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Archive for February, 2011

Never Stop Marketing

Wednesday, February 16th, 2011

I learned this the hard way. The biggest mistake you can make in your business is thinking that marketing and advertising are only necessary when job flow is zero. Why? Because when you have no active projects you have no cash flow. And we all know what happens next. The mind goes to survival mode. Working from this state of mind is always unpleasant and unwise. Marketing is as necessary as saving. It should be a habit like brushing your teeth. It has to be present each and every month in your budget. If you’re not marketing you’re losing business, and even worse, planning for failure. You should be marketing always. Market in the fat months so that you don’t have lean months. And when you don’t have active work, the marketing is the work. So this is my advice to all creative freelancers and small businesses: never stop marketing.

But you don’t have a marketing budget you say. Make one. If not now, do it when you have the resources, but marketing is not just limited to media buys in the New York Times. For all of us mortals there are other creative alternatives to marketing that are low cost. They do require more hands on involvement and hard work, but Rome wasn’t built in a day. The bottom line is you need to get creative with your marketing if you don’t have the marketing dollars of Coca-Cola. In a follow up post I’ll offer some resources and tips that have helped me understand online marketing. Something I’m sure you’ll find useful for your business.



25 Outstanding Photography WordPress Themes

Saturday, February 12th, 2011

Like many web designers and developers I’m a dedicated WordPress user. There’s no secret here. I love the software for it’s simplicity, flexibility, and well, the many ways in which it can be adapted and morphed into different themes for different uses. I would also venture to say that WordPress probably has the largest global development community, which produces themes that can give any WordPress based site a facelift. But for this particular post let’s say you’re a photographer and you want a WordPress theme to showcase your work. What do you do? Easy. WordPress can give you a photo gallery for cents on the dollar, compared to what it would cost to develop a site from scratch. It’s also quick to set up and customize. The following list includes high-quality WordPress themes that I handpicked and are brilliantly designed to highlight a photographer’s best images. (more…)



Must-Have Mac Tools for Web Designers

Saturday, February 5th, 2011

textmateAs a web designer I can’t remember the last time I used Dreamweaver. I don’t know of any hardcore web designer who does. I have been designing and coding websites for over eight years now. In this time the web landscape has changed immensely and the tools to make websites have improved dramatically. If you’re still using Dreamweaver and ImageReady it’s time to update. I ask that you give new software a chance. Here I present a list of professional applications that I can’t work without. They’re indispensable tools of the trade that make my job a thousand times easier. My work would be slowed down or brought to a screeching halt if I used anything else. I use these programs daily because they all contribute in some form to usability, efficiency, and simplicity. They have helped me become a better web designer and I hope they help you in your workflow.

Adobe CS5
This is the mother lode of all design software in the market. This comes as no surprise and I won’t go into detail about it because it’s common knowledge. I chose to include it in the list just because it’s mandatory. Without Photoshop or Illustrator life would be depressing for designers everywhere. Fireworks and Flash deserve a special mention also. But the complete suite of products is incredible and Adobe is beyond a doubt the industry leader for making great software for designers.

Transmit
I have used this FTP client since day one and will never look elsewhere. The latest version comes with an Amazon S3 connection module. What can I say? It’s just plain simple to connect with multiple servers, manipulate files, drag and drop objects, change file names and permissions, etc.

TextMate
TextMate is a coding powerhouse. It’s an efficiently simple markup editor. Code anything you want with it in ten seconds or less, HTML, PHP, ActionScript, you name it. It has quick libraries that can help you build site frameworks in seconds. It also has keyboard shortcuts, snippets, and macros to make coding lightning fast. I cannot recommend this piece of software enough.

Coda
This is the main event when it comes to server side coding. I love using this because it gives me live server access to change and update code on the fly. This has completely replaced Dreamweaver and its interface is phenomenally clean and uncluttered. Besides text editing it has terminal access and subversion control. What else could you ask for? Brought to us by Panic, the same guys who made Transmit.

Little Snapper
This handy app has helped me gather web inspiration like nothing else. I use it to grab screen shots of sites that inspire me which I later archive and use. It serves as my digital scrapbook with tags, annotations and a well organized interface. And it’s super easy to publish the content to Flickr or upload to a server via FTP.

Font Case
Typography is essential to design and I manage my font library with Font Case. I only recently started using this software but as far as I’m concerned it rocks! Imagine an iTunes like interface that handles all your fonts. Need I say more?

Things
I’m a get-things-done kind of guy. This is not as much a design tool as an organizational and productivity tool. I gather my task list for certain areas and I simply check things off as I complete them. It’s a reliable task management tool that helps you get it done.

Quicksilver
Here’s another speed app. By using it you’ll be able to access and launch all programs and files on your computer with a few keystrokes. Makes switching from one program to another fun and seamless. This alone is a rare and crazy productivity and time saving tool that has saved me hours in accumulated time.

DropBox
Although this piece of brilliant software is not related to design, it deserves a special mention because it is essential for all of us who manipulate and share digital files. This is more critical if you’re working with a remote team. And we all know how important backups are. Well, DropBox does it all.

If you haven’t given these programs and apps a try I suggest you do. They’ll take your design and production skills to a whole new level. And if you know of any other software that has helped you make a quantum leap in your design work flow I invite you to share below.