still feels familiar.

Web 2.0 was not the hook, but it was interesting to see that adjective used nonetheless. What hooked me was that it was different from anything else, yet still familiar. This is good because I’ve not been a fan of all the other web based PM tools out there.

I did a little investigation and am smacking myself for not seeing VentureBeat’s “Strong Project Management” endorsement from January. Or this from my new favorite company, Mixx from last year. (Of interest to Mixx fans is that Saturday night is the opening salvo of the new official Technosailor.tv which will be aired on Saturday nights at 9pm Eastern. As part of the format, I’m including a Mixx hour - which may or may not be an hour. ;-))

The Mixx story had a fantasticly engaging comment from one of the 5pmers which explains some of the thinking behind the product:

In terms of features - we implemented what worked for us and skipped what we thought is redundant. It’s difficult to find the right mix, as there is no such a thing, since each team works in their own way. That’s why we were developing our own project manager for about four years now (we had an old version called PTManager). And that’s why there are so many PM applications out there. It’s about finding the right balance, as the core features are common.

To mention new features, I would point to two things. Firstly - the interface. We spent a lot of time designing an interface which is very fast to navigate. Everything is within a click or two. We consider the UI being very important, since any pm application is just a tool. Less time navigating and clicking around, means more time for actual work. For example, coders usually hate to spend time on reporting, so our model for them was “get in. get out. fast”.

Second, I would like to mention our Flash timeline. It gives an alternative view to the projects and tasks and helps visualizing the durations and deadlines (kind of simplified Gantt). In time we plan to make it fully editable, which means you will be able to drag the tasks around the timeline. We think it will be pretty cool.

So this is just version one of our new tool. There is more to come - the feedback from our users will dictate that.

Hardcore. In fact, I may use this because, honestly I can’t stand using Basecamp and desktop-based apps are really no-go when it comes to client work. The one thing that I would really like to see before committing, is Freshbooks integration. I use Freshbooks for all my quotes, estimates, invoicing, time tracking etc. And all my clients have the ability to check in and see whats been done. Integration with Freshbooks is an absolute must for me.

I registered my 14-day free trial, poked around at it for a bit, and I can see how it is different.

Information provided by CrunchBase

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What 28 of My Blogging Friends Say about How they Build Relationships with Bloggers

May 29th, 2008 by Darren Rowse

building-relationships-bloggers-3.jpgImage by Michael Sarver

Over the last two days I’ve been writing about building relationships with other bloggers including tools and techniques for building blogger relationships as well as general principles of building relationships.

Today I want to finish this series on building relationships with bloggers with some tips from some of my own network of blogging friends.

A few days back I mentioned on Twitter that I was writing this post and asked those who follow me there to submit their own tips. Here are some of the tips that they mentioned. By the way - my Twitter followers are fantastic and are some of my favorite people to interact with. If you’re looking for a place to start networking why not follow some of these people on Twitter - by responding to this question they’ve proven how willing they are to network - what a great starting place!

  1. meanttolive - I’m part of one blog network. I follow bloggers on Twitter. And I read and comment on lots of blogs.
  2. galadarling - Be personal, complimentary, offer something, get their attention, be different. Works a charm ;D
  3. mattwardman - Ask them questions so they think they can help me … seriously.
  4. robbyg - I start with blog comments, move to twitter second, and finish off with regular emails if the relationship is strong.
  5. travelrants - networking: commenting on blogs, twitter, blog forums, email / MSN communication, blogger summits, conferences etc.
  6. bkajino - I read blogs I like & participate in conversation when I have input
  7. miguelpineiro - building relationships, selfish promotion and genuine interest in their success.
  8. DebNg - Twitter and Skype mostly though I do belong to a couple of forums as well.
  9. profwebs - Leave meaningful comments on their blogs, become active in their “community” when relevant, “reach out and make new friends”
  10. StuartL - email, twitter and the phone seem to be working for me at the moment
  11. RossMaguire - I have to agree with Stuart about twitter, it is very effective
  12. Telemill - simple, social networking sites: twitter, linkedin, mybloglog and blogcatalog.
  13. sharrypdx - among other things, I have very few close relationships with a couple of other bloggers. We share insights, leads, tips, etc.
  14. shawnfarner - Lately, Twitter :)
  15. jakebouma - interact w/comments, establish a relationship, send articles of interest to them via email, connect on other social sites
  16. auer1816 - email tends to work well.
  17. theotherdrummer - Comments, e-mail and/or Twitter.
  18. chrisguillebeau - everything all the others have said is good, but for me i think the slow building of personal relationship is most important
  19. rahsheen - Twitter and FriendFeed primarily…in regards to connecting to other bloggers
  20. inkedmn - comment on their blogs to start, then casual emailing
  21. davidcubed - Twitter, IM, Private Forums, and Blog Comments are my biggest ways of connecting with other bloggers
  22. kristarella - Comments are the best networking, subscribe, comment, email. Networking sites are tools: useful, but often fickle, short-liv …
  23. genuinechris - It depends on if we’re in sync. I often link first to show up in their dashboard, and then if it’s apropo, exchange guest posts
  24. AGoodHusband - I comment on blogs I like, link to blogs that I love, and find something useful for bloggers I admire.
  25. jimgoldstein - good old fashion flattery via any communication medium ther person uses regularly. Email is a great standby.
  26. briancarter - Twitter with them and help them write their blog posts by answering twitter questions… ;-)
  27. davenavarro - Comment on their blog, start conversations that lead to more comments, get noticed :-) Looking fwd to your book va SF
  28. jonathanfields - Twitter is a great tool for casual banter/fun, for more important/detailed contact, I still lean on e-mail

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Rules for Entrepreneurs: You Don’t Need Swanky Office Space

May 29th, 2008 by Steven Fisher

When I started my first company, AppSolve, in 1999 it was the height of the Dot-Com boom and companies were raising massive amounts of money and staffing quickly without even making a dime yet and most not knowing how fast or whenever they would be able to. One symbol of this era was paying for expensive swanky office space that was most of the time half-empty waiting for all the other people they were going to hire when they finished their next round of insane amounts of funding.

As we all know, the boom busted hard and it left a lot of space available for companies to sub-lease or established companies to take over really cheap. As the economy got better, not like it sucks now, most people took a different look at office space but still some never learned.

My message to you who are growing companies or raw startups, you don’t need swanky office space and you probably never will. So here are some pointers in approaching your search for office space and some alternatives to serve your growing business.

Pointer #1 - You are a startup and most people will understand that.

As you grow your business people that are looking to join your company or sign a contract with you know you are startup. They will understand that and if they are potential employees they are more concerned with the fact that they will get paid on time and their stock options vest. Clients are buying from you because they believe you can deliver and what your office space looks like has nothing to do with it. A perfect example are law offices. Swanky offices and high billable rates but they do the same work that most small practices can do and probably they do it better for less cost.

Pointer #2 - You can work out of the house - the good and the ugly

When I started my first business we worked out of the house for the first 18 months. Granted, I didn’t have a wife or kids and I had a great space in a finished basement that worked well. The problem I ran into was since it was my house I was the only one with the key and had to be there to let everyone in. When my travel schedule got hectic it became ugly. This is good when you are working for yourself and have no desire to grow to a larger company. Plus, if you have really nice stuff and people you don’t exact trust, stuff can disappear. I had an intern steal most of my DVD’s and some CD’s that I didn’t realize until after they left the company had taken them.

If you have a place with a separate entrance you could make this work but it would be good to have an admin person hired that has a key to this part of the house so you can at least travel and not worry about people coming and going. Lastly, don’t forget about zoning laws. Some people in the neighborhood are just busy bodies and if lots of cars show up every day in front of your house they might call someone and you get hit with some type of fine and you will have to scramble fast to find real office space.

Pointer #3 - There is always Starbucks

If you continue to work out of the house it can become very isolating. Plus, there are many distractions (e.g. TV, Xbox, refrigerator, sofa) that can make focusing on work very hard. I found that when I don’t have to go into the office (which is far and costs me alot on gas) I work out of Starbucks where there are many regulars who have become my virtual offices mates. I also use it as a meeting place that people who have to live in an office love to escape to for a meeting. Plus, the coffee is ok and the wifi is great.

Pointer #4 - But I have a business where clients come in all the time….

Some of you have business where clients visit often or you have to present to potential customers. If you aren’t ready for formal office or your office doesn’t have a conference room, partner with someone that has nice conference space. Network with fellow entrepreneurs who you partner with and have nice conference space and see if you can use it for meetings. You can also leverage “Executive Suite” office spaces that have virtual packages that I describe next.

Pointer #5 - The beauty of “Executive Suite” offices

If you are meeting with clients alot or need to get your small team out of the house but are not ready or staffed high enough to justify a dedicated office space, these “Executive Suite” offices are great. They offer virtual plans that you can use a certain amount of hours to get an office to work in or use their beautiful conference space for client meetings. Plus they offer voice services to give you a centralized phone line with a real person answering the phone and access to other concierge services that can help you so you don’t have to pay for an assistant.

Pointer #6 - Have you thought of co-working?

If you are on your own and plan to stay that way and the “Executive Suite” is a little too expensive, there is an emerging model that blends the “Executive Suite” with the “Work at Home” model. It is called Co-Working and it is essentially renting your own cubical on a part-time, full-time or dedicated basis. It is an open space that blends together all types of consultants, freelancers, artists into one space. It usually has a conference room and a fun room along with a shared kitchen. Examples of this are Independents Hall in Philly and LaunchPad in Austin, TX. For a complete list of coworking spaces, check out the CoWorking Wiki.

Pointer #7 - Sublease, sublease, sublease

When you are ready for office space of your own, you might want to consider sub-leasing space first. We found this effective because we knew we were growing fast and didn’t want to commit to anything long term. There are always companies that have leased too much space than they need. Talk to local real estate agents or work your local chamber to find companies that are looking for companies they can sublease to quickly. This will buy you enough time to get to a point where you stabilize on your company size and will be ready for space of your own.

Pointer #8 - Getting a better space doesn’t really change anything, except how much you pay every month

As you prepare for getting your first dedicated office space, remember this simple thing: Better space doesn’t change anything, except how much you pay every month. If you are prepared to go this route and can do it to serve your ego, go for it. But don’t come back to me when you have to cut costs and are staring at that massive lease bill every month.

Pointer #9 - So what should I not have?

Here are three quick “never haves” from my past experience:

Open Work Spaces

When I first saw those dot-come spaces that were all open I thought they were really cool. Then I had one for our office and all I could think of is “everybody shut up!”. It was very noisy and you couldn’t have any kind of private conversation. You usually had to walk out of the room on your cell to talk to someone. The “ad-hoc” conferences became distracting for people that were not involved and need to get real work done. Don’t do this. You will regret it.

Huge Lobby Areas

This is just a waste of money. Most startups leave the receptionist as the last job hire so the front area is usually empty. Keep it small and simple. And no expensive furniture that no one sits on while they are waiting for someone.

Massive offices for executives

Yeah, yeah, yeah. You must be thinking, I am the master of my company I should have the biggest office so everyone knows who the CEO is. Trust me, they know who signs their checks so they know who the CEO is. You probably hired them yourself. Big offices just piss the rest of the staff off because it communicates that you deserve better than the rest of your staff when you are busting your ass as much as they are but still they come to resent you. Resist the massive office, you will have more space to put valuable staff in its place.

Pointer #10 - So what do I really need to have?

Here are three quick “must haves” from my past experience:

A big break room with free stuff

Tiny little crappy kitchen says to everyone that they should eat at their desk and never talk to each other. Smart startups put free stuff in their fridge (e.g. sodas, beer, snacks) and have good water machines along with great coffee machines. This keeps people fed when they are working late nights or want to work through lunch. You might also be surprised that buying lunch once a week can really keep morale up.

A “fun room”

Of course you should have big break room, but with many startups you are probably hiring a younger, hipper crowd. What better way to create real camaraderie than to have a plasma with a Wii or Xbox and have lunch or Happy Hour tournaments of Guitar Hero or Halo. People have fun and it helps give them an overall perception that going to work can actually be an enjoyable thing.

Great chairs, crappy tables and large multi-monitors for your people

I heard this from Jason Calcanis but he must have gotten this from me. People don’t need fancy desks, heck they really need a table to work from. The chair is way more important. People are sitting on their butts for 8-12 hours a day. Great chairs like Aerons are amazing and keep people from having to go to the chiropractor and be out of work and ultimately raise your health care costs

The other part of this great work environment is providing large multiple monitors because it has been proven that people see at least a 30% productivity improvement with two monitors. Go with two 24″ monitors so they can multi-task maximize the effectiveness for your company. Plus, if you have video game LAN parties after work, HALO looks amazing across two monitors. I am just saying….

So when is the time to get the swanky space?

Mostly, never. Spend it on getting good people.

What are your office space horror/humor stories?

So what are your horror or humerous stories about looking for office space?
Ever worked at one of those place that spent too much money on being self-important but not enough money on hiring the resources needed to grow the business?

Please share…we all want to know.


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For PHP Devs, a Twitter PHP Class

May 29th, 2008 by Aaron Brazell

At the end of this post, this site is going into a twitter free period of two weeks. I’m sensitive to the fact that we talk about Twitter quite a lot and not always doing a good job of reaching into all of real life like we’d like. So after this post, Twitter will not be mentioned here until June 12. :-)

However, I wanted to get this out the door for devs to knock on and bang out. Awhile ago, I created the dctwits Twitter group and released the generic code. It included a Twitter class created by David Billingham and slightly modified for our use.

A few days ago, I released the WP-Twitterpitch plugin which also used the same class. It’s a very useful class but, to be honest, was a little messy, didn’t support XML and JSON and didn’t have support for all the Twitter API.

So I cleaned it up, extended it, fleshed it out a bit more, brought in Keith Casey as a developer and we’re basically launching the class as a version 1.0-beta today.

I’ll work on documenting things a bit more but there is some basic usage on the site and the code itself is pretty well documented. I need testers to bang on this code and submit issues back, via the Google Code page. Patches welcome as well. And I’d love to see how you use this. You can download direct or via SVN.

When Keith gets done with the DC PHP Conference, we’ll look at pushing it out as stable.


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Shopzilla Publishing Program - Showing Very Promising Results

May 29th, 2008 by Darren Rowse

Shopzilla

I’ve been playing around with Shopzilla publishers network for a few months now but it’s only been in the last week that I’ve had time to take it for a full run on my blogs.

Today I checked my stats and am kicking myself that I didn’t take this program more seriously sooner!

You can read my first impression review of Shopzilla here from when I first started to play with the ad network.

This last week I’ve experimented with some more aggressive positioning of the ads and I’m very impressed with the conversions. You can see one such campaign operating on single posts right at the base of Digital Photography School Posts (like at the bottom of this one).

Now the positioning of the ad unit on that page is far from prominent (it’s so far below the fold that it’s not funny) but my initial testing is that while the CTR isn’t high, it is higher than the ad unit that I previously had in that position. What makes Shopzilla attractive however is that while CTR isn’t massive the ads are paying a significantly higher amount per click (I’m talking a 500% increase).

As usual with this type of ad unit, they work best on product related sites and where the products featured relates strongly to content (I suspect that the higher value the products the better for click value) - but it’s a great program that I have a new found excitement for and plan to start using more and more.

Check out the Shopzilla Publisher Program here.

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Offline Blog Promotion Techniques

May 29th, 2008 by Darren Rowse

In my weekly column over at ScribeFire this week I started a series on Offline Blog Promotion (ie promoting your blog through means that have nothing to do with the internet).

You can read part 1 (it’s a 3 part series) here. In this post I introduce why offline blog promotion is worth considering and 4 techniques to get the word out about your blog. Over the coming two weeks I’ll be sharing another 9 techniques.

Got some offline blog promotion techniques to share? I’d love to hear about your own experience of how you’ve done it in the comments on that post.

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