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Archive for May, 2008

May 9th, 2008
Posted by Renee Dobbs at 9:17 am

Well here it is my very first blog. My first thought, who came up with that name? My second thought, what in the world am I going to blog about? So I googled and googled in search of some ground breaking news to insure that my first blog would be inspiring. After a general consensus of internet searching, it occurred to me that I was not alone in my search for inspiration.

If you’re anything like me I take pride in what I do. So with reputation at risk, I did my research to find some mind blowing tricks of the trade. Amazed with a plethora of information available, it seemed to me that even veteran bloggers share one common question. What am I going to blog about?

Here are some ideas I discovered that will get your blog going:

    Keep a Journal
    Write everything down; keep a journal handy to jot down anything that inspires you throughout your day. Ideas appear when least expected. Even if you don’t use it immediately your fire may reignite later on down the road.
    Expand
    If you are an experienced blogger unlike me, you probably have some older blogs from when you first started out that can be expanded upon. Take those ideas and dig a little deeper.
    Keep an Open Mind
    As they always say “you are your own worst critic” holds true (I am definitely guilty of this one). Try not to judge your ideas, this tends to block creativity.

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Category: General Thoughts

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May 8th, 2008
Posted by Chris Sloan at 5:22 pm

MySpace, Facebook, Gmail, Twitter and the list goes on; trying to keep up and maintain all my junk accounts friends status got to be a little overwhelming. At any given time I’d have tabs to an array of communication tools and personal blogs just to stay in touch with friends and family, so I decided it was time to consolidate.

What really drove me to make the move was the daily use of IM in the work environment combined with Twitter for the social environment, lets just say lots of open windows. I took a look at Digsby, just as a trial, and it’s one of the best virtual workspace decisions I’ve made because I no longer have to login to each individual account to get messages and alerts. Once you’ve download the application simply input your username and passwords to the various communication tools you’d like to use and bam…one app to rule them all. Plus with some easy Twitter Apps, I can now send all my updates right to my Facebook profile, no need to continually post to several systems (not a big MySpace user). Do what I did, get rid of all those needless windows and consolidate to one clean system, your computers performance will thank you.

Category: General Thoughts, Social, Cool World (Wide Web), Personal, Organization

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May 7th, 2008
Posted by Neil at 6:46 pm

Cali Lewis Geek Brief

Last night, at the Dallas Junior Chamber of Commerce monthly meeting, Cali Lewis presented how to “Be Your Own Media” through podcasting. Dallas-based video and audiocast evangelist Cali Lewis is the cute host of GeekBrief.TV, which features three to five minute video podcasts covering new technologies, consumer electronics, and Web 2.0 projects. Check out my video and commentary inside.
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Category: Dallas Business, Networking

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Posted by Brent at 9:55 am

As mentioned in my last post, creating a strategy and project plan before beginning the design and build of a website or web application is perhaps the most important step in launching a successful website. Most successful businesses start with a business plan, it is our job as web strategists to translate that plan into the ever evolving web. Read the rest of this entry »

Category: Web Strategy, Web Technical, Good Design, Organization, Business

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May 5th, 2008
Posted by Jamie Swartz at 10:53 am

Every morning when I login to my computer there are about 5 newsletters if not more that I see that I have subscribed too. They range from technology, special events, news, search engine marketing hot topics to daily words of wisdom. Each one of these newsletter I scan, jot something down from and then reorganize them so I can get through my daily emails.

Today I did something different! Read the rest of this entry »

Category: General Thoughts, Personal, Sales

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May 2nd, 2008
Posted by Jeremy Lujan at 6:49 pm

First off, let me say that I am a huge proponent of free and open source software. With that said, I am also very much a capitalist. I do not feel these are mutually exclusive characteristics, although some would disagree with me.

This article was conceived as a critical review of Eric S. Raymond’s The Cathedral and the Bazaar. However, I came across a rebuttal by Nikolai Bezroukov that covers most of my criticisms already. As such, I will limit my discussion to one specific quote that I find to be a blaring fallacy, for different reasons than expressed in Nikolai Bezroukov’s rebuttal.

“Perhaps in the end the open-source culture will triumph not because cooperation is morally right or software “hoarding” is morally wrong (assuming you believe the latter, which neither Linus nor I do), but simply because the closed-source world cannot win an evolutionary arms race with open-source communities that can put orders of magnitude more skilled time into a problem.”

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Category: General Thoughts

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Posted by Kayla Wren at 6:32 pm

To Ning or Not to Ning - that’s the question around here. Who has the time to join (or start, for that matter) another social network? I have enough trouble finding time to twitter.

The subject did come up in a marketing meeting the other day and while some of us thought Ning was dead there were others who thought it just might be gearing up to take over as one of the best advertising opportunities out there.

I may just be one of them.

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Category: General Thoughts, Social, Girl About World

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Posted by Jon Webb at 5:57 pm

Microsoft adCenter now has a new advertising tool that’s in beta for Excel O7. It’s a keyword research, expansion tool that provides great in-sight on keyword relevancy, cost history, demographics and geographic information. It looks to be a great tool for really honing in on target markets and localized terms.

Take it for a test drive for FREE but you’ve got to have Microsoft Excel 07.

adCenter add-in

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Category: General Thoughts

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Posted by jenniferc at 5:11 pm

It’s not a good morning when I walk into Starbucks and the line is out the door. The other day this happened and the lady behind me inches towards me and says “You gotta really want it today, huh?”. Pfft, lady, I want it everyday. But, let me be honest with myself though, and tell you what I really want. I want to walk into a coffee shop— a local coffee shop—like the first coffee shop I ever frequented in Pacific Beach, California. No corporate mugs or teddy bears. No ham sandwiches, glazed donuts, or skinny-2
pump-vanilla-1 pump-caramel-no whip-lattes. It’s such a vague memory now, but I remember coffee, and banana nut bread which came in fresh from a local vendor. It was simple.

“Err on the side of simple.”

This was possibly the downfall of Starbucks: the opening of too many stores, selling too many products, and not concentrating enough on the coffee consumer. But has that changed? With declining sales, and changing CEO hands from Jim Donald to Howard Schultz earlier this year, Starbucks closed its doors for 3 hours on February 25th for a barista training session among 7,1000 stores. What was the purpose? According to The Seattle Times, “The retraining is part of Starbucks’ plan to revive its brand and sales growth, which by one measure sank to an all-time low last quarter.”

Last month Schultz introduced its five-point plan to boost sales and bring back the customer experience. The press release used terms like “revolutionary” and “reinvention”, but what received my attention was the term “online community”.

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Category: General Thoughts, Social, Business News

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Posted by Neil at 5:10 pm

The official Google blog announced recognition of the the ”nofollow tag” in January of 2005. This tag did not reach awareness on a wide scale until Matt Cutts, Google’s mouthpiece to the SEO world, further clarified in his blog the many uses of this controversial link tag.

This post explains one excellent alternative use for the “nofollow” tag — helping divert “link juice” to the most important pages and give stronger link flow to improve your SEO results.
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Category: SEO

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