Some Things to be Thankful For

November 25th, 2009

Thanksgiving is the greatest American holiday. It’s an authentic celebration of the things that matter most in life – things to be thankful for. All too often, these are things that we take for granted. Taking time to pause with our family and friends to consider all that we have to be thankful for, just might be one of the best gifts anyone could ask for. So without further ado, here’s short list of some things we’re thankful for:

Our clients (of course!)
Our jobs
Our work
Our friends and family
Our health
Our troops
Fresh air
Clean water
Tasty food
Wilderness
Wild places
Storms
Sunshine
Snow
Skis
Powder days
Waves
The internet
Search engines
The social web
Flex time
Vacation
Kids
Smiles
Music
Laughter
Tolerance
Inspiration
Beauty
Exercise
Endorphins

What else? How about you? What would you add to this list?

Have a Happy Thanksgiving! Our offices will be closed tomorrow and Friday. We’ll be back at it on Monday!

– Josh Lewis
VP Marketing

Almost Daily Drupal, Distributions: Tattler, Managing News, Open Atrium

November 25th, 2009

Drupal Distributions are pre-configured for a specific type of site and use a variety of contributed modules.  Here are some that have been in the spotlight recently.

Tattler , created by Phase2. “Tattler (app) is an open source topic monitoring tool for today’s Web. Tattler finds and aggregates content from the Web on the topics you want.” Listen to the Acquia interview with Phase2 about it.

Managing News , created by Development Seed, is also for aggregating news and data.  Read an article about customizing your Managing News.

Open Atrium, also created by Development Seed, was recommended on the American Express Open Forum.

- David Lanier
Director of Web Development

Almost Daily Drupal: White House, Aegir, Eric Clapton, Drupal 7

November 20th, 2009

Watch White House new media team members discuss the new WhiteHouse.gov web site which was launched recently on Drupal.

An updated version of Aegir, a powerful hosting framework for Drupal, is released.

Eric Clapton’s site launches on Drupal.

Davy Van Den Bremt posts a slide deck outlining Drupal 7 from an end user’s perspective.

- David Lanier
Director of Web Development

Leveraging the Persuasive Power of the Social Web

November 19th, 2009

Today, all it takes is an angry person with thumbs and a Twitter account to start trashing your business online. Recently, a lead came into us that clearly displayed this newfound phenomenon and the persuasive power of the social web:

Please Describe Your Needs: Please help with a few negative comments about our business consisting of 14,000 patients and over 30,000 implants placed to date. Less than 5 negative google comments are destroying 8 years of a business I have spent everyday building 16 hours a day.

Ouch! Less than 5 negative comments posted on Google are destroying 8 years put into building a successful business. The weight of that statement is astounding! This prospect (from the dental industry) is prepared to spend upwards of $10,000 per month to address these negative comments that were posted on the “social web” and are adversely affecting his business in a very severe way.

There are good and bad effects of this evolution of the web into the social sphere. On the good side, consumers have more control, more information, and more voice to affect purchasing decisions. On the bad side, the reputation of a great business, established over many years of hard work, can now be tarnished almost instantly by a few dissatisfied customers.VH_guestbook

Which raises the question: How is your business leveraging the power of positive feedback online?

This is perhaps one of the most important questions for a business of any size to be mindful of when evaluating the importantance of social media to their business. The answer is obvious: It’s critically important. It simply doesn’t matter what type of business you’re running. Whether you’re in lodging and vacation rentals, dentistry, dermatology, the ski rental or restaurant business, the end result is the same – it matters what people say about your business online.

I recently returned from a trip to the Victoria House in Ambergris Caye, Belize (it was amazing, albeit a bit pricey, but don’t take my word, see what others have to say). As I was checking out I noticed a beautiful guest book (pictured at right), full of glowing reviews from past guests. The only problem was that these glowing guest comments weren’t reaching the right audience. That’s where we come in.

We create programs that reach out to your most satisfied customers, and turn them into your most enthusiastic online brand advocates – thus leveraging the power of the positive.

Anyone that’s ever read the letters to the editor in their local newspaper realizes that many of the letters are people complaining about something. The social web has made it even easier for people to make their complaints heard. The trick is combat and overwhelm those negative experiences with positive ones. However, expecting these positive reviews to appear on their own is a dubious approach indeed.

This is where the strategic approach to social media comes into play. You’ve got to find ways to first identify who your most satisfied clients are, and then make it easy for them to share their experiences online with the right audience – whether it be on Google, TripAdvisor, Yelp or elsewhere. Think of this type of expense as reputation maintenance. And we all know that it’s easier and less expensive to maintain your vehicle on a regular basis than it is to neglect it and be faced with expensive and inconvenient repairs when they inevitably occur.

Click here for more information about how we can help your company or organization leverage and maintain its positive reputation online.

– Josh Lewis
VP Marketing
@Blue_Tent

Daily Drupal: Buzzr, messaging, admin interfaces, and more

November 17th, 2009

Welcome to the inaugural Daily Drupal, an almost daily wrapup of the days events and discoveries in the land of Drupal. This also happens to be my first Blue Tent Blog Post.

Development Seed released updates to notifications and messaging framework modules. These are powerful modules that enable advanced messaging capabilities and gives users a lot of control over what notifications they receive, and in what forms, whether by email, sms, or twitter.  See the Features section of the notifications module and the Sending Methods section of the messaging module.

Dries posted “8 steps for Drupal 8” blog post, envisioning and steering the development of Drupal after version 7 is released.

Drupal wins awards from Packt Publishing.  Awards include: Hall of Fame award, Best Open Source PHP CMS. Drupal was not eligible for “Overall Best Open Source CMS” because it won it too many times in the past. Wordpress won that award this year.

Development versions of Admin 2.0 and Context 3.0 modules are demonstrated. Amazing stuff in the world of building flexible and controllable web sites.

Article on cmswire about Buzzr (a hosted service by Lullabot and others). Compares to Acquia services too.

David Lanier
Director of Web Development

Aspen Orthopaedic Associates Redesigned Site Goes Live

November 6th, 2009

New Homepage

Aspen Orthopaedic Associates (AOA) delivers a personalized care experience catering to outdoor enthusiasts from Olympians to young athletes and local weekend warriors.  The practice was founded fifty years ago during Aspen’s quiet years.  Since then, Aspen has become a glitzy global sporting mecca, and the practice has added centers across western Colorado in Glenwood Springs, Basalt and Rifle.

Provided with a fresh design from the team at Cadence Marketing, we redeployed the site on the Site Management Console (SMC) content management system.  In furtherance of their mission to provide their patients with an unparalleled level of care, the site we created for them incorporates several advanced features that will provide their patients with an online experience that is commensurate with the high level of care they’ve come to expect.  For example, patients can quickly and easily request an appointment with their favorite physician, or have their prescription refilled online.

Providing quality educational resources for their patients was an aspect central to the site’s redesign.  AOA really stepped up and made the investment necessary to create a valuable educational resource.  AOA provides the information, interactive animations, and video needed to demystify the often intimidating prospect of having a surgical procedure.  These animations take patients through a detailed step-by-step explanation of the procedure they will undergo. Patients can even print out these interactive descriptions of the procedure, or they can send them around in an email.

The site also has a community blog where you can track the impressive exploits of some prominent patient athletes.  The Doc’s Desk is an informative forum providing an array of event announcements, educational opportunities, research findings, community-related information, and news about the practice.  They also use the site to promote the Aspen Sports Medicine Foundation. (ASMF) This is a publicly supported nonprofit organization, spearheaded by AOA dedicated to the promotion, support and sponsorship of education and research in the field of sports medicine.

Congratulations to the great team that made this great redesign possible. Preproduction came courtsey of Cadence Marketing with design work by Tom Kenyon, development by Five Technology, Lauren did a great job as PM, Moira and Intrcomm made for a smooth deployment and Andrew made the project possible from the sales side.

Google Analytics Announces New Updates and Features

October 20th, 2009

Google announced today a new set of features which makes Google Analytics more powerful, flexible and intelligent.  These new tools will be rolled out in the coming weeks and further Google Analytics as an enterprise level web analytics tool.  As Google Analytics Authorized Consultants (GAAC), Blue Tent is excited to share these new features with you.

Expanded Goals – Feel confined by just four goals?  Google Analytics now supports up to 20 goals per profile.  Also, you can now use metrics in your goals include setting benchmarks for time on site and pages per visit.

Advanced Analysis Features – Tired of exporting your data into a spreadsheet to perform more complicated data analysis?  Try using table filtering to perform advanced data analysis.  This new tool allows you to filter rows based on metrics.  When used with pivoting and secondary dimensions, this new feature becomes even more powerful.

Multiple Custom Variables – Define and track visitors based on specific visitor attributes through multiple custom variables.  Attributes include page-level (viewed movie), visitor (returning vs new visitor), and session (logged in or not).

Sharing – Easily share segments and custom report templates across multiple accounts and profiles.

Analytics Intelligence & Custom Alerts – Stop combing through data to find significant changes in metrics that matter for your business.  Use Analytics Intelligence to alert you to the most significant changes.   Google Analytics is now in its initial phase of an algorithmic intelligence engine.

Mobile Reporting
– Track your mobile websites and apps with Google Analytics.   GA can now track mobile devices even if they don’t run JavaScript.  PHP, Perl, JSP and ASPX sites will be supported.

Visit the Google Analytics blog or contact us for more information on these exciting new features!

A New Generation of Smart Metrics?

October 16th, 2009

We just returned from our first annual pilgrimage to the GooglePlex for the Google Partners Summit – a weeklong event for Google Analytics Authorized Consultants (GAACs) and Website Optimizer Authorized Consultants (WOACs). The highlight of day one, was the keynote entitled “Crime Against Humanity” by renowned Google web analytics guru Avinash Kaushik.

Much of his presentation centered around the concept that web analytics as we know it is undergoing fundamental, rapid change. He highlighted the limitations of Javascript based analytics tracking in the increasingly fragmented ecosystem of online information consumption.

“The website is no longer the center of the universe,” he said. “In this new world, javascript tracking does not work … Current metrics for web analytics lose their value everyday.”

Marketing & Influencing People is Fundamentally Changing

By example, Avinash pointed to some of the most popular and widely consumed sources for information and online purchasing: Twitter and Amazon.com.

In regards to a book listed for sale on Amazon: How do you measure the value of content publishing on Amazon? At what point is the value of that page maximized? How may reviews are needed before the tipping point is reached upon which many new sales are generated? How do negative reviews affect the value of this page? How will we identify and integrate such influences into our web analytics ecosystem?

And how to measure success on Twitter? Avinash stressed the importance of viewing Twitter as a brand channel. Think the number of followers you have matters – nonsense! One important smart metric that we’re all aware of is the all-important “re-tweet” or RT. Check out Retweetist.com to measure the viral value of your tweets. Then divide the number of RTs per 1K followers to arrive at your RT metric. This metric shows your capacity to influence people!

“Influence not because I did it, but because you did it – that is marketing,” said Avinash.

In regards to your blog, focus on your number of subscribers – what Avinash described as the “future of permission marketing, the future of email marketing.” Another engagement metric is to analyze the number of words in posts versus the number of words in comments.

You’ll notice that many of these metrics aren’t readily available in Google Analytics. For the time being, you’ll need to “automagically pull, scrape, integrate, invent, correlate and compute” to arrive at meaningful behavioral metrics that lead to actionable outcomes. Then set long term goals and continue measure and refine your approach.

The “A” Stands for Agile

It’s clear that web analytics is evolving at lightning speed. Avinash stressed that the smaller shops, not the giants (or elephants in his words) are the ones leading the charge into this brave new world of web analytics. Take a look at companies like statsit.com, percentmobile.com, and brizzly.com for a glimpse of the what the future holds for web analytics.

Cheers to Avinash for a thought-provoking, entertaining and insightful keynote. We can’t wait to dig into his new book, “Web Analytics 2.0” – how about you?

- Josh Lewis
VP Marketing

Tie Social Media in with Your Email Campaign

October 6th, 2009

With the emergence of social applications there has been much debate as to which marketing channel is more efficient, Email or Social Media. Although new technologies such as Twitter and Facebook can be very effective when used correctly, they are more of a way to spread news in 140 characters or less than a marketing channel. These social applications don’t replace the need for relevant, well-executed Email Marketing.

The truth is that people still use email to communicate more than any social application, but that doesn’t mean we can’t combine the two to create an even deadlier email program! 15% of your email list will read your emails and research on Facebook or Twitter to see if others are chatting about the message before taking action. Solid evidence there is room for both Email and Social Media.

About 6 months ago Blue Tent started using a Share With Your Network (SWYN) application called AddThis (which is free) that allows recipients of an email message to post the online version of the email to any social application. Through AddThis you can track which message was sent and to what social media applications it was sent to. AddThis allows you to post to any social application but from our experience Facebook has hands down been the most popular with 172 posts in the last 6 months (pictured).

Using this application allows the audience of those who view your latest email a lot larger and increases the chances of your email marketing campaigns to "go viral". With 300 million Facebook users and the average person having 120 friends, you can see how tying in social media to your email program can create fast, efficient results. By adding in an email subscribe option to the posted online version allows the postee’s friends or followers to sign up for future emails. By allowing these folks to sign up through the posted eNewsletter is key since it also further adds to your premission based list!

The facts speak for themselves. There is still a demand for properly executed email marketing while the advantages of combining your email marketing efforts with your social campaigns are simply too good to pass up. Use the benefits of social media to create more exposure, increase ROI, and increase the list size of your email campaign.

Eric Taylor
Email Project Manager

Analyze Internal Search Data with Google Analytics

September 30th, 2009

Many sites have internal site search functionality which allows visitors to search for content, products and more.  Google Analytics can track these site search terms.  Analyzing this data can be beneficial for your search engine marketing campaigns.

To set up site search for a Google Analytics profile, log in and select “Edit” website profile.  Select the “Do Track Site Search” button and then enter your query parameter in the provided field.  You can determine your query parameter by going to your website and performing an internal site search.  For example in http://www.domain.com/search/?q=site%20search%20query the query parameter is “q”.  For more information on setting up Google Analytics site search check out the GA help center.  Depending on the volume of your site, give Google Analytics a few days to collect data and then analyze the data.

Site Search Blog Post Image

Access the report in the content section of Google Analytics.  Identify high volume search terms and compare these to the content currently on your site.  If you don’t already have content dedicated to these topics, consider adding new content.  This will help improve visitor retention.  Strategize on how to generate more search engine traffic from these terms.  Is paid or organic search more appropriate?  In this example, we might add a new page dedicated to area hiking including safety tips and recommended trails for all levels of hikers.  In time we would expect to start ranking in the search engines for keywords relating to [Aspen hiking] and thus we would begin to drive search engine traffic for this keyword.

Check back next week for another Google Analytics’ reporting tip.

Lindsay Reither
Director of Search Engine Marketing & Web Analytics