Archive for the ‘work’ Category

Web design and SEO: I’m hiring

Monday, February 25th, 2008

I have just spent the last 4 hours responding to 107 emails. Yes, over a hundred emails have piled up over the last 8 days, mainly web design and SEO enquiries. In the last 4 months, average daily page views of MB Web Design have trebled, presumably as I’m ranking on page 1 of Google for web design and for website design. I’m struggling to cope with demand, which leads to the next logical step – hiring. Well, hiring on a freelance basis, at least. I know that there are a few of you web design types out there who read this blog and/or know me personally, so here is your public invitation – send me an email with your portfolio and let’s see if we can do business together.

I seem to still be attracting a disproportionate amount of “I have the next eBay” messages, where someone wants me to design free or on the cheap in exchange for equity in an awful business model.  I have a polite “thanks but no thanks” message that I copy and paste in response to such enquiries, which usually see them off, but I was a little taken aback by one person’s response. It was, in a nutshell, a request to go through their business plan, suggest how to make it foolproof for investment, and then they might consider hiring me once they have the money. Talk about singing for your supper!

The fact is: if the business model was any good, and if the ‘entrepreneur’ was serious about their concept, then they’d be able to find funding for it. And if they can find funding for it, then they can afford to pay me for my services. My mind is not completely closed to the idea of working for shares, but really, some of the ‘offers’ I get verge on the insulting. I remember an intensely patronising one I got from a student a few months ago, which asked me to design the next Betfair purely because “it would look really good for your portfolio”.

Anyway, onto better matters.

I’m about to start designing for a salon marketing consultancy run by Liz Ridley, who has an impressive track record of turning around health and beauty businesses into successful enterprises. She’s now turning her hand to helping other businesses achieve the same success via her marketing consultancy. Where I come in, rather obviously, is in successful Internet marketing and search engine optimisation for their websites and redesigning the sites themselves if they are, shall we say politely, below par. Liz is my kind of person – we discussed the venture over a Tyskie, a welcome step up from my usual client meeting beverage – an overpriced American-chain coffee.

General Update: Work, Wales Foundation School, More Work

Saturday, January 19th, 2008

Just a brief update for infrequent visitors to digest what is happening in my life right now. Business has boomed this month, fuelled primarily by a surge of businesses wanting new websites for a new year. Later this week, Louise finds out whether any of her applications for junior doctor vacancies in South Wales (via Wales Foundation School) have been successful. Fingers crossed that’s the case. If unsuccessful, there is a second round of choices from the hospital/course combinations left on the list.

A number of very exciting work prospects have presented themselves in the last week. My lips are sealed per NDAs but what I can tell you is that if either/both are successful then they could prove quite lucrative and a regular stream of work, which is very appealing given that I’ll be working freelance full-time as of April/May this year. A perfect start to my full-time freelance career. Much like Louise’s job applications, I mustn’t count my chickens.

Bags under my eyes

Monday, January 14th, 2008

This month I have elected to use up all of my remaining annual leave entitlement at UCL, meaning I’m only working Thursdays and Fridays. The timing of this was intended to conincide with an anticipated flood of New Years work, and that presumption has proved to be well-founded. I’m pleased to say I’ve got several interesting contracts on the table at the minute, not your run-of-the-mill websites but all databasey, functional sites. These are, of course, harder to design for as one has to work within the constraints of the system. On the other hand, it is quite satisfying to turn the bog-standard skin of an Open Source app into something pretty. It’s a double-edged sword.

However, with so many work opportunities presenting and in the hope that I can actually afford a mortgage in 6 months time, my time has become completely monopolised – it has become quite common for me to be up until 5am working on the various sites if I’m not expected at UCL the following day. This is unsustainable, but I’ve always been able to work better in the evening. So today, I’ve made Louise force me out of bed early to adjust this punishing schedule. I have bags under my eyes that are so bad it looks like I’ve been in a fight.

EnTrip

Tuesday, January 8th, 2008

I’m pleased to report that as of this afternoon I’ve officially joined EnTrip as a part-time website design and SEO consultant. My good friend Nick set up a prototype app to track his two-month holiday around the United States, and the interest it generated has inspired him to take the project further. He’s recruited two guys to work on a full-time basis and we’re all hoping that we can launch the site, albeit in preliminary form, within the next six months or so.

I’m certain that the site has potential but I’m also acutely aware that the vast majority of start-ups – both on and offline – don’t succeed. That’s not to say I’m pessimistic; at best it could prove a lucrative investment of my time and at worst it will provide an interesting learning experience.

Flash & Actionscript: Eaters Of Time

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

As part of my job at UCL, I’ve spent the last two weeks working on some Flash-based gimmicks for the sites I’m putting together. Very whizzy and Actionscript-laced they are, too. Except I have a meeting with my boss later and I only have one-and-a-half SWFs to show off.

How come Flash programming eats up my time so much? My problem is I get caught up in unnecessary details – turning the slightest movement into a carefully-described variable, rather than just tween an instance from A to B (you know, just in case…) or defining dynamic text boxes and filling them out via Actionscript rather than – you guessed it – just writing it in a static box and forgetting about it. Granted, these examples only illustrate a workload increase of seconds rather than minutes or hours, but over the course of a fortnight these really have stealthily gobbled up my time.

I’m approaching my work too much like a programmer and not enough like a designer.

Nightmare web design clients

Thursday, May 17th, 2007

I was recently joking with Martin Bean (a friend, fellow web designer and founder of MCB Studios) about a couple of silly web design enquiries I’ve received over the past few days. Between us, we realised, we had quite a number of such stories and quotes to share with you, here are 10 of the best (or worst!) ones.

#10 – “I have an idea for a website which could by the next eBay and I need a web design partner…”

I got this email when I was young and naive, so I agreed to meet this guy to discuss his plan over coffee in Central London after work one evening. It turns out his idea of “the next eBay” was to clone eBay itself! Indeed, he had acquired a rip-off domain name and wanted an identically functioning website, to be delivered within 6 weeks, and to be within his budget which was £900. I made my excuses and walked out.

Meet the new eBay, same as the old eBay.

#9 – “I want you to use this photo. I want it to be in landscape, but changed so that the height is bigger than the width”

You may presume here that this is just a case of a client not knowing the term ‘portrait’, but you’d be wrong. It was a photo of the building which the client in question operates from; the client wanted this photo stretched vertically so the building looked “taller and more corporate”. Bizarre I know, but this might have worked were there not trees in the foreground which made the whole effort look completely ridiculous. I tried in vain to convince the client to remove it, but the response I received boiled down to “I’m paying you to do a job, so do it as I tell you”. Fair enough.

Then they got all offended when I removed my “Designed by…” credit from the bottom of their site.

#8 – “Black on white is boring. How about hot pink on lime green? And can we make the logo spin? And Ariel is boring, let’s use Comic Sans.”

Of course this is not an actual quote and yes, it is a mild exaggeration, but the proportion of web design clients who fail to grasp the basics of good, sensible design is staggering. Just because you can make an element on the page animated doesn’t mean you should. Just because you can use a kooky font doesn’t mean you should.

I don’t hold it against a client for not having good design sense – that is my job. However, it does irritate me when my advice is ignored completely. One school of thought is that they’re paying me to do a job so I should do it exactly as they specify. Another school of thought is that it is a good designer’s job to convince the client against stupid design decisions. I think I lie somewhere in the middle – I’ll always make a case againse their ill-advised design choice, but if they’re still insistent, why waste more of my time?

#7 – “Use these photos, I got them from Google Images”

A big problem I encountered recently was with a client who provided a number of images for me to use on his site. I didn’t realise this, but he’d lifted them all from other websites, having done searches on Google Images. A few weeks after launching the site I received an angry email from a professional photographer who was accusing me of stealing his images. Clearly he was in the right (the image in question was part of a series he was presenting via his website) so I forwarded to the client his request to remove them. Soon the truth came out: every single one of the client’s images had been lifted from other sites, and he refused to remove them. Thankfully I include a liability disclaimer in my web design contracts which indemnifies me from claims that supplied images are copyright protected. In other words: if he gets caught, he’s got to deal with it. Last I heard, the photographer has initiated a copyright infringement claim against him, all because the client is stubborn.

#6 – “It sucks.”

Constructive criticism is a good thing. “It sucks” doesn’t fit that description.

This is a conversation I had with a client. I had just emailed them a link to a demo of a web page I’d made for them. The underlying page structure was identical, but I’d modified the CSS to change some colours and alter the size of some H1 and H2 tags. Nothing that major.

Client: I don’t like it.

Me: OK… what about it don’t you like?

Client: I don’t like any of it. It doesn’t work for me.

Me: Is it the colours, or…?

Client: No it’s ALL of it. You need to change this all completely.

Me: I only changed the colour scheme and the size of the headings. It’s otherwise the same as the last version.

Client: (pause) Well, now I don’t like it, change it back.

The client then agreed to use the original version.

#5 – “Why is your quote so expensive? My nephew can do [a 5 page website] for £50″

If he’s so good, just get him to do it. Even if site looks like this:

It doesn’t matter what quality your site is so long as you have one, right?

The quote above represents the attitude of too many small businesses acquiring their first website. A significant proportion of my clients already have existing clients designed by the boss’ son / the boss’ nephew / the office junior / the work experience kid /the boss himself using Publisher. In time, they realise that good web design is best left to the professionals.

#4 – “I paid for my domain name by credit card. My credit card billing address is in Oxford. So why doesn’t my site come up in Google when I type in ‘Oxford’?”

My response, in a nutshell, was: because it’s a one page website which hasn’t been indexed by Google, and the content did not refer to Oxford once.

I didn’t bother responding to the follow-up email, which began “Thanks for your response. Just a few follow-up questions” then asked about two or three dozen questions – “why am I not #1 in Google“, “why won’t anyone link to me“, “how do I get to #1 in Google“, etc. I followed the link at the bottom of their website to find their existing designers, who boast proudly to be SEO experts. I advised that this is a question for them, not me. There’s plenty of free information out there about SEO too, I’m not going to waste my time explaining it when some comprehensive answers to those questions have been answered in forums and blog posts many times over.

#3 – “I want to be number one in Google for the term ‘consultant’. My budget is £200.”

I just had to write back to this guy. What kind of consultant is he anyway? Turns out he was a life coach operating in the South-East of England, and didn’t even have a site yet. I briefly explained that it is useless to target the generic term ‘consultant’, far better to go for something like ‘London life coach’, and that the whole effort was useless when there wasn’t even a site in the first place. His response? “If I’m only going to show up for ‘London life coach’ then the cost should decrease proportionally. £25 should be enough.” No, it won’t.

#2 – “Just one more small change…”

Though it seems trivial to “change everything from red to orange“, you might have to change a PSD or PNG file, export all the slices, modify the stylesheet, modify some other details to complement the new colour… the list goes on. Only for the client to say “nah, I don’t like the orange. Make it red again“.

#1 – “We can’t afford to pay you but we’ll let you have a link back to your site.”

How generous. This is a particularly common request, some variations of which are “we won’t pay you but all our customers will see it” and “we’ll pay you once the website turns a profit“. A few months ago, a lot of people were finding my website by searching Google for “UK web design student” or similar, and my site was ranking highly. Therefore I was getting one or two of these requests per week. I now have a stock response to this:

Thank you for your enquiry. MB Web Design does not undertake any speculative work. I encourage you to read this article.
http://www.no-spec.com/articles/why-speculation-hurts/

Of course, they won’t write back because they’re cheapskates who want to exploit students to get a website on the cheap. This issue only seems to be getting worse – everyone with a computer and a copy of Dreamweaver can log onto sites like Gumtree and Craigslist and call themselves web designers*, freelancer sites like Elance allow prospective customers outsource their web design requirements to the lowest bidder. Both of these tend to be sources where price is proportional to talent. Craigslist in particular is often frequented by businesses seeking students to do their work for free as it will give them something to put in their portfolio.

* This is a generalisation of course, there are some good designers on these sites as well. They’re the ones who charge the most.

Conclusion

This post has been rather tongue-in-cheek but does highlight a fundamental problem of being a web designer. People hire you because you are the expert. It is, of course, unreasonable to expect your clients to be as savvy as you so patience and understanding are pre-requisites. However, they ran a little thin with the people mentioned above!

I’m sure in a couple of months I’ll have to update this with a few more “nightmare” clients and potential clients. Feel free to add a comment with your own experiences.

Just checking in

Friday, February 23rd, 2007

I’m at work and thoroughly exhausted. My New Years Resolutions have burnt out. The exercise thing hasn’t gone well, mainly because of the amount of work I’ve had – so at least one resolution has gone to plan.

The dwindling frequency of my posts makes me wonder if I should post them to one central location and just duplicate them here. Myspace is awful, Facebook less so but still not good nonetheless, but most of my non-geektastic friends would rather read my messages there. Their lack of feed support does not help my decision.

I’m not looking forward to the Wales-England rugby game I’m going to see in 3 weeks – Wales have been abysmally poor and England… well, they’re a one-man team. A good one-man team though, and so far playing better than we are. The cunts.

Escaped unscathed the other side of a work-related drama, in which I figured I was either going to get myself sacked or hand in my notice before a cooler head prevailed. It’s a long and probably uninteresting story that I won’t bore you with. Office politics, people sticking their oars in, too many cooks spoiling the broth, and many other cliched proverbs spring to mind.

Watched the entire third series (or ’season’, if you insist on being a Yank about it) of The 4400 in one day-long sitting last weekend, and it was great. I highly recommend it.

I also loved the Mike Judge film Idiocracy, which paints a pretty grim portrait of what society will be like in 500 years: Benefit-leeching council house dwellers breeding irresponsibly create a dumbed-down society such that a guy with an IQ of 100 is the suddenly world’s smartest man, the President of the USA carries an machine gun and has a harem, the top rated TV show is called “Ow, my balls!” in which the star just gets kicked in the nuts for half an hour, one can buy 6000-calorie burgers from a family establishment called Assfuckers, and no-one drinks water anymore, just soft drinks (and the soft drinks manufacturer employs over 50% of the American population). Watch it, laugh a little, then die a little inside knowing it could happen. Never mind climate change, address the human stupidity issue first and everything else will fall into place.

What’s Math been up to lately?

Tuesday, October 17th, 2006

Saw Mitchell and Webb at the Pleasance Theatre last Friday, and they were so funny it hurt.

Went to a signing of the Garth Marenghi’s Darkplace DVD. Garth, Todd Rivers and Dean Learner were all there in character. I ended up having a discussion with Garth about the benefits of equipping all NHS staff with firearms. Surreal.

Saw some weirdo masturbating on a platform at Canning Town station. As you do.

Got absolutely bladdered on Sunday afternoon and spent that evening heartily chundering and vowing never to drink again. I’m still hungover.

The BBC and Great Ormond Street Hospital are now involved in this medical physics video we’re making at work. Our producer, of all goes to plan, was one of the producers for Tomorrow’s World [/geek fanboy mode]

They say climate change is a bad thing. You ever been to Wales? Bring it on!

Thursday, October 5th, 2006

A morose Welshman who now lives in London, telling anecdotes about how behind-the-times things are West of the Severn Bridge.

No, it isn’t me down the pub, it’s Rhod Gilbert and his excellent show Knocking on Heavens Door. If stand-up comedy is your thing, I highly recommend you go see him at Soho theatre in a few weeks.

Being the only Welshman in the audience this evening I did make myself a target for each of his Welsh anecdotes but it was all good fun. We’ll be returning to the Pleasance theatre next week to see Mitchell and Webb (the guys off Peep Show), which I’m sure will be hilarious. I can’t wait.

The Missus bought a car this evening, so if you hear of a hit and run in East London involving a silver Ford Fiesta, it wasn’t us…

Work is getting steadily busier, those of you who think I’m a slacking bastard will be overjoyed to hear.

So then I got totally wasted and woke up in Antigua

Monday, August 7th, 2006

Not quite. But still, what have I been up to recently?

I was supposed to visit the in-laws a few weekends back but backed out to go and see Guns N Roses. In a nutshell: great show, but he turned up late again and I didn’t get home until 4. The ginger prick. Shared the nightbus with two journalists from NME, one of whom had so much cleavage on display it was painfully obvious they knew where the afterparty was and were going to use her feminine charms to get in. I think I was right – they got out at Regent St, which is where the afterparty turned out to be. When passing through Canary Wharf I happened to see a pair of bums sitting on the pavement. Turns out the truth was far worse, it was Liam and Marek!

Work has been plodding along – I’m a little anxious to fuck off for my holiday now, to be honest. I have nearly finished all the websites I’ve been working on, so a long holiday is due.

I took the day off on Friday to attend the funeral of one of my best friend’s father back home in Wales.

As I’m sure you’ll agree, the best way to deal with grief, or anything else for that matter, is to drink yourself stupid. And that’s exactly what happened. It seems to be a little-known fact that the Welsh are just as keen on wakes as the Irish are. I’m digressing…

I went out with my friend and a bunch of people I hadn’t seen in about 4 or 5 years, but it was if I hadn’t left. One chap in particular – a training MMA fighter, no less – took it upon himself to get everyone else drunk at his own expense, then jab cocktail umbrellas into his scalp, and then yell a Quagmire-esque “Giggidy-giggidy” at passing barmaids. At one point I had 3 Guinnesses, 2 double-vodka Red Bulls and a tequila in front of me. In retrospect I’m quite grateful I didn’t shit or piss myself.

18 hours later, I’m sitting on a park bench outside the pub where we’d managed a lock-in, but pretty sober. Or so I thought. Turns out I was still drunk. I didn’t get my hangover until Sunday. Though it wasn’t as bad as I’d feared, seeing as I’d had a fat Sunday lunch to soak it all up courtesty of my Mum.

One final note – the Missus has the first of three exams this morning. (The other two being tomorrow and Wednesday.) So, if our flat was a station right now it would probably be called Tension Central. Or maybe West Stressbury. I’m hoping she flies through the exams this year and the next two, and becomes a doctor. Then the station would be called Bank.

Over and out.