Loving Life Blog

Spur of the Moment Reflections

The Crash… September 8, 2010

I was sitting in a conversation with Amita Paul, the CEO of Objective Marketer – THE social media marketing campaign management software company – talking about partnership (provide promo code Herringbone if you sign up for it! ). I shared some statistics from one of the recent campaigns I had run on her software, and she said “that is great – we should do a user case about that one – you have a website, right? We have a PR deadline this Tuesday, or next.

The shoemaker’s son dilemma was pretty present. I had been in business for almost 5 months, but acted incognito on line. Doing social media marketing for others, you don’t really need to have a presence yourself. But if you want to expand your business, there comes a point when that is necessary in this day and age, whatever business you have.

Three thoughts passed my mind instantly: 1) Amita had already referred me to a site where I could have a website created over night for $150, 2) I did create my blog in a day last year, so this should be doable too, 3) If Christine Comaford could offer employment to all temps at Microsoft with her business, that she hadn’t yet created and didn’t know exactly how, then I could commit to getting a website up in a week and document the user case.

After a few hours of figuring things out, having the web host support on the line, being talked down by a San Francisco based contractor who only sign up minimum 10 hours of one on one tutorial or 1 month web creation projects a $2K, reaching out to freelancing contractors – in Vietnam and India – working through the night with them on skype, and about $75 later + template and hosting $100 approximately: the website was up!

Now, there are a few things that need to be checked and added – it may not automatically work on the mobile phone for example. And you may want to do some enhancements. And it may go wrong… Which it did. Waking up and seeing a crying icon on your skype message from your joomlanser is not what you want to see…

Hoping and begging that tonight’s shift will lead to a solution and not a recreation. At least the process would go a little smoother… For all of you who are tempted to do the same, below are some tips and lessons learnt. Hopefully it speeds up your process.

Begin again… hopefully not.

Johanna – aka web master (so many hats to wear as an entrepreneur!)


OPERATION CRASH COURSE IN WEB DESIGN:


Herringbone Website is coming soon

The http://www.herringbone.fm website is coming soon...

1)    Get your URL and web hosting accountGoDaddy is a good alternative (does not work for .se domains) They have great support.

2)    Choose a template from www.joomlart.com – open source web design, comparable with wordpress, but more professional look and apps/extensions

3)    Create your content off line first (just in case the database fails without you having made a back-up…)

4)    Study Joomlawww.joomla.org – how to make the installation, template configuration and content update. There are a bunch of tidbit movies available all over the place for specific functions. These resources are what I found particularly helpful:

a.     Joomla Beginners Guide

b.     Joomla Step-by-Step guide

c.     Joomla Tutorials

Even if you won’t do all of the updates yourself – it might save you a lot of valuable time to outsource the creation – it will help you make educated decisions when it comes to finding a consultant to help you. You will have an idea of how complicated some updates are, and how long time they will take to do, and be able to evaluate a proposal accordingly. Some updates might actually be easier to do yourself, such as installing google analytics. That was a piece of cake.

5)    Get help. If you find it difficult or run into a time crunch, post your project on www.joomlancer.com and await bids from all over the world (unless you specify differently) from professional freelancing joomla webmasters. Before you choose one:

a.     Wait for more bids to come in – my first one was $50, and I ended up working with lamtv for $15, and got the job done perfectly.

b.     Check the profile and reviews of the bidders. You can also see how much they have earned so far and how many reviews they have – that will give you a picture of how established they are.

c.     Have a conversation on skype – for me it was very important to be able to communicate my questions written and verbally, to be understood and understand the answers. My first contact in Vietnam was super friendly, but the communication just didn’t work.

d.     Just be clear that the bid is $ per hour, or per total project. I have seen bids that are not clear on that.

e.     Keep it professional and be respectful. You don’t need to work with a seemingly young kid because he looks begging at you to give him the job and saying “so I don’t speak English good enough?” I am sure he will be great for a different project, but if you want to learn in the process, that might not be the right guy for you.

f.      Be prepared for a consulting services live bidding process if you connect with them on Skype. “I will do it the cheapest for you”, “I will provide the best service”, “if you don’t trust me go somewhere else”.  What are the key criteria for you to select your contractor?

6)    Clarity. Before you post a project on Joomlancer, make sure to specify your project clearly. Have it ready to go in an email with links, documents, photos etc.

7)    Timing is key. If you post a project on Joomla during the day pacific time, you can have a contractor chosen by the evening, and the work done by the next morning. Many of them are located in Asia – I got help from Vietnam and India. It is possible to create a website in Joomla in 24 hours if you know what you want and what content you want to add. Since I wanted to be part of the process, check and learn (which is not a bad idea – the contractor may have questions that you can respond to in real time), I created a nice 29 hour workday for myself… which I don’t recommend to anyone. But it was fun to see the website created.

8)    Document all the login IDs and passwords. There is an array of login information to keep track of. You don’t want to have the same password to all accounts. Create a different for the accounts you will share with an external consultant. And if you have a joomla freelancer install your template, then make sure to document the database password, and joomla password.

9)    Create different user accounts for security. If you create a different super user account for your web master in your joomla website, you can provide a different password than your own, and you can see when your webmaster or anyone else is logged in to the system.

10) Assign an account executive with godaddy.com, to separate the webmaster’s access to a specific domain host only. This is if they need to access the database.

11) Add necessary extensions from joomla and others that will fit your needs. What do you want to create? A community? Photo gallery? List of recommendations:

a.     Social Joomla for web 2.0 features such as like, tweet this etc.

b.     Mobile Joomla to make the template look good on mobile applications, phones etc.

c.     Google Analytics to track and learn about your website traffic.

12) SAVE a back-up of your database through the web host. IF something goes wrong in the process of installing and tailoring, then you can go back to the last saved version.  I didn’t, so keep your fingers crossed please, that whatever issue there is, will be fixed.

13) Consult the Joomla Forums. If an error has occurred – search for an answer in the Joomla forums or post a request for help. You know what you did to create it, and a consultant may not take the time to figure that out. The answer may be very simple, and the Joomla users are very helpful in providing solutions.

I guess these were the key learnings. If you want a San Francisco based joomlancer, I will be here. By the end of this process I will be real good. 😉

AND – sometimes you don’t need to stress things. Natural time is good. The PR deadline got moved. However, the user case is ready and up – check it out on Slideshare by clicking here.

 

Successful Authors Secrets August 25, 2010

A year ago I wrote  This Time I Dance” – a blog post about the book with the same name that instantly called my attention as I was in the period of transitioning from my full time job.

The fact that the author shared her process in going from a practicing Harvard lawyer to Writer wasn’t the pull – it was the dance, which I love. And the subtitle – “Creating the work you love”.

I have never seen myself as a writer or author. In fact the OTHER Johanna Nilsson in my business school is the author. However – after one year of blogging I have three ideas to books brewing in my mind. The last one I got during the past weekend as I read Webify Your Business, by Patrick Schwerdtfeger whom I met last week. Yes, that book idea is social media related…

Since a few of my Social Media Marketing clients with my business Herringbone are authors, I have attended a few different authors success webinars. The speaker of the Successful Author Secrets Program Monday was Marci Shimoff, author of the New York Times #1 best seller Chicken Soup for the Woman Soul, and the new book Happy for no reason.

Her key message was: Success comes out of happiness and it is something that you can create yourself.

To stay on track during the process of creating your bestseller book, or what ever your mission is she advised the mantra: Intention, Attention, No tension.

Intention: have a clear and specific intention for what you want to create

Attention: put all your energy and focus on creating that

No tension: let go of the outcome and relax – enjoy the journey

Now- what is your intention with what you want to create? Are you ready to spell it out?

Enjoy the journey. It may be better than you imagined. 😉

I introduced myself to new participants at the Young Scandinavian Club happy hour two weeks ago. “Oh – you are the writer!?” one of them said. “Me? No… I write a blog? Loving Life Blog?” “Yes, exactly, I am following that!” That gave me a kick – still riding on the wave…

All the best,

Johanna

 

“An automated Twitter tool”? Seriously. Why? August 20, 2010

Yesterday I shared on facebook, LinkedIn and Twitter about a great tool that I have come across, which has been key in serving my social media marketing clients in an efficient way. The message was: “Awesome automated Twitter tool for getting 1000’s Twitter Followers & Customers quickly http://om.ly/rTwe

Today a comment on a LinkedIn discussion was: “Why would anyone want “an automated Twitter tool”? Seriously. Why?”

This was my response:

If you have a wish to connect with Twitter users with a certain profile (for example health coaches), or Twitter users tweeting about a certain topic (for example health issues), people who you would like to share your knowledge with – then an automated Twitter tool could be a very efficient way of connecting with them. Instead of getting recommendations or finding individuals one by one, you can make a search and start follow a number of them with one click. Similarly, you can make a search and find whom of them are close to your area, or located in the city where you will be for a presentation etc.

I for example will help promote a devise that will alleviate colic for babies. Help that is not available in the US today. If I can make a search and “automatically” follow those moms who has tweeted about that issue with their babies, and send a DM to those who choose to follow me (or the brand) back, that would be a very quick way of reaching out to someone who has that need.

Twitter today has $100M users. For most of them it is probably a very time consuming tool to use. For others it is a great way to find clients. This is the tool I am using to automate following for my clients: http://om.ly/rTwe , and I would be happy to provide you training on how to use it. Or – do it for you, should you choose to spend your time differently and still have the results.

Make real connections!

Enjoy,

Johanna

 

 
GRANT LEVIN

San Francisco Musician and Composer

Steve Blank

Innovation and Entrepreneurship

Thegoodplace.se

- where it all comes together...

Co-Creating Health

Creating Great Days!

NurseGrit

definition of GRIT: firmness of mind or spirit

one&onlyeva

From the heart of Silicon Valley

SanFranciscoVC

Phil Sanderson

PRōMENADE

WordPress Music Theme

NYVR

a community for VR developers and enthusiasts