No. 210

Topics: Process: Business

Surviving and thriving as a freelancer, employee, or small web business owner. Laws affecting web content and web business. Business basics and growth strategies. Working with clients and consumers. Web marketing and search engines. (29 articles)

Web 3.0

Issue 210January 16, 2006

Web 2.0 is a fresh-faced starlet on the intertwingled longtail to the disruptive experience of tomorrow. Web 3.0 thinks you are so 2005.

Design Choices Can Cripple a Website

Issue 207November 08, 2005

”...just pause for a moment and think of all the design choices you have made over the last year, and the reasons why you made them. And think about the huge impact those choices might have had on the performance of the sites you worked on.”

High Accessibility Is Effective Search Engine Optimization

Issue 207November 08, 2005

“I have been a search engine optimizer for several years, but only recently have become infatuated with web accessibility. After reading for weeks until my eyes became sore, and painstakingly editing my personal website to comply with most W3C Web Content Accessibility Guidelines, I have come to a startling revelation: high accessibility overlaps heavily with effective white hat SEO.”

Never Get Involved in a Land War in Asia (or Build a Website for No Reason)

Issue 205October 10, 2005

“Throughout all these projects, one thing has remained a constant: those with clear, well-written, strategies ran smoother than those without—and ended up pleasing everyone, including the client.”

When You Are Your Own Client, Who Are You Going To Make Fun Of At The Bar?

Issue 201August 22, 2005

Should your blog have a business? Jim Coudal shares insights into the adventure of transitioning from client services to product creation.

Use Cases Part II: Taming Scope

Issue 196March 02, 2005

The use-case model can be a powerful tool for controlling scope throughout a project’s life cycle. Because a simplified use-case model can be understood by all project participants, it can also serve as a framework for ongoing collaboration and a visual map of all agreed-upon functionality. Use it to plan, to negotiate, and to prevent scope creep.

Better Invoices for Better Business

Issue 186August 10, 2004

Invoices that obfuscate information, incorrectly state terms or arrive incomplete can be a massive headache for all parties. Strategic timing and attractive presentation are also important, as they can help “soften the blow” by making your invoice seem less like a stale demand for money and more like a friendly letter.

The Problem, the Balloon, and the Four Bedroom House

Issue 177April 16, 2004

Without a problem, there is no project. Where there is a problem, however, there is a stakeholder who is desperate for a solution and who has a delivery deadline — which is normally sometime yesterday. Find out how a good process can tame even the most unruly project.

A Fairy, a Low-Fat Bagel, and a Sack of Hammers

Issue 162November 07, 2003

Never underestimate the importance of words on the web.

Starting a Business: Advice from the Trenches

Issue 161October 30, 2003

Did that last “fire your boss” spam push you over the edge? Do your wish-fulfillment dreams revolve around letterhead, legal entities, and avoiding arrest for tax evasion? If you’re crazy enough to start your own business, Kevin Potts wants you to learn from his mistakes.

Using XHTML/CSS for an Effective SEO Campaign

Issue 159September 01, 2003

Improve your search engine ranking by harnessing the benefits of well-authored XHTML and using CSS to boost your code-to-content ratio.

This Web Business IV: Business Entity Options

Issue 152October 13, 2002

You’ve mastered Photoshop, Flash, CSS, PHP, ASP, XHTML and JavaScript; studied usability, accessibility, and information architecture; and can fake your way through XML. But there’s more to running a web business than that. Part Four of a continuing series.

Getting Paid

Issue 134January 18, 2002

As businesses struggle to stay in business, many are short–changing vendors or woefully delaying payment. Zeldman laments the difficulties of getting paid.

Nipping Client Silliness in the Bud

Issue 116July 06, 2001

Slashdot’s Robin (Roblimo) Miller could write a book about web clients’ mistakes. In fact, he’s writing it now – but he needs your help.

CSS Talking Points: Selling Clients on Web Standards

Issue 116July 06, 2001

Selling your clients on standards-compliant design doesn’t have to hurt. Kise’s four-point CSS Selling Plan helps the medicine go down.

Cheaper Over Better: Why Web Clients Settle for Less

Issue 114July 15, 2001

Schumacher investigates why clients hire bad web designers—and what good web designers can do about it.

The Road to Dystopia

Issue 105April 13, 2001

Now that greed, pride, and stupidity have wrecked the web economy, how’s a semi-idealistic web developer supposed to make a living? Chris Kaminski hitches a ride down the road to dystopia.

This Web Business III: Selecting Professionals

Issue 102March 23, 2001

In part Three of his series on running your own web agency, Scott Kramer shares tips on hiring the right accountants, attorneys, and other consultants and institutions.

Web Designer and Proud of It

Issue 100April 02, 2001

Building respect for the profession.

This Web Business II: Getting a Loan

Issue 97August 13, 2005

In Part 2 of his series on running a web agency, Scott Kramer discusses the ins and outs of securing a business loan.

Breaking out of the Cubicle: How a Small, Swiss Company Got its Groove On

Issue 97August 13, 2005

In the mid-1990s, Makiko Itoh and her partner left New York’s cubicle land for a web shop of their own in the suburbs of Zurich. Learn from her tips on running your own web agency.

Survivor! (How Your Peers are Coping With the Dotcom Crisis)

Issue 95January 19, 2001

It’s ugly out there, but how bad is it, really? We asked 40 colleagues to share how they were coping (or not) with the layoffs and business failures plaguing our industry.

One Boy’s Life: Surviving the Dotcom Blitz

Issue 95January 19, 2001

A boy, a job, and a floundering economy. Nick Finck tells his personal story of hirings and firings on the cusp of the dotcom crunch.

Rolling the Start-up Dice (A Survival Guide)

Issue 92August 13, 2005

So you want to work for an Internet start-up company. Bruce and Moyer show you the ropes.

This Web Business

Issue 85October 20, 2000

Web designers do not live by GIFs alone. In this new series, Kramer explains how to set up your business, prepare for projects, maintain profitability, and grow your firm. It all starts with a solid business plan.

Time to Close the Web?

Issue 61April 28, 2000

Focusing on presentation at the expense of content, and invasive money-making schemes at the expense of everything else, designers must take some of the blame for the trashing of the web. Herrell wonders if it’s time to call it a day and close up shop.

Clickthru Is Evil II

Issue 55February 25, 2000

Ten years ago, Tim Berners-Lee invented the web. Five years ago, advertisers started discovering it. Now they are poised to wreck it. Double-Click’s poison cookie has Alan Herrell foaming at the mouth as he explains why Clickthru is Evil.

The Money Page

Issue 40November 05, 1999

Low tech, high yield: A funny thing happened on the way to the shopping cart. One Web designer found a simpler way to make e-commerce pay. Alan Herrell shows you The Money Page.

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