Posts Tagged ‘Google’

Tools for Small Business

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Starting and running a small business is one of the most challenging things a person can take on. In a large company there is the luxury of a specialist for every task. The entrepreneur has no such luxury. Everything from accounting to legal to technology must be learned. Sometimes not mastered, but at least learned to an extent that you can hire someone to clean up your mess.

Perhaps the most important quality in an entrepreneur is the ability to know one’s own limits. Few can master everything but we can get a pretty good handle on it. For my business it has been fun learning a bit of everything but also a huge relief as I hand things off to the lawyer, accountant, and developer. In our role as small business technology coaches and consultants we advise a lot of clients in many industries and many stages of business. We often see the same problems and we even fell into some of the same traps ourselves. What we are providing here is a list (current only as of today) of some of our favorite tools for the DIY entrepreneur. Some of these are permanent solutions and sometimes these are good startup and interim tools. How and when they are implemented varies from business to business.

Domain Names and Web Hosting

One of my favorite places for both domain names and hosting is MyHosting.com based in Toronto. Great service and very good prices. There are many hosts so I encourage you to shop around and read many reviews before committing. Do not decide based on price and popularity.

The Safe and Profitable Web

Safe Surfing: Do yourself a huge favor and stop using Internet Explorer. Seriously. There are several very safe, fast, stable alternatives including Firefox, Google’s Chrome, and Opera.

Passwords: You’ve heard this but statistically speaking you aren’t listening. This is getting serious. Change your passwords, make them strong, and keep them safe. Here is a great article by John Pozadzides on LifeHacker. Use a utility like RoboForm, KeePass, or LastPass. Mac users have the best with 1Password by Agile Web Solutions.

Email: Gmail is a favorite choice for many. It has many strengths including security and the ability to use it on any computer. It is also very nicely integrated into Google Apps which will be discussed elsewhere. If you use Gmail we suggest you still use your own domain name for branding. So gsawyer@sawyertraining.com rather than gsawyer@gmail.com. Both will work in the Gmail application. For some a more robust Personal Information Manager such as Thunderbird is a better choice.

Networking and Identity: are essential in any business. Of the many many Social Media tools available the one that stands out as premier for the entrepreneur is LinkedIn. For some it may be a tool for generating customers, for others it is more useful for peer-to-peer networking. In either case LinkedIn is a useful tool. Some have expressed concerns with issues such as identity theft and personal information used against them by employers. Properly used (and assuming proper safeguards by the service) no Social Media should put uses in jeopardy. However, if you use weak password, click indiscriminately, fail to keep your computer and account free of virii and maleware, or post compromising pictures of yourself you will probably suffer no matter what network you are on.

Another useful tool for identity and networking online is Flavors.me. Slick, clean, easy, and free, Flavors.me is a simple way to get a web presence without necessarily building a whole website. In fact, many types of businesses today would be better off simply engaging and utilizing Social Media rather than a traditional website. Basically, why spend the time and money to build something if it will add no more value than what you can use for free. Social Media gives you instant marketing channels and simple set up. For example, consider using Flavors.me as a home page (for a small fee you can get the premium service that allows you to use your own domain) and link from there to your LinkedIn (about us page), a Facebook Page (marketing), and Etsy (sales). There is even a contact link at the bottom so people can send you a note. Is it the same as a professionally design website? No. But it is very quick and simple and a great way for many entrepreneurs to start without a huge investment in money or energy until they can get a full-fledged site up. Indeed, the investment in Social Media marketing can do no harm.

Business Continuity

This is one of the most heart wrenching stories we hear: the business owner who’s computer died and lost everything. Don’t let this happen. Computers do die and attacks happen. You can’t afford to loose your work and your business. Do you leave your shop unlocked when you leave? Do you leave home with the stove burning? We are in a digital world now whether that means one old computer in the shop or a Cloud Server and Social Media Marketing. Safety and security are essential. So what are the threats and how do you mitigate them? Good maintenance can save you significantly in repair costs to boot.

Virii and Maleware: These can wreck your computer, steal your data, turn your computer into a criminal zombie, and much more. Use an anti-virus software and keep your computer cleaned up. We suggest Avast! free version. You will need to register it but be sure to select only the free version. We also suggest a nice little application called CCleaner. CCleaner is a free tool that cleans the histories, cookies, and other junk from your computer. Cleaning will speed up your computer, help it run faster, and can make it more stable. CCleaner also includes a registry cleaner which can help eliminate or reduce little Windows issues.

Backup: There are several options here. We typically recommend using a service like Mozy or DropBox to automatically backup your files off-site. Three very important words here: automatically, backup, off-site. Automatically, because you will forget. Backup, because you care. Off-site, because if your office burns down with your backup external drive inside what good is that? Mozy and DropBox are two different types of service but can accomplish similar things. Mozy is strictly a backup service. Your files are stored securely and safely until you need them. DropBox adds the additional feature of being able to access your files anytime through any web browser. Both have free price levels and additional services for the paid levels.

Office Productivity

Word Processing, Spreadsheets, and Presentations, oh my. We suggest skipping the ubiquitous Microsoft Office in favor of a less expensive but equally powerful alternative. Two come to mind as very strong competitors. Google Apps Standard Edition is a sufficiently powerful and feature-rich suite for most small businesses. The Premier Edition adds some features useful primarily in an enterprise setting. Indeed, Google Apps has begun to gain some traction in the enterprise market and is leads the field in cloud-based business suites. Google Apps provides the core requirements with a word processor, spreadsheets, forms, presentations, and a basic drawing tool. Files can be shared and collaborated on with granular security. In addition Google Apps is completely hosted making it available from any browser on any computer. Once HTML 5 is fully available there will also be the ability to use Google Apps (and other tools) when disconnected from the Internet. To make the deal even sweeter, Google Apps integrates Gmail, Google Calendar, Contacts, a simple site building tool, and allows other third-party applications to integrate such as TimeBridge. With all of this, a low (or free) price tag, and Google’s stability and security you can see why it is become a major player.

Even with all of those tools many of us still rely on OpenOffice.org. OOo is an Open Source office productivity suite featuring a very mature set of features rivaling Microsoft Office almost point for point. OOo is a more mature suite than Google Apps and includes word processors, spreadsheets, presentations, a very nice drawing tools, and a database application. OOo is very easy to learn and use with a user interface almost identical to Microsoft’s Office 2003.

If you find you can’t choose between OOo and Google Apps don’t worry. They are both standards compliant and talk very politely to each other. In fact, we use both in our office and they function quite seamlessly allowing us to make use of the best features of each. For those that do more than their share of presentations try out Prezi. I may never go back to PowerPoint.

George J. Sawyer III is Technology Coach & CEO of Sawyer Training, Inc.

The Browser App Generation

Friday, May 29th, 2009

In case you are wondering why Microsoft announced their Bing search engine yesterday, well it might have to do with the big Google event in San Francisco the past couple days called Google I/O. [Note to my students: You WILL watch the keynotes!] At I/O Google rolled out it’s new gadgets and development tools and folks are taking notice making for a big week in tech news. One of the biggest messages we should be taking away is that the way we do things is changing. A few years ago we might have heard this message as simply marketing talk. Sure every new gadget is going to change our lives. No really, now they are serious. We are in a watershed moment or as CEO Eric Schmidt says, “It’s Time”. The reality is that most users are integrating and assimilating these technologies at a pace so rapid and so smoothly that we hardly notice the change. MySpace to Facebook to Twitter to…what’s next. Users are expecting the changes and even demanding it. We heard this same message from Adobe CEO Shantanu Narayen at the CS4 launch broadcast.

So what will we see in the future? The web is no longer simply a sheet of digital paper to type your business statistics for people to read. The web is now a platform for application development. Vic Gundotra, VP for Engineering at Google says “Never underestimate the web…Yes, the web has won, it has become the dominant programming model of our time.” With a foundation in HTML 5 Vic showed demos of the “five things that excite Google” which should, of course, be five things we keep our eyes on.

Canvas: Using HTML and JavaScript Canvas “defines drawing and animation APIs with pixil-level control”. Going beyond what we can do in Flash and Silverlight, Canvas gives the ability to render graphics in the browser with near-native speed and quality. With O3D 3D graphics using JavaScript Google is experimenting with 3D graphics running on the graphics processor that will compete with what can be done in native gaming graphics. When you see the demo watch the water!

Video: Google is working in HTML 5 and JavaScript to allow simple insertion of video using a <video> tag equivalent in simplicity to <img> and free of plugins and codecs.

GeoLocation: Google has taken some criticism on this one for their pioneering work but the potential is great and the work so far has a real “wow” factor. The example of the mobile warrior connecting her CRM to geolocation certainly should suggest some valid business uses.

App Cache and Database: Here is a big one I am personally watching. Google Apps has been a huge success so far with it’s ability to open and edit both Microsoft as well as OpenOffice.org formats (though admittedly poor at spreadsheets) completely free of a native application (and for free). Google has far outpaced Microsoft with their attempt at Office Live. Google Apps is quickly moving toward apps which have not only fully cached data but the apps themselves run in fully-functional mode off line. This has great business potential and could bring competition to OpenOffice.org and certainly shows room for collaboration between these two great organizations to blur the line between web and desktop experiences.

Web Workers: background processing using JavaScript inside the browser!! Have to be a real geek to know how this works but we will all be benefiting from this very soon. Oh, and on the geek developer side make note of the Java support Google is working on. And then there is Android.

Where is IE in all this? Vic “danced past that elephant” by saying “IE could do much to move the web forward … [Microsoft is committed to HTML 5] …we eagerly await to see evidence of that…”

Where was Firefox? Well, they were there. Yep, Mozilla VP Jay Sullivan spoke at the keynote on the new Firefox 3.5 and its support fro geolocation (almost a Microsoft Windows 95 launch moment there) and it was made clear Google is not simply competeing with Chrome but it is a cooperative competition based on the standards.

George J. Sawyer III, Technology Coach & CEO of SawyerTraining, Inc.

“Taking the guesswork from your decisions…” - Bing

Thursday, May 28th, 2009

Trust us - we’re Microsoft. From cameras to french restaurants to your health Microsoft will all but make the decisions for you. Bing! Today Microsoft unveiled it’s newest attempt (replacing Live Search) in the online search market which, to date, has been almost as big a flop as Vista. No one would ever accuse Google’s algorithms of being perfect. But in truth, isn’t it amusing when you are met at each search with a score of ads selling you the Gutenberg Bible or boasting the best price on the planet Mars? And then there’s the porn. So how does Microsoft plan to solve this lingering problem in the search results? Make the decisions for you. The title web site bing.com resolves to the real site which is DecisionEngine.com (is this good SEO?). Here’s where the trust comes in.

The internet is bad and full of lies. You can’t trust it. Medical advice on the internet comes from a thirteen year-old boy. In steps the trusted expert Microsoft. By searching on Bing, Microsoft will only display truth and those things which are best for you in every way. Cameras? Microsoft will only display the best retailers. Travel? The best travel agents. Medical advice? The best authorities. Bing will even sort and filter everything for you to help you find just what Microsoft wants you to find — er… I mean what you are looking for. Well, same thing.

Maybe back in the days when search engine models actually involved people making decisions that could be trusted. But even then? Who does Microsoft think is the medical expert best able to answer my problems? Perhaps I want a second opinion? So now we are to trust Microsoft and blindly. And just to prove that Microsoft will be able to make completely unbiased and fully expert disisons they have partneres with “hundreds of online retailers” to bring you cash back when you trust their decisions. I’m just kind of curious where in the ranking those “hundreds of online retailers” will be? They wouldn’t all be at the top of course. Trust us -we’re Microsoft.

Is Bing bad or better? To be fair it is hard to say yet. Bing will go live to the public on 3 June. It will be different and for some users and some searches it will probably be superior. The various early reviews (go Google them) are cautiously optimistic. Given the history of Microsoft I tend to be a little pessimistic and a bit concerned with the whole trust thing. We would hope that the positive outcome would be that Microsoft might threaten Google enough that they will make some significant improvements both in their algorithms as well as in their display and organization of results (where Bing seems to excel). But, in any case, those of us who do web design and optimization will be back to the books with a whole new challenge.

How did Bing rate in the Google search? Fourth, if you don’t count two reviews ranked second and third. Who was first? BingSurf.com, maker of surfboards. [as of 28 May 2009 at 21:09 Central time]

George J. Sawyer III is Technology Coach & CEO of SawyerTraining, Inc.