Archive for ‘Design

Why the 24 Hour Web Project Works

Oct
12
2010

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When we did the first 24 Hour Web Project in July 2009 with Second Helpings, it was a bit of a leap of faith. Yes, we did some planning (Does the server work? Will we be able to connect to the internet during the project? Will we have all the content from the client? and so forth), but it was the first time we’d ever designed, developed and launched a website in 24 contiguous hours. Even more so, it was a website for someone else, so we had to collaborate with a new team we hadn’t worked with yet. We were counting on seamless communication and collaboration between teams, for decisions to be made quickly and definitively, for our team to work fast enough to design and build the site in the time allotted, and for everything to work out enough that we’d be able to let go and have a bit of fun together during that 24 hours. I have to say, I think we did quite well for ourselves and I’m very proud of both teams.

Fast forward to September 29-30 when we did the same thing for the Madame Walker Theatre. Again, similar leap of faith and similar success.

After both Projects, we’ve received questions like, ‘Why can’t you build EVERY site in 24 hours?’ or more accurately, ‘Why can’t you build MY site in 24 hours?’ This is a good question, so let’s talk about why the 24 Hour Web Project works.

We only have 24 hours.
This is probably the biggest factor. Since we have just 24 hours to complete a site, we have to be swift in our assessment of the client’s needs, brainstorm and sketch our ideas quickly, and make decisions efficiently. There’s little room for waffling back and forth on an idea. So the time constraint really helps to keep the project moving along.

Preliminary planning.
In order to ensure a successful 24 hours, we take time to plan a few things in the weeks prior. This includes working through technical issues such as where the site will be hosted, where the domain is registered, what payment gateways we need (if any), as well as working with the client to come to a somewhat final site map and making sure the client comes to the start of the Project with at least 90% of the content for the site. This way, we spend the 24 hours focused on creating a message and website design for the client’s target audience, and coding and developing that design and tweaking the content to align with that message (as well as for SEO!).

The client knows how to engage, when to trust us, and when to provide input.
In both Projects we had two members from the client’s team who provided approval and signoff at the necessary points during the Project. Both teams got involved in the process when needed and trusted us to do our jobs well when the time came (and often provided musical entertainment during those times). In addition, this allowed us to be more agile through the project and helped us avoid potential design by committee mishaps.

Both teams are in the same room with each other the whole time.
This means instant communication. If we need feedback on designs or questions answered on content details, we can go straight to the client who is sitting two seats away and get direct feedback/answers.

We only do it once a year.
If we created sites in 24 hours every week (while trying to do everything else we do), we’d be burnt out in no time. It certainly takes a lot of energy to pull it off, not only from the team involved in the Project, but from the rest of our team holding up the fort and maintaining our other projects back in the office. Without the support of everyone on our team, we wouldn’t be able to even have a 24 Hour Web Project. So a big thank you to everyone directly and indirectly involved.

And thank you to the folks who watched our live blog, live video feed, live tweets and supported us from the great Internet space (and to those who donated to the Walker Theatre during the project!). We can’t wait for the next project. Hopefully it will be bigger and better than ever, and hopefully we can get you more involved.

See you next year!


Austin Web Design – Making it Easy

May
15
2010

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If you are looking for a Web Design Company in Austin, look no further than Small Box Web Design. We know that you have choices when it comes to building your web identity, why trust your web marketing to anyone else.

Does your web designer work under contract to a separate agency?

At Small Box we do all our work with full time employees. We have a great staff of professionals who have built sites in any industry imaginable.

Are you being sold a cookie cutter site?

Word Press, Joomla, and Drupal are all fine content management systems, but let’s be honest. There are good and bad programmers. There are template designs and custom designs. There are sites that fail to meet business needs, and then there are Small Box sites.

The Small Box CMS a collection of powerful SEO controls and intuitive site management tools that are exactly what you need.

Is working with your site difficult?

Then make a change. Call Small Box Austin at 512-850-4819. PJ Christie will be glad to provide you with the information you need.


Our Partnership with WDD Inc.

May
11
2010

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The following is a press release for our new partnership with WDD Inc. Our two companies are not merging but looking to join forces to pursue larger, mutual opportunities.

Small Box, WDDinc Form Partnership to Offer

Fully Integrated, Complex Web Solutions

Indianapolis, IN (May 10, 2010) — Indianapolis-based Small Box Web Design and WDD, Inc. announce their partnership to pursue larger engagements, offering clients more advanced Web based solutions.

Both Small Box and WDDinc are highly successful Web businesses specializing in their respective areas of expertise; Small Box in Web site design, Internet marketing and the user experience, and WDDinc in complex programming, Web development and systems integration. The businesses will now partner and offer their top core competencies to larger clients as one team.

Jeb Banner, Small Box CEO explains, “Because our businesses are highly focused on separate aspects of the Web, our services perfectly compliment one another. By joining forces on larger projects, we’ll be able to offer better-integrated solutions for clients. It’s a win-win situation for everyone involved.”

The partnership between Small Box and WDDinc will allow the companies to provide full-service, more elaborate Web capabilities.

“We’re very excited about our partnership with Small Box. By adding the best of breed interactive media offerings from Small Box to our best of breed back-end software development and testing capabilities, we become a much more robust company with an offering unsurpassed in the Midwest,” states Alan Wlasuk, a Principal at WDDinc.

About WWD, Inc.

Founded in 1993, WDDinc., is an Indianapolis-based custom software development, testing and engineering company providing software expertise to a large variety of clients. WDDinc focuses on high-quality software for clients with unique needs ranging from data center infrastructures to multi-national call centers. WDDinc client base spans the United States and their software is used throughout the globe. www.WDDinc.com

About Small Box Web

Small Box is an Indianapolis, Indiana based Web design and Web development company that provides professionally designed Web sites as well as Internet marketing, social media marketing, search engine optimization (SEO) and new media consulting services for organizations and agencies throughout Indiana and the Midwest. www.SmallBoxWeb.com


Small Box Austin – Now Open for Business

May
9
2010

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Small Box is pleased to announce that our new office in Austin Texas is now open for business. Since 2006 Small Box has been providing custom web solutions for businesses and non profit organizations in Indianapolis.

Now Small Box is taking the same great design and technology to a new level. Austin Texas is different from anywhere else. There is a big focus on Social Networking. There are many entrepreneurs and business startups looking for venture capital.

Our goal is to be a one stop shop for anyone looking to have a great looking site on the first page of the search engines. Call PJ Christie at 512-850-4819.

Follow our special Twitter feed @smallboxaustin for local insights including SXSW.


Embracing Constraints- from Music to the Web

Apr
12
2010

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Tape Machine Reel To Reel

Music is a common bond for most Small Box employees. Most of us play at least one instrument and if not have strong opinions about those who do. We have an internal project, MusicalFamilyTree.com, that keeps us connected to our music roots. At one point or another some of us thought, foolishly!, that we might go pro with music. Instead we have funneled that energy into designing, building and marketing websites. I’ve found there are a number of crossover lessons with these two seemingly disparate disciplines.

I grew up recording on cassette 4 Tracks with very limited equipment. A 4 track was just that- 4 audio tracks to fit all of your guitars, bass, drums, vocals, keyboards etc on to. But I learned how to maximize that constraint, make the best of it. I would record to three tracks, bounce down to one, record to two, bounce to one, etc until I had a wonderful wall of lo-fi sound that came pretty close to the thing I heard in my head.

As I got older I had access to real studios and better gear including 8, 16 and even 24 track machines. These things are as big as washing machines. But you were still limited to how many tracks you had and tape was expensive ($100-200 for 30 minutes). You also had to be careful about wearing out the tape during recording and mixing. Each take and mix mattered. This forces you to focus and make choices.

When computer recording came along it offered a world with few constraints- no real limit of tracks, no tape to wear out, etc. But that doesn’t mean the albums are actually better. It used to be a band would record an album, mix, master and press it all within 30-60 days. Now it is usually 1-2 years. This while we live in a world where you can record a song in the morning and have it posted in MP3 format to a website for anyone to hear by the evening. Think of all the albums that were never recorded since the band was spending years tweaking something that was already finished- hello Axl Rose and “Chinese Democracy”.

The limitlessness realm we are approaching with technology is fun and exciting but let’s remember the technology itself is not an end, it’s a tool. As we adopt new devices, interfaces and functionality we have to ask- Does this actually improve the experience? Is it adding or removing value?

To the Web.

Since the Web has so few limits it’s difficult to artificially impose constraints but I am beginning to see that we have no choice. In order to deliver a website/app for a client on time/budget requires discipline from both parties. This is especially challenging when your medium is perhaps the least disciplined in the history of mediums! Anything goes with the Web, for better or worse.

The easiest/laziest thing to do when faced with multiple choices is to not make a choice, leave every door open as long as possible letting in all kinds of distracting ideas. The Web is a world of a million ideas and making decisions hurt, at first you feel like you are stepping on ants for no good reason. It’s easy to start second guessing- “maybe the original logo was better”, “maybe we should have added a blog”, “maybe we should have gone with green?”, “maybe we need to add ‘FAQ’ to the main navigation”, etc. These kinds of decisions, often ones that can be changed later if really needed, can drag a project down. They hurt morale and momentum. They stop the next album from ever getting into production.

So the web is limitless but time and money is not. This is a good thing! Endless resources are the root of all waste. Limited resources create discipline. For a project to be successful all stakeholders must agree on and embrace the existing constraints. This doesn’t have to mean a defined scope of work as much as an understanding of budget, timeline and goals. Scope will change. It’s just a guess anyway until you dig into the project. But just like recording you only have so much tape, so much time and lots of tracks to lay down. So let’s embrace constraints, see them as needed chalk lines and get the job done on time and on budget!

Related reading: “Rework” by 37 Signals (this book and my time in Austin for SXSWi greatly influenced this post).