
Charter School Development is a start up provider for new and existing charter schools. CSD works with local Charter School Boards, School Leaders and Educational Management Organizations in the development and construction of state of the art educational facilities.
CSD needed a simple, brochure type website to attract new business and showcase their first project, Peachtree Hope Charter School. Take 2 Digital worked with CSD’s graphic designer, Lee Smith, to build the WordPpress site from scratch and go live in less than a week.
Project Highlights:
- Entry level website using WordPress as a Content Management System.
- Display of project photos through feature banners and the NextGen gallery plugin for WordPress.
- Search Engine Optimization (SEO).
- Blog featuring press releases and latest projects.
Project Budget: $
MC² is full-service provider of corporate meeting and event planning services. Their client, GovEnergy, wanted to promote their commitment to sustainability by offering tree seedlings to the attendees of GovEnergy, an annual training conference for federal employees and their associated stakeholders. MC² and GovEnergy turned to Take 2 Digital to launch, Tree Branches of Government, a micro site to promote and create excitement for the GovEnergy Tree Tracker Giveaway and Tree planting program.
The WordPress site features:
- Registration form for participants to log their tree plantings. The form was created using the cformsII plugin for WordPress.
- The Registration form utilizes the google map javascript APIs to track the tree plantings. When a visitor logs a tree, the visitor’s IP address is used to plot the initial location.
- Integration with NextGen photo gallery and NextGEN Public Uploader plugins to allow participants to upload photos of their trees.
- SlideDeck for WordPress and Flexi Quote Rotator plugins to display Tree Planting Instructions and Tips.
- Search Engine Optimization and Metrics Tracking.
We worked with our design partner, Cindy Erni, to create the site.
Project budget: $
Georiga Shares is a 501(c)3 coalition of non-profit organizations with a common mission of social justice for all Georgians. The organization offers an easy way for employees to contribute to the Georgia Shares member agencies through their workplace giving programs.
Georgia Shares needed a website to reflect their newly designed logo. The new site content needed to be budget-friendly and easy for the client to maintain.
The project highlights include:
- Complete website creation using WordPress as a Content Management System.
- Display of Member Agency photos through NextGen gallery plugin for WordPress
- Integration with social media
- Set up Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
- Add blog and train client to maintain it
- Transfer site to a new web hosting provider
We were pleased to work with our Design Partner, Susan Archie of WorldofAnarchie, on the new site.
Project Budget: $
SocialOomph for Twitter Automation
Do you have too many posts, tweets, and status updates to post? How about blog entries, too? One service that can help automate all this posting is SocialOomph.com (formerly TweetLater). It offers free and paid versions. You can upgrade to a professional membership to enjoy more perks, such as scheduling recurring updates and blog posting. The free version is great if you’re someone who has at least one twitter account and plenty of content to share, with limited hours in the day to sit at the computer. Free accounts can post to Twitter, Buzz, and StatusNet. Paid accounts can post to those, plus Facebook, any blog, a blog feed, and ping.fm. You can schedule a reservoir queue of tweets to be posted automatically at a future date and time. Features included in the free version: Save drafts, track keywords, send auto welcome DMs to followers, URL shortening, extended Twitter profile, etc.
The appeal of SocialOomph is trifold. First, no one wants to be blasted with ten tweets from the same person all at once, even if you like them. Each tweet seems less important when sandwiched between six others. By scheduling status updates ahead of time, you can stagger them to give each tweet its time in the limelight. Better yet, you can schedule tweets to hit a certain time zone at the time that best serves your needs. Second, this is great for international posts. A tweet can go out at 3:36AM Eastern (US) while you’re sound asleep; your followers in Paris and Amsterdam will read it as they arrive to work in the morning. Third, for businesses, employees would rather leave their work at the office on Friday. But your twitter account may benefit from weekend activity because many consumers or customers check Twitter on the weekend.
If you’re interested in further helpful social media automation, check out Three Twitter Techniques, John Haydon‘s video on utilizing other services such as CoTweet.
What is your favorite Twitter service these days and why?
Emily BinderFor a couple years now, I have found the ever-expanding barrage of applications on social networking sites annoying and distracting. This post explains why LinkedIn users in particular should tread carefully with app integration.
Facebook Provenance
I maintain that I (and most of my generation born in the late 1980s) have a unique view on Facebook.
I started college in the first year Facebook became a household (/dorm-hold) name. It was summer 2005: I was preparing to depart for my freshman year at college. Ironically, my impetus for FB derived from a high school classmate who began balding at 18. Known for being born a middle-aged Republican man, we joked that Dan had a mild case of progeria (remember that movie Jack? I don’t either…)
Anyway, “Uncle Dan” mentioned his Facebook wall at a gathering, and somehow, already, the esoteric, club-like nature of early Facebook was obvious. I felt it in the air. So I did not admit my ignorance and later looked up this mysterious wall at home.
Flash forward a year- I’m on the Facebook; everyone is on Facebook. And suddenly Mark announces that photos will now be part of Facebook. People were upset. This was an invasion of privacy! Well, at least you knew that only .edu email addresses could register for accounts, so worrying about future employers seeing images of you doing a kegstand were moot.
Eventually, more and more apps arrived. Superpokes (what is a poke in the first place, really?) and then Mafia Wars, Farmville, etc. Causes. Gifts. You name it. All along, I hesitated to allow even basic apps to access my information. Something about clicking that green Allow button felt risky. Or like a snowballing departure from the original point of Facebook.
Despite my heavy FB privacy settings, I still maintain professionally acceptable candor, just in case. But I view it differently than people who were already mid-careers when it hit. I was about 18 when Facebook got popular. It surpassed MySpace and is now Number 1 for social media. My point is that despite having a few periodical schema-adjustments as new apps and new kinds of users were allowed on the site, I still see it as a friends/family social tool and not as one I have to seriously worry about using as a representation of my professional self. (Granted, the internet is the internet. Never overestimate your privacy anywhere.) Alors, the great solution is LinkedIn.
My parents (Baby Boomer, tech-savvy entrepreneurs who work extensively online) recommended LinkedIn c. 2008. I had heard of it but did not yet understand its greatness. The point is that this time, W.O.M. ensured legitimacy, unlike Uncle Dan’s mysterious “wall.” This simply triggered mystique (a la the fascination triggers by Sally Hogshead), but LinkedIn was prestige and power.
In my mental map of social media trashiness formality, I revere LinkedIn as shirts tucked-in, words spelled correctly, and tattoos mostly covered, (or at least tasteful and only displayed at “young” companies). However, LinkedIn does have Casual Friday: you can post your status updates and even share books you are reading via an Amazon application. But obviously, you don’t share cheap romance novels or guilty pleasure reads- you share professionally-relevant content from which your colleagues could benefit. In kind, you don’t post tweet-worthy or Facebook status-worthy content on a LinkedIn status update. It is simply not the venue. Furthermore, no one on LinkedIn is interested in where you checked in for lunch or how you just dethroned the mayor of Starbucks. Back up- what do I mean by venue?
Social networking sites are different for a reason. They are not unique in the ways I have just described so that you can meld them all together and eradicate the point of their specific uses. Chris Brogan is right: Do not post your tweets on LinkedIn. #in exists for a reason. Specify a column in TweetDeck or Hootsuite for Foursquare so you don’t have to actually tweet every checkin.
The theme is that players who joined the game at awkward times have no appreciation for the early iterations, and thus get confused about which new developments to take advantage of, and which to acknowledge as trigger-happy social media miscegenation, if you will.
Disclaimer: The rules of social media are evolving everyday and there is no one authority on how to behave.
I started my Etsy
shop almost a year ago. It began when a former coworker in Michigan mentioned she was selling her yoga mat bags. I hadn’t heard of the site. Around that same time in 2009, I had discovered a unique new method for baking cakes.
It involves jars. Flash forward to today- I have had about 75 sales to date and several local catering gigs. Through trial and error, I have figured out what works and what doesn’t.
For those who don’t know, Etsy is a top site for selling and buying handmade goods. I often explain it as a grassroots eBay, sans bidding. (However, the Alchemy section is similar to bidding. Buyers can request custom goods and sellers offer a price; then haggling occurs.)
Etsy has its own culture, one of individual attention and a commitment to genuine handmade quality. It is a real community. If you make anything with your hands, from food to clothes to art to canoes, Etsy might be the place for you to sell. Here’s the Etsy guide for beginner sellers. But I have my own tips too (a guide for sellers somewhat familiar with Etsy):
7 Etsy Seller Tips
1. Posting
Spell check and reread anything you post- errors look unprofessional and may create doubt as to your reliability.
2. Photos
Take quality pictures that display your products clearly- buyers want to see color, size (some items do well to be photographed next to a penny or ruler as a guide). Use a good digital camera and avoid artificial lights- photograph items in the daytime with natural light and in a setting relevant to the item. If it’s jewelry or clothing or an accessory, use photos of the item alone and then on a model. For edibles or other sanitary-sensitive goods, use discretion for having human models.
3. Interacting with Treasuries
Create a treasury to reach out, share cool items, and support other sellers. Treasuries are themed collections of handpicked items. For example, a treasury title might be: I Love Chocolate, Red, Father’s Day Gifts, etc. If you’re feeling charitable, a treasury featuring items that donate to a cause is a nice idea. Always let other sellers know you have featured their items. Etsy’s guide on creating treasuries.
For example, this is a Gulf Oil Spill Relief treasury I created in Treasury East (non-expiring):
There is the original Treasury West and the new beta testing ground for Treasury East. West treasuries expire and there is competition for space. As soon as one expires, you have the chance to jump in and create a new one. At East, however, new features include no expiration date on treasuries, wide screen, and easy rearranging of items similar to shop rearrangement. Rundown on East’s (IMHO superior) features.
4. Social Media
Blog, tweet, and/or create a Facebook page for your Etsy shop. This will help you engage with the community, and when appropriate (I.e. when balanced by more sharing of content than self-promotion) you can use it to advertise. Remember though, golden rule of social media: no one wants to fan or follow someone who purely self-promotes.
5. Listing
List in small quantities so that you can relist after a sale and have the item go back to the top of the default sorting of items, which is Most Recently Listed. (Searches can be by relevancy, price, and date of listing- but many people simply search with the default of recent listings.) Take advantage of this by relisting sold items often, or adding new items a couple times a month. A shop with all old listings looks like it’s not updated or cared about.
6. Communication
Communicate with your buyers. Be on top of your sales in a timely, polite, and grateful manner! Message them with a thank you and a notice you have shipped the item, along with the projected date of arrival. Don’t simply mark the item shipped. This ghost seller M.O. is considered “eerie.” Ask politely for Feedback in the note you include in the package or in a convo message after the transaction. I recommend a handwritten thank you note for every transaction.
7. Packaging (As in the 5 P’s)
You may know of the 5 P’s of marketing. Some lists (E.g. powersbusiness.com) include Packaging within Product, while others list Packaging as its own P: “The basic marketing tools known as the 5 P’s are still the most effective way to product launching. The 5 P’s stand for Promotion, Place, Price, Product, and Packaging.”
Or the list is: Product, Price, Placement, Promotion, and People (powerbusiness.com).
Either way, packaging is hugely important for Etsy specifically. If your product is just mediocre but is beautifully, originally wrapped and personalized, it will be better received. Think of Godiva’s lovely signature gold box. Imagine that the chocolates contain preservatives. Your mouth still waters at the sight of the packaging, right? (PS- Godiva did begin using preservatives, and the Lust trigger, which I learned in Sally Hogshead’s book Fascinate. Do peruse this book if you want your brand (or yourself) to be fascinating. See my blog on the Triggers of Fascination.)
Go green on packaging- the Etsy community loves this. Either mention in your Shop Announcement and/or include a card indicating how much of your packaging is recycled/recyclable. Go to USPS.com to order free packaging supplies. (I like the Flat Rate boxes because the small one is $4.95 and fits most of my single batch orders.) Boxes will be delivered to your house. Pack at home, and in bulk when you can- it’s faster and you have all your supplies in front of you, vs. navigating the stampede/cluster and disorganization of most sadly underfunded U.S. post offices.)
Do you have a specific Etsy question? Comment and I’ll answer.
Emily Binder



