April 23, 2024

You’re the Boss: Assess This Web Site


Site Analysis

Since December, Colorado Mountain Coffee has been selling mountain-roasted Arabica coffee exclusively online. Its owners say that what sets the company’s coffee apart is its roasting process, which is done at high altitude. “With less oxygen and pressure at high elevation, we are able to preserve the beans’ delicate flavor profile,” said Ryan Wagner, who founded the site along with David Richards.

As you can tell from the look and feel of the site, the target audience is outdoors people: hikers, climbers, skiers — all people who relate, Mr. Wagner said, to the idea of mountain-roasted coffee. That’s why the coffees have names like “Ragin’ Moose,” “Jittery Ascent,” “Treeline” and “Trailhead.” The site features a blog, an e-commerce store and even a video of a caffeine-fueled Mr. Wagner climbing a tree.

The marketing for the site has included a Google AdWords campaign, social media, promotional events and an Android app that helps you measure out the amount of coffee you need for your particular taste. The app has been downloaded more than 1,000 times.

“The biggest disappointment was Google Adwords,” Mr. Wagner said. “A modest advertising budget was spent, but a significant amount of conversions remained elusive.” The social media efforts have been only slightly more successful. Twitter and Facebook, Mr. Wagner said, “continue to be a mixed bag. We run contests on both platforms with varying results but remain optimistic.” On a recent day, there were 49 “Likes” on Facebook.

Mr. Wagner said that search engine optimization had been a primary concern from the beginning. “Most of our traffic comes from the more obscure long-tail searches involving Colorado, high altitude and other mountain terms combined with the standard coffee keywords,” he said. “Other searches, such as ‘coffee calculator,’ are showing our related pages on the 1st and 2nd pages of results. We are slowly climbing the rankings and are adding useful content to help generate more search engine interest. Our blog generates search engine traffic as does the coffee calculator. Where we have had the most trouble is generating links from other sites. We have asked site owners for links/exchanges, offered coffee for review and generated helpful and interesting content, but so far the results have been less than desired.”

The company’s most successful marketing has come through promotional events. “Since we promote an active lifestyle with our Web site theme, we have a presence at a handful of triathlons, aquathlons, bike races, etc. We serve complementary coffee and sell bags face-to-face to our customers.”

Still very much in its infancy, the site has seen increasing traffic steadily and now approaches 1,000 unique visitors a month. Revenues, however, are still only a few hundred dollars a month. Since abandoning AdWords, the site has been relying almost entirely on social media, leaving marketing costs at a mere $30 a month.

“Over all, we are very pleased with the current look of our site,” Mr. Wagner said. “However, we are constantly brainstorming better ways to present our products, and from time to time we make minor updates. As a purely online retailer, our site is the only face of our company to many customers, and so we are always on the lookout for better ways to present our coffee.”

Please visit the site and tell us what you think. What features do you like? What’s missing? What’s confusing? What needs to be improved? Would you buy coffee from this site? Is the coffee calculator app helpful? Please review the marketing efforts as well. Go to the search engines and see how the company fares. Then please share your views in the comment section below.

“David and I are constantly looking for ways to improve our site,” Mr. Wagner said. “We began with a focus group before launching the site and have jumped at the opportunity to again have more eyes take a careful look.”

Next week, we’ll collect highlights from your comments, I’ll offer some of my own impressions, and we’ll get Mr. Wagner’s reactions as well.

Got a site or mobile app you’d like to have critiqued? I am always looking for Web sites and mobile apps to review. I am especially interested in hearing from businesses that are using smartphones, iPads and other mobile devices and apps as tools in marketing, selling and branding. To be considered, please tell me about your experiences — what works, what doesn’t, why you would like to have your Web site reviewed — in an e-mail to youretheboss@bluefountainmedia.com.

Gabriel Shaoolian is the founder and chief executive of Blue Fountain Media, a Web design, development and marketing company based in New York.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=0276d12f9c86da2ed1cff7921c426d48

Tips to Take Your iPhone to the Next Level

But dig a little deeper into the iPhone’s latest operating system, iOS 4.3 — available for the iPhone 3GS and the ATT iPhone 4 — and there’s another layer to master. (Sorry, Android users, but that OS has so many versions and skins that a quick guide would be neither very quick nor much of a guide.) Beyond the realm of those basic iPhone controls is an advanced level of shortcuts and tweaks, some of which even hard-core users may not know exist.

DOUBLE-TAP Even while your iPhone is locked, you can access the audio controls by double-tapping on the home button when the lock screen appears. This saves you the time it takes to unlock your phone, open a music-playing app like iPod and get to the volume and track controls. This feature is not limited to Apple’s iPod app. If you are using Pandora, for example, the same technique will bring up its controls.

VOICE ACCESS If you press and hold the home button while the phone is locked, you can still access Voice Control to place a phone call (or FaceTime call) or get to any of the iPhone’s other voice commands.

TELL TIME Voice control can dial phone numbers (“dial 212-555-1212”) or people (“Dial Mom, mobile”), and it can control music (“Play music,” “Play artist Earth, Wind Fire,” Play album “That’s the Way of the World,” “Play more songs like this,” “Shuffle,” etc).

But did you know that it can also tell you what time it is? Say “What time is it?” and your phone will say the time back to you. It may sound silly, but it comes in handy if you are rushing and do not have the time or inclination to pull out your phone. (And who wears watches anymore?)

SHORTCUT TO SEARCH Swiping to the right from your first home screen pulls up the search window, where you can pull up any contacts, apps, e-mails, calendar appointments and media that have the word you are seeking.

But the search screen is also a shortcut to Google and Wikipedia. The last two search results for any entry are always “Search the Web” and “Search Wikipedia,” saving you the time it takes to open browsers or apps.

FORCE-QUIT APPS Double-tapping the home button while your phone is unlocked reveals a panel of most recently used apps. Swiping to the left moves through the apps in reverse chronological order to aid in quick app switching. This is advanced-beginner stuff.

But serious iPhone ninjas know that pressing and holding an app icon in this panel will cause minus signs to appear beside each app. Touching an app in this state forces it to shut down, a useful move if you have an app that is running in the background and causing trouble.

MUSIC SHORTCUTS Swipe that same previously used app screen to the right and you get another shortcut to music-playing controls. If you have the latest operating system, iOS 4.3, you will also see a button that will call up controls for AirPlay, Apple’s wireless audio feature.

It is here that you also gain access to the screen rotation lock button, so you can turn on or off the iPhone’s ability to switch from portrait to landscape mode. Swipe once more to the right from this screen and the iPhone’s volume control appears.

VOLUME LOCK If you want to limit the iPhone’s volume (because it is being used by your children, for example), you can go into Settings, then iPod. Under “Volume Limit” you can adjust the maximum volume and set a code to lock the setting. This code can be different from the lock code for the entire phone, if you have set one of those.

SAVE WEB IMAGES When you’re looking at Web pages in Safari, tapping and holding any image will call up buttons that can save the image to your camera roll or copy it to the clipboard.

FIND WORDS Safari’s search bar will not only look up sites, it can also be used to find a word or phrase on a Web page. Type in your search term and scroll to the bottom of the results; the last result is always “On This Page”; tap that and you can see where that term appears on the page you are viewing.

MULTIPLE KEYBOARDS You can add keyboards in other languages. Go to Settings, then General, then Keyboard, then International Keyboards. Add as many keyboards as you like. The next time the keyboard appears, it will have a small button next to the space bar with a globe icon on it. Tapping that will cycle through the languages you have selected (the name of each language will appear on the space bar).

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/28/technology/personaltech/28basics.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

App Smart: The Dress, the Ring, the In-Laws: Navigating the Royal Wedding

I know nothing about it — not because I believe that watching a bucket of gravel is somehow better than watching a wedding between Prince William and Kate Middleton, two people of immense celebrity.

In fact, I’m deeply intrigued by all the possible story lines. What on earth will the bride wear? Will her old flames be invited? Will someone make a really inappropriate toast? Will the queen hit the dance floor?

Because I refuse to be left in the dark about such matters — and because I’ve temporarily sworn off all information that doesn’t come in mobile form — I’ve found apps that purport to shed light on these and other essential royal wedding questions.

That list includes The Royal Wedding by NBC News (free on Apple and, soon, for Android), The Royal Wedding by Hello! (free on Apple), Royal Wedding — The Wills and Kate Story ($2 on Apple), BBC America’s Royal Wedding Insider (free on Apple and Android), and, for children, Will and Kate ($4 on iPad). Westminster Abbey also announced plans to release an app, Abbey 3D (around $5 for Apple and Android), but it has not yet reached the market.

The dearth of useful Android apps in this category is an interesting sidelight that may or may not reveal a personality split among Android users.

Maybe Android users are from Mars and Apple users are from Venus. One thing is clear: The best royal wedding app developers are, predictably enough, from Britain.

The Royal Wedding by Hello!, for instance, was downright good, for a free app. The top corner of the home page includes a countdown to the big day (as if anyone could forget), above nine categories of content.

That material seems directed at wedding of the century dilettantes like me. The Royal Romance section, for instance, includes a slide show with major events in the couple’s courtship.

The History section has excellent vintage photos of past royal weddings, like that of the Queen Mother and George VI at Westminster Abbey in 1923. One quibble: you can’t pinch-and-zoom on the photos.

The Dress section, too, is interesting. Well-known designers offer sketches for the wedding dress they would have made for Kate, had they been asked, along with captions that explain their intentions.

The William section includes a slide show of the young man’s life, complete with a photo of him, at age 15, with his father and brother just a few days before Princess Diana died.

Royal Wedding — The Wills and Kate Story is from the publisher of Britain’s Daily Mirror, and includes 10 photo-heavy chapters on the couple’s lives, along with a video introduction from the Mirror’s top royal correspondent for each section.

It may not provide as much entertainment as, say, Angry Birds, but for $2, the app offers a fair amount of content, in a well-designed format.

BBC America’s Royal Wedding Insider is one of the only apps from a major media company to appear on both Android and Apple. The good news is that it is free. Unfortunately, it’s an uneven product.

Royal Wedding Insider features seven categories of information. In the My Royal Wedding section, for instance, users are prompted to scroll through various elements that they might choose if they were planning their own royal wedding. For me, it was a bit like scrolling through a thinly populated wedding magazine.

The Video section is somewhat strange. It includes clips of celebrities looking into the camera and offering their sincere greetings to the royal couple. The actor Paul Rudd, for instance, asks them to consider the Big Island of Hawaii as a honeymoon destination.

Far better is the app’s Blog section, where BBC America’s reporters weigh in on the sort of tiny details that wedding spectators will presumably snap up. Last week, the blog reported speculation that Kate’s hair would not be “half-up, half-down,” as previously rumored. The latest gossip is “100 percent down” and “flowy.”

Speaking of words children would use, one of the better wild-card entries in this Royal Wedding competition is a children’s book for iPads, Will and Kate. Parents can rely on the app to help their children partly understand the enormous buzz surrounding the event, and they can get a little laugh while doing so.

The book includes fun interactive touches as it guides users through an illustrated version of the courtship and wedding, including a depiction of Kate waking up on the day of the ceremony and, only then, deciding what to wear. Users get to help her choose the dress.

The Royal Wedding by NBC News does a fairly good job representing the American news media. The app is slow at times, perhaps because it features heavy doses of broadcast news video to preview the event and recap past events, but the coverage is comprehensive.

And it’s not completely geared toward video.

In one section, NBC lays out the route the couple will take from Buckingham Palace to Westminster Abbey. Users can take a brief video tour, but they’re far better served by touching specific points on the map. That yields a set of still photos describing points of interest, with well-researched captions.

Did you know, for instance, that Westminster Abbey has hosted the crowning of monarchs since the 11th century? And that we are approaching a Westminster Abbey event of nearly the same magnitude as a coronation?

For the record, that event takes place around 6 a.m. Eastern Daylight Time, on Friday, April 29.

Speaking of which, I could find no apps that will offer supplementary video for the wedding, in the manner of apps for the Oscars, March Madness and other big events.

I won’t be watching on an app, though. For this royal wedding fan, it’ll be strictly big screen or nothing.

Quick Calls

iMedjet (free on Apple and, recently, on Android) offers first-aid information for travelers. It’s clearly written and well-organized, and you don’t need a data connection to read the content. … Baseball coaches who want game articles written for local papers should consider GameChanger, free on Android and Apple. It’s a well-designed scorekeeping app that automatically generates game articles.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/21/technology/personaltech/21smart.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Digital Domain: Microsoft + Nokia = a Challenge for Apple

Make way, however, for Windows Phone. Yes, Windows Phone. Despite Microsoft’s multiple, abject failures with mobile phones since 2002, many software developers and industry watchers expect Microsoft to become the second-largest smartphone player worldwide.

The evidence isn’t visible today, nor will it appear anytime soon. Even at year-end, Android will have a 39.5 percent share of smartphones worldwide, according to projections from IDC, the research firm. Symbian — used by Nokia, though it is not a major presence in the United States — would be second, at 20.9 percent, while Apple’s iOS, the software that powers the iPhone, would be third, at 15.7. Windows Phone 7 and its predecessor, Windows Mobile, would be far behind, at 5.5 percent.

These rankings are likely to change thanks to one player, Nokia, which has seen its market share shrink in the United States. It has formed an alliance with Microsoft and will switch from Symbian to Windows Phone software on its smartphones.

As a result, according to IDC predictions for 2015, Windows Phone 7 will occupy second place, at 20.9 percent of the market, ahead of iOS, which is projected to stay near 15 percent. BlackBerry, then as now, would be No. 4.

(In the United States alone, IDC expects Windows Phone 7 to jump to third place by 2015, at 15.6 percent, behind Android, at 48.9 percent, and iOS, at 16.8.)

Despite its recent worries, Nokia remains the largest phone manufacturer in the world, and it has no equal in building handsets inexpensively. Last year, it sold more than 452 million phones, including 100 million smartphones.

“The average price paid for smartphones is going to go down, and the total number of smartphones is going to go up,” says Andrew Lees, president of Microsoft’s mobile communications business.

Microsoft introduced Windows Phone 7, a major overhaul, last fall. By year-end, Microsoft had 5,000 apps in its store, a milestone reached three times as fast as Google’s Android, says Al Hilwa, an IDC analyst.

Mr. Lees says that there are now more than 11,500 apps. It’s not close to the more than 350,000 apps that Apple boasts for iOS. But the difference may not be significant.

“What is often missed is the diminishing returns after 1,000 applications,” says Thomas R. Eisenmann, a professor at the Harvard Business School. “If a platform attracts the thousand-most-popular apps, then it provides almost anything a reasonable person would want to do with a smartphone.”

I sought out iPhone software developers who have done well with iPhone apps to see what they make of Windows Phone. I was surprised that many are already adding titles for Windows Phone, despite the tiny market share.

“Microsoft has a perception problem. Everyone thinks of them as a distant third, but they’ve got a good product,” says David Roberts, chief executive of PopCap, a games developer whose Plants vs. Zombies game is among the iPhone’s top-grossing apps. The company just introduced its first Windows Phone game, Bejeweled Live.

Halfbrick, based in Brisbane, Australia, is another successful iPhone software developer. Last week, its Fruit Ninja game was No. 5 in the App Store’s list of top paid apps. It, too, has introduced its first title for Windows Phone.

Shainiel Deo, Halfbrick’s C.E.O., says that while games were not a major attraction on past Microsoft phones, games will be a differentiator that will favor Microsoft this time. For example, the Marketplace store of Windows Phone employs the same user accounts used for Xbox Live.

Mr. Deo says he, too, is susceptible to iPhone-centrism. “In Australia, almost everyone I see has an iPhone,” he said. But “the next phone for a lot of the Xbox gamers will probably be a Windows Phone,” he remarked. “And there are 30 million Xbox Live subscribers.”

Jeffrey R. Williams, a professor of business strategy at Carnegie Mellon, predicts that Microsoft will become a major player in mobile devices for one overriding reason: “They’re willing to spend billions of dollars, just as they did with Xbox,” he says. “And this is even more strategic.”

There is also little need to focus on tight integration with Microsoft Office, a keystone of the company’s marketing campaigns for its earlier phones. The Office integration pitch was aimed at corporate I.T. departments, which also made the purchasing decisions that shaped the personal computer industry.

The world has changed since then, Professor Eisenmann points out. “In PCs, it was business leading consumers.” he said. “This is a different game: consumers leading business.”

SMARTPHONES are a different case for another reason. In the industry’s formative period, Windows and Macs didn’t mix well on the same network, but different brands of smartphones share the same voice and data networks just fine. “I don’t think the network effects in smartphones are as strong,” Professor Williams says.

Nokia is in Microsoft’s camp. Good reviews of the software are coming in. Some leading iPhone developers are taking it seriously, and the company has plenty of capital to help it form alliances. Unexpectedly, Microsoft is well positioned to leap into the top ranks of smartphone players. A story to hearten latecomers everywhere.  

Randall Stross is an author based in Silicon Valley and a professor of business at San Jose State University. E-mail: stross@nytimes.com.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=709a64596f445af42f671791feb3d1fc