Archive for September 2008

Thoughts On Growing A Business In An Economic Downturn

Sep
25
2008

0
Comments

With the financial world in turmoil and many business owners watching fearfully from the sidelines, including myself!, I thought it might be a good time to discuss some of my ideas on how I plan to grow Small Box as we stare down an almost certain downturn. Here is part of our plan for Small Box, maybe you can steal some ideas for your business. If you have ideas you’d like to add please do so below as a comment. I’d love to hear your thoughts.

1. Diversify Our Client Base
- in particular we are interested to work in industries that tend to be recession proof. My thinking is death and taxes. PJ mentioned home repair since people tend to hunker down and invest in their homes instead of upgrading. Mainly I am interested in having a presence in as many different industries as possible so we can profile work for other potential clients in the same industry. I find that once we have done work for one company in an industry we often find others following closely. To quote an old auction buddy “You do work to get work”.

2. Aggressive Advertising
- It may seem counter intuitive to spend money in a downturn but we plan to invest heavily, and intelligently, over the coming months. Many companies want to either start or finish a new website by the end of the year so we find the September-November period is a busy one, along with February to June as companies kick off their year with new projects. If our plan is successful you will be hearing about Small Box from a variety of media outlets over the next few months. I expect weaker firms will be cautious in advertising during this time as they look to protect their cash flow balance so this is an opening for us to sprint ahead and become the premier Indianapolis web design company.

3. Constant Communication- Our goal in the coming months is to capitalize on the contacts we have made over the last 2 1/2 years. This means emailing the 3500+ members of the Chamber of Commerce, sending out regular press releases, emailing previous clients to see if they need updates or additional services, blogging on a regular basis, collecting testimonials, submitting our work on design galleries, maintaining our monthly newsletter, client surveys and a variety of other smaller efforts. Basically we are going to use our past work and reputation as leverage to reach out to a larger audience.

4. Be #1 In Google
- There’s a saying “the cook always eats last” and sometimes we feel that here at Small Box. We have lists upon lists of improvements for our website. Same goes for SEO- link building, directories, crazy ideas, etc. So we are going to spend the next couple months working to dominate local search. If someone types in “Indianapolis Web Design” or any variation we want to be #1, we want to be at the top of the Google Local listings as well. We also want to be on page one for a variety of different searches related to our industry and location. As you might expect we have been working hard on this for a while but over the next two months we are going to obsess over our rankings until a potential client in the Indianapolis area simply can’t ignore us no matter what they type into Google.

5. Improve Everything, All The Time- our goal is to do even better work, faster. I strongly believe that being continually reactive is no way to grow a company. You have to focus as much on the fire not yet started as the one currently roaring. So at our weekly meetings we often get into heated conversations about how we can improve the way we work. One brainstorming session brought about an in-house Quote Engine that we can use to give a client same day turn around on a proposal. Another great idea (from PJ) was to create and implement a Quality Assurance program. These are a couple examples but the key is to actually implement these ideas. There is a large gap between a great idea and it’s execution. My goal is for us to have a good and always improving batting average on turning good ideas into home runs.

6. Empower Employees- now that Small Box is no longer a start up and is entering into growth mode I am learning to delegate and empower our team. It’s hard to let go but it’s the only way to grow. In order for us to be the absolute best at what we do- using the web to grow businesses- everyone on the team has to buy-in to the big picture. Some of the ways we have encouraged buy-in is profit share, flexible working hours (and locations), commissions, raises and free meals. The result has been a team that does great work, enjoys doing it and enjoys each other. My goal is to keep this positive culture alive as we grow since I know it is the only way to have a healthy business in good or bad times.

iPhone Apps Reviews- Loving them but still waiting for the killer app

Sep
5
2008

4
Comments

I’ve spent a couple hundred dollars on iPhone apps over the last month hoping to write an amazing blog detailing the “10 Best iPhone Apps” but alas! I am still waiting to undercover an indispensable app that I can’t live without. Sure there are plenty of fun apps, slightly useful apps, apps you think you might need to use sometime but where is the “killer” app? So in lieu of a proper Top 10 iPhone Apps blog I have some random reviews of ones that I am finding of interest.

Pandora, a music streaming service, is pretty close to “killer” but I find their selection of material for artists to be very limited with a good deal of repeats after more than an hour of tuning in to a “station”. They need to offer a premium service with a wider selection and no restriction on how many “skips” you can have in an hour.

Yelp is cool if you are in a new city and want to find a good restaurant but it doesn’t let you submit reviews via the iPhone so it doesn’t really mimic the community feel of the site. Watch out Angie’s List, these guys are going to eat your lunch.

New York Times app is worthwhile, I use it pretty often but it doesn’t really have much on a normal web app like Google’s news reader.

My father in law loves the Bloomberg app since it gives him his stocks and loads quickly. He’s on a 3G as well so that doesn’t hurt.

The Hold’Em app is super impressive with lifelike graphics but I can’t say I ever have the urge to sit there and play cards on my phone. Maybe if I’m stuck in an airport sometime. Also, I suck at poker.

Weather Bug is nice since it lets you see a live radar feed of your local weather but it loads slowly and I find I just go to a computer instead of using it.

Band is a good novelty app and let’s you do real time recording but I can’t say it’s instruments are interesting enough to do any real song writing on the iPhone.

Labyrinth is pretty awesome I have to say. It exploits the motion sensor functionality of the phone and really feels like you are playing an old school Labyrinth with a stell ball, etc.

Tuner would be a killer app if it worked outside of a Wi-fi network, as it stands I can’t use it in the car which is a bummer. It lets you tune into 1000s of worldwide radio stations. I’ve long been a believer in Internet radio and this is a big step closer.

Shazam is definitely cool, I almost forgot about that one. You can put the phone up to a speaker and it will tell you what song and artist are playing. Could be useful if I actually listened to the radio outside of NPR. One problem is that by the time you load the app the song is often done. Needs a quick start solution.


Ok, so maybe I shouldn’t be so down on iPhone apps, there are some cool ones out there. But where is the voice dial app? (at least one that works). Why can’t my iPhone be a universal remote? And when is it going to do my dishes?

I have faith eventually all my iPhone app dreams will come true. Until then I will keep reminding myself that until the iPhone came along I didn’t know I needed these things so desparately. Damn you Steve Jobs!