Archive for November, 2009

Despite a tanking economy, Apple has record sales and profits and doesn’t need a fire sale to compete this holiday season.  Find out four things they have mastered which make this possible.

Apple is coming off the best performing fiscal year ever according to cNet, with $1.67 billion in profit – which is a whopping $1.82 per share of earnings.  This along with record sales for the Mac and iPhone, I wonder how Apple does it.

When other companies struggle to weather the economic storm, how is it that Apple is able to sell a record number of some of the most expensive phones and computers on the market?  Why is it that people are willing to put up with AT&T just to have the glorious iPhone?

Image of the new iMac from apple.com

Image of the new iMac from apple.com

Dell just came out with their earnings a few weeks ago and missed even the most modest analysts expectations with only $727 million in profit, or $0.27 per share.  Not even close to Apple, and the new Netbooks with Windows 7 is apparently pretty hot, right?

Part of the answer is how they package it. When you buy any Apple product, the packaging is very high end – you feel like you have purchased something very special.  When I first opened my new MacBook Pro box, I felt like I was opening a gift from Nordstrom’s. Open an HP box and it’s nothing special.  You actually get instructions that look like they were meant for a 5-year old, or those wordless graphics like you see in the backseat of an airplane.  Yep – I think I can figure out how to put the battery in – thanks.

Part of the answer is how they market the products. If you visit www.apple.com from a PC, you see a page really hyping the new iMac.  If you visit the page from a Mac, then you get a page pushing new accessories.  This is smart marketing.  Visit www.dell.com and to find a monitor, you first have to decide if it’s for Home or Office – as if it matters – do they price them differently?  The Apple home page is simple, easy to navigate and puts a big focus on the “hero”, which are the products.  Their checkout process is refined and brilliantly cross-sells other accessories leaving you no choice but to fill your cart with about $300 of more stuff that you absolutely have to have.  After all, that’s great marketing, right?

Part of the answer is their trusted brand. Apple has spent years building a brand.  A brand that you can trust is reliable and where the products will last.  The only company that decided it was better to manufacture the hardware and the software all in the same place.  That means installing new software or applications will only require you to click and drag an icon, rather than having to scour the Internet for a driver.

Part of the answer is innovation. The innovative products that Apple keeps pumping out are a huge factor in their success.  If your company doesn’t change, or innovate, you likely will not experience explosive growth, revenue or profits.

So if you have all of these things and you’ve been able to create insatiable demand, you really don’t need to have sales on days like “black Friday.”  Not only would a sale “cheapen” the brand, but it creates an expectation in the mind of the consumer that all you have to do is wait and eventually the price will go down.  This is what the cable companies do at the end of every month, and car companies do at the end of every year.  Surely you’ve heard the best time to buy a car is at the “end of the year clearance sales” – right?  Apples doesn’t need sales, and unless the competition brings, well….competition, they probably won’t even have to lower their prices much either.

New data is out to show that visitors want sites to load in 2 seconds or less, and Google says fast sites may get slight preference in rankings.

A new study by Akamai confirms that Internet users are as fickle as ever.  Their new study released in September this year shows that 47% of consumers expect an e-commerce website to load in 2 seconds or less.  While the study focuses on e-commerce, I can’t imagine the behavior is much different on a non-e-commerce website.

You might remember the study we did several months ago where we took the Akamai study from 2006 and developed a visitor loss curve from 0 to 30 seconds using some fancy math.  We use this data in our SiteJuice product to tell site owners how much potential visitors they could be losing based on how long their page is taking to load.  If you’re not using SiteJuice, sign up for free.  Our curve is based on a visitor patience of up to 4 seconds.

How this affects your Google rankings

Google search engineer, Matt Cutts, has mentioned twice now that Google may be giving a slight advantage to pages that load quickly, while slow loaders won’t receive a penalty on their rankings.  Rand Fishkin from SEOmoz writes about in their blog post yesterday, where “web page load times can positively influence rankings.

We’d like to thank you for trying out SiteJuice as your SEO Tool.  Some of the feedback we’ve received shows us that the tool is not as intuitive as we initially thought, and we’re working hard to make some usability changes. This is not something we can accomplish in a week, so we’re launching the next best thing: live chat!

We’re excited to announce the availability of live chat today to help answer your questions in real time, so we encourage you to use this feature when something isn’t obvious, or you’re getting frustrated with the UI.

Or if you’re bored and just want to chat with Graham, Ryan, or Vid. :)

If you’ve never used a live chat feature before, it’s rather simple. There is now a link in the header at the top right you can click which will launch a separate window for the chat. Enter a screen name with your question and click submit to get started. You’ll automatically be connected to one of us here who can help you. That’s all there is to it!  If we happen to be unavailable, you can still submit a question through the chat window and we will get on it right away.

A few things we’re working on:

  • making the user interface more intuitive.  Some folks have mentioned that the green banner is confusing and looks like primary navigation, and everything else is sub navigation.
  • There are a couple of bugs in Link Analysis and Keyword Watch.  You may see some keywords come up with no search volume, or the position is incorrect.  Link Analysis is not scoring each link properly in some cases.
  • We’re going to put an “In process” indicator for ech new keyword that you add to Keyword Watch, and also add a button to allow you to add all of the keyword suggestions at once.
  • Competitor Monitoring may show you some competitors in the list that you did not add…..we believe we fixed that this morning

Please continue to provide feedback – we appreciate your support!

You heard it right…I use Keynote to develop iterations on user interface design for our products and front end retail site.  This method saves us a ton of time and cost in design and development.  I used to use PowerPoint, but then converted to a MacBook Pro a few months ago, and now I’m hooked on Keynote.

Before I get into how this works, I need to mention how cool is it that you can control your Keynote slide presentation with your iPhone by downloading the Keynote Remote app for like two bucks.  Just had to get that off my chest…

Ok, here we go:

1. Start with a basic wireframe – you’ll need to spec something out for your designer to get started.  Give them the basic elements of where you want navigation, sub-navigation, and general text and image requirements.  You basically have your header, body section and footer area.  You also might want to have an interior page concept as well.  Below I am showing you how I went from a PowerPoint slide (at the time) to the almost final design:

Here is another example of how I started designing and concepting our SiteJuice™ tool in Keynote and how it transformed into Photoshop:

2.  Research web icon sets and photos you want to use – I like to use actual icons and images in my concepts to portray the website as real as possible.  This way you can see how it would actually look, and then play with size and location.  Go to istockphoto or similar and look for “web icons” and you’ll find thousands.  I ended up with the Universal icon set, and purchased about nine different sets.  You can do a screen capture to use in your screenshots while concepting – just make sure you go and buy them later :)

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