Recent Posts

New client - Graves Jenkins

by Sean Brasington 7. January 2011 14:40

GJ-logoGraves Jenkins are a leading, Sussex based estate agent, providing a mix of commercial and professional property services. 

Following an extensive pitch process, we’ve been commissioned to redevelop Graves Jenkins’ website and CRM system. Our winning proposal involved a totally bespoke software solution tailored to their exact business requirements.

The new website will hopefully look great (naturally), but will more importantly provide the tools for the business to take full advantage of online marketing and sophisticated client database management.

The winning formula
We don’t want too give much away yet, but some of the proposed features include:

  • Social media integration
  • Fully configurable client area with preferences and alerts
  • Comprehensive and easy to use search facility and alert system
  • Automated email property alerts
  • Google map integration
  • Enhanced property details.

Phil Graves, Director at Graves Jenkins told us,

"The decision to appoint the right website design agency was a difficult one as the City has a plethora of good quality agencies in a rapidly expanding media business. We have recognised that the new website will have to meet the demands of new business and be more interactive online. The property industry is ever changing and Graves Jenkins are keen to keep pushing new boundaries which is something which we are known for.

Gravitate Media were selected from a short list of agencies, as they demonstrated a complete understanding of our project requirements and company values. We very much look forward to a long term business relationship."

Watch this space
We’re obviously delighted and excited to have won the contract, and are very keen to get stuck in immediately. Please keep an eye out for any announcements in the early spring regards launch dates. 

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Clients | Web Design

Trading Places

by Sean Brasington 2. November 2010 13:20

We’re pleased to announce the launch of our latest client website, http://www.baymarkets.com/

The Swedish based I.T. company, provide cutting-edge software for OTC derivative trading systems and have a prestigious portfolio of clients such as the Norwegian Stock Exchange, Vantage Capital Markets and Cleartrade.
baymarkets-screen-shot

Baymarkets asked us create a website to communicate their core sales messages effectively to their highly corporate market. Following an extensive consultative design process, we’ve delivered a very clean layout with a generous use of white-space offset by powerful abstract images.

Having recently been launched at an international trade show in Chicago, the site has so far been met with universal approval.  We are confident that the site will perform and help Baymarkets improve their already impressive track record.

We’ll be reporting measuring and reporting on site performance as per usual, so watch this space…

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Clients | General | Web Design

Issues with website templates

by Sean Brasington 26. October 2010 17:36

It often bothers the collective Gravitate Media psyche how often simple web design principles are ignored in favour of a one-size-fits all approach.

Off-the-shelf website templates have become increasingly popular, especially with the proliferation of WordPress blogging tool with its numerous third-party plug-ins and burgeoning development community. Their popularity is testimony to the tempting freedom it can offer businesses with the obvious potential short term cost savings. But before everyone runs off and attempts DIY website solutions, businesses should remember that most off-the-shelf web templates are exactly that – a basic template – and as such should be handled with care.

A working exampleahelpinghand

We were recently approached by A Helping Hand, a London based company offering one-to-one IT tuition for silver surfers. Following numerous conversations about their website performance, we were commissioned to improve design and user experience of certain key pages.  What was immediately clear from initial discussions was as the site was based on an adapted WordPress template many of the finer details that add up to a commercially successfully online presence had been missed.

Generic home page

Their existing home page used an identical grid/layout to the rest of the site (as dictated by the WordPress template). This presented the visitor with long paragraphs of copy devoid of visual prompts – the result was at best underwhelming and did not work nearly hard enough.

Along with setting the tone and creating the right immediate impression, a good home page design should encourage and entice visitors into the most effective zones of the internal site. Our solution http://www.ahelpinghand.co.uk/ broke up the main central column up into multiple areas descending in a hierarchal order. 

Ecommerce issues

The page selling vouchers also suffered by adhering to the generic Wordpress template. Important ecommerce features like the Buy Now buttons were pushed far too low on the page and the purchase options confusing.

Page example pre-overhaul

Gift-Ideas-promo_before

We applied tried and tested design principles by splitting the main column up into two. Our solution brought the call to actions up above the page fold and allowed for a greater level of supporting messages and information.

Page example post-overhaul

Gift-Ideas-promo_after

The lesson

Although off-the-shelf templates may seem to offer a tempting short-cut, the visual solution that they produce can be rather generic and lack individuality. Many professional websites share similar goals but individual design requirements are rarely identical. In order to get the most out of any template purchased or provided by the likes of WordPress, expertise in the shape of for an experienced designer is still required. This then begs the question whether it may be better (and more cost-effective in the long run) to ask an experienced designer to produce a bespoke website from scratch in the first place.

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Clients | General | Web Design

Appointing an SEO Agency

by Sean Brasington 1. October 2010 16:19

searchmarketing Regardless of business size, selecting a partner to help develop your search marketing can be a confusing and at best daunting experience. To the uninitiated, SEO at best can appear like a dark art and this perception is certainly not helped by the shroud of secrecy that Google keeps about the true nature of their engine. This quick guide, although by no means exhaustive, is aimed to help business decision make an informed decision when choosing the right agency to work on a SEO project.

Black, white and grey hats – the importance of ethical SEO

A problem, particularly for small businesses, is that there is still what can be best described as cowboys operating, often making wild claims of getting your company to the top position of Google within weeks. Although, a part of SEO has historically been about reverse engineering the search engines algorithms to perform better than your competitors, there is a dividing line between what is considered acceptable. What at first may appear to gain you a short term boost in rankings can often run the risk of having your website removed from the search engine index indefinitely.

Black hat techniques are sometimes referred to as search engine spamming. One example is repeating an important keyphrase many times on the home page. Another is using text that is the same colour as the background of the page, so the keyphrase is visible to the search robots but not to the human reader. Engineering pages for robots is a practice known as “cloaking”. Other well-known examples are doorway and visibly optimised pages and the use of link-farms.

Such approaches should always be avoided if you care about long-term success. Only ever talk to a search optimiser who wears a white hat (although many may wear a grey one). A white hat approach uses an ethical approach that conforms to best practice set out by the search engines. A good rule of thumb is to ask yourself  “Does this aspect of a search imitative make the visitor experience or the way the brand is presented better or worse”.

Always ask a potential agency of examples of how they achieved success for clients. If they don’t list ethical techniques such as Keyword Analysis, On Page Optimisation, and SEO Link Building and above all creating relevant and engaging content head for the hills.

Does size matter?

Big brands tend to naturally choose one of the bigger, better known SEO agencies. Large agencies will have a higher daily rate but will have the experience of delivering results and their size gives them the chance to hire staff with a wide variety of skills. Change is constant in this world, so the more time a company can dedicate to staff education the better. In smaller agencies, a lot of time will be spent simply learning on the job and their time may be split between several clients.

However, there is also a risk with selecting a large search-marketing agency. If a client is relatively low value, then they may get less attention from account managers and may not get the best available SEO technicians. A smaller company may also have the motivation to go the extra mile to help build reputation so big doesn’t always equate to better. The final decision will usually be dictated by size of budget but remember SEO is a long term strategy and most agencies will insist on a minimum contract period of 6 to 12 months, with appropriate exit clauses.

Get with the program

Search marketing is a hugely dynamic discipline; what is accepted practice today can be outdated by the next. Although it is an exciting time to be involved in the sector, more and more search practitioners are being left behind, adhering to what used to work and sticking with habits even if they don’t produce tangible results. But how do you tell the search-marketing dinosaurs apart from the more progressive and cutting edge professionals? The following is a quick overview of some of the tell tale signs.

Too much emphasis on keyword density

Keyword or keyphrase density remains a useful SEO technique. It aims to sensibly place key search terms into your web copy (typically repeated to a predestined percentage). But over reliance on density of keywords is a far too simplistic method to estimate what is a hugely complicated process carried out by all the engines to determine the relevance of page content.

What are more important is context, relevance and meaning. Consider the following scenario; Google has two different pages to consider when returning search results for the term The Rolling Stones.  One has the phrase Rolling Stones but in context of a scientific study of the rate of movement of rocks down a mountainside, the other is a biopic of the rock group containing relevant words such as Mick Jagger etc – you get the picture. We can safely assume that the page that ranks higher will be the latter. As a search engine’s value is measured by the relevance of its results to the users intention, it must judge content not by how many times a word appears but the content of the supporting copy. Therefore, creating expert copy that uses relevant and authoritative language will always be far more important part of an overall strategy rather than simply repeating certain words.

They don’t mention creating content for your site

“Content is king” has always been the mantra of search professionals although not everyone practices what they preach. Alarm bells should start to ring if an agency doesn’t display a creative approach to adding new and compelling content to your site. Search engines just love regularly updated content, and tools such as blogs are one of the best vehicles for achieving this (it also generates extra content from contributors).

Don’t have an integrated approach to Link Building/Online PR

Although link building has long been a central to any SEO strategy, gone are the days when the accumulation of large volumes of inbound links was a fruitful exercise. Gaining relevant inbound links from high-ranking websites requires an approach that is truly multi-disciplinary and collaboration with your PR team is pre-requisite for any successful natural search campaign. Specific promotions, for example, should focus on seeding content throughout a wide range of targeted websites and a variety of other online channels such as social media and news aggregators.

Lack of in-depth tracking and reporting

Constant reporting is crucial to the DNA of SEO. In order to assess and measure the relative success of any campaign, monthly reports historically normally show page rank for a wide variety of targeted keyphrases with associated conversion rates.  However, when assessing path to conversion metrics, most tracking software fails to give a true picture of user journey. For example, a sale may be attributed to a click from an affiliate banner ad or PPC ad without showing that the same user may have previously found the same product via an organic search. Without using the latest, most sophisticated tracking software, crucial information is usually missing that would otherwise let us see the true performance of your organic traffic.  

Of course, by the time you probably read this current thinking would have probably moved on…

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