National Entertainment Company – Letting a great company flaunt their assets.

Blog Design, News, Portfolio, SEO No Comments »

nec2 National Entertainment Company – Letting a great company flaunt their assets.

Martin from the NEC already had the right idea, he had built his company website using wordpress as a CMS and just needed a great theme design to make it pop.

Since the NEC provide events management and equipment for a massive range of party entertainment – from paintball and foam cannons to bouncy castles and rodeo – it was not hard to be inspired when coming up with design ideas for this site.

First we asked about the websites wide target market, as NEC’s services range from Stag and Student Events to Children’s parties, which would usually demand very different designs.

We then asked which sections of the market needed addressing most. From here we could focus the design on its target audience without alienating other potential customers.

After building the site we integrated it with a popular email marketing client, to allow Martin to create email campaigns around various products. We connected google maps and provided SEO advice which we will be following up on as his site develops.

http://national-entertainment.com/

Coastline Fish & Chips – a business website run on WordPress.

Portfolio, SEO No Comments »

coastline Coastline Fish & Chips – a business website run on Wordpress.

Coastline is a great “chippy” on the coast of Blyth in the north east of England. Blyth’s coast has recently been redeveloped and it is looking great – the beaches are clean, the promenade is new, and there is always people windsurfing and jet skiing out at sea – so Coastline  adds to a nice day out at the beach with some quality fish and chips!

Because of this, we were very happy to build their website, and spent a sunny day taking photographs to use and get creative with the theme. We also did some custom coding as we feel this site could really develop into a community hub, and can benefit from adding local events and weather along with the expected content.

We really believe more small businesses should know about wordpress:

The great thing about using WordPress to get companies on the web, is that many of the usual five page static websites can’t be updated without more work from the web design company, costing extra money – some even charge a monthly fee.

Using a content management system (CMS) you log into for security, it’s not only easy to update the site, but it’s easy to link with social media such as Facebook and Twitter – these are great ways to connect a business website to its customers.

With WordPress, it is easy for a small business to update themselves without wading into HTML. Adding a post to WordPress is no harder than writing an email:

Coastline can update customers with business news, local events and any changes required to the menu are easily done.

WordPress has also has many “plug in” features that can add even greater functionality to your site:

We custom coded a widget that displays the local weather over Blyth, getting the data dynamically updated from Yahoo Weather. Customers can check the weather and the menu on the website before driving to the coast for fish and chips!

Finally WordPress is great for SEO, the way it is structured means your site is friendly to Google and other search engines. WP sites are indexed faster than many other sites and will start bringing you traffic to your business in no time at all:

We also linked Coastline’s website with Google maps so people searching for fish and chips in the area will be directed to the website, and people on the website can find out how to get there. Fantastic!

A WordPress site plus Google Maps registration is great SEO for local business.

SEO 1 Comment »

While we cannot usually guarantee 1st place on Google – certainly not in the first few weeks after a website launch – but that’s exactly what doubleglazingrepairsne.co.uk have within weeks of us building the site for them for the keywords “double glazing north east”.

While a wordpress site is known to achieve good search listings, there is a lot of competition for double glazing repairs. In this case it seems to be a combination of adding the business to google maps around the same time as the website went live that has helped them reach no.1 so quickly.

doubleglazingrepairsne.co.uk is a good example of WordPress being used as a simple website with no blog, four informative pages and a contact us form – all far more easy to manage and edit than a 5 page website coded without a CMS – and easy to grow as a business requires it.

If you are a local business and your interested in getting a website that works for your business get in touch!

Search Kingdom – Another Satisfied Customer

Blog Design, Portfolio, SEO 1 Comment »

searchkingdom2 Search Kingdom – Another Satisfied Customer
Search Kingdom is a great resource for SEO knowledge which is definitely worth reading for anyone who wants to get more traffic to their site. The blog instantly clears away many of the myths surrounding SEO and keeps strictly to the facts we know about the top search engine algorithms and various practical tips to ensure your site is optimised.

We were asked to do a Medieval theme and this was the design that  our customer loved. The landscape contracts and expands to fit different browser sizes and is cross compatible in numerous browsers despite using .png files and z-index to create the layered effect.

Search Engine Optimisation Basics

SEO, Tutorials 10 Comments »

A lot of our work at Baltic Blog Design has been for very successful affiliates, and we think its worth sharing some tips and good SEO methodology that we’ve learnt or picked up along our merry way.

Search Engine Optimisation, that was first left to hard working affiliates to figure out has now becoming a key part of any company that has a significant online presence. The trouble is however, while affiliates and SEO guru’s are clear on the difference of Black Hat (Bad) and White Hat SEO, a director of a small to medium enterprise will only want results in web traffic. Often this leads to companies grabbing hold of old hearsay and web myths along with Black Hat SEO in an attempt to beat their rivals to the top of search engine lists, which could be dangerous for their website.

We understand many affiliates will know SEO very well, but it make’s sense that we explain the basics to our customers starting out on the web with their blogs.

SEO 101

There are many Search Engines on the web, but only a small select few themselves control the majority of traffic. It then stands to reason why most SEO techniques have been focused on major players in the search engine business such as Google, Yahoo and MSN. In this brief article we will be focusing on Google which is generally considered to be the most popular search engine used in the UK.

Google’s algorithms and search criteria are on a large part, unknown to the public, but through SEO it’s possible to use what information has been made public alongside testing and analysis to work out what will work best to gain a higher page rank and increase web traffic to a site.

For instance, we know that for competing websites Google’s software can analyse the content of a web page and makes decisions on the page’s relevance compared to its domain name, metadata and other competing websites. It counts web pages linking to your site (backlinks – often known as linkjuice) and takes into consideration each websites own page rank:

A website (A) with links from many other reputable websites will score highly in a search compared to a site (B) with links from many lesser ranked domains, but a site with few links (C) will score the lowest. It’s worth noting however, if a website’s content is completely unique, or contains unique keywords – it will be listed first for those keywords as long as Google has indexed the site.

Google works this way to favour websites with original content that offer genuine products and services or deliver valuable information. In turn their software attempts to filter through and block websites created solely for underhand marketing techniques such as link farming and spam, but it must be constantly updated to keep up with the latest tricks and hacks.

Black Hat SEO

Unfortunately search engines cannot fully comprehend a web page as we humans do and it’s still possible to exploit flaws and loopholes in the current system. While this may at first achieve amazing results in driving traffic to a site, Google, among other search engine providers, have become increasingly aware of this and the site will likely end up being blocked from ever appearing on their pages again.

Black Hat SEO is generally bad for the web too. Originating from the pornography (link farms) and spam industry, web pages full of nonsense clutter up the web. They have been generated to create backlinks to boost a domains pagerank while fooling search engines into thinking they are legitimate pages, they are often known as Splogs.
Large corporations have in the past have fallen off the top listing when a search is carried out specifically for them, due to overenthusiastic affiliates keyword stuffing, and bidding on the companies own brand name.

While a nuisance to a web surfer, and somewhat a clutter in cyberspace, Black Hat SEO techniques are actually most dangerous to the websites and domains using them. If a website’s purpose is to grab money and run, when the site is inevitably blocked it will have served its purpose. Any company wishing to keep their business online and on their chosen domain name will do well to steer clear of any blatant Black Hat techniques, as any increase in traffic will probably not be worth the risk of being shut out from the major search engines.

Good SEO

Good SEO is about following search engine requirements, using common sense and using analytical tools to increase readability by, and relevance to searchbots, browsers and people alike.

Search bots and spiders need to be able to read pure content, they cannot see flash animations or images and do not like to find lot’s of code between coherent sentences as they are not great at understanding our language in the first place. This is one reason web designers use CSS, as it separates design from content.

When building a website there are many standards to comply with that offer usability to the public and often allow accessibility to the blind and disabled. These standards in turn are used by search bots to make sense of the site – header tags are taken notice of for keywords, and alt tags provide information explaining the image.

Browsers need web compliant code to display web pages, and bad web code will prevent a website displaying correctly. This alone could prevent a website appearing on a search engine, but more than likely if people cannot see a webpage correctly in their browser, they will not link back to the site, or visit the site again.

Customers surfing the web want clarity: marketing mumbo jumbo, sales patois, flashy animations or intro pages will almost always serve to annoy them. Product descriptions should be as clear and concise as possible.

Blogs are not new, but more and more they are being recognised as a very good way to get noticed by search engines and promoting a company’s website. We have mentioned many of the benefits of blogs on our “how we work” page; the key advantage though, is the ease of updating content on a website combined with the ease of setting up an RSS feed to syndicate your content so users can subscribe to it, and other sites can link back to it.

Link exchanges with relevant websites, or website directories have always made up an important part of SEO. Get in the news! Create publicity stunts! Simply getting a link from a highly popular website will work wonders for web traffic. Use Digg and other sociable web tools such as add this. Building up links can be an arduous task but if a site offers meaningful, unique or competitive content, links to the site will grow organically.

Failing that; employing someone to submit a site to hundreds of web directories is a valid option if you can afford it. This is not the same as building link farms: acquire a database of web directories to submit to and instruct someone to add your site to them. If someone contacts you promoting the service, especially if they have fantastic claims of success, they will probably be charging money for nothing or utilising Black Hat SEO techniques that could put your domain in jeopardy.

This is just a brief outline on SEO, there are already books, plenty of forums and blogs on the subject. There are many old pieces of information that are no longer relevant and myths that we have seen companies and affiliates cling onto. A large proportion of SEO when sold to the layperson will be snakoil too, so it’s definitely worth reading up on. In the future we will be posting a few issues in SEO that we’ve came across working for our online clients, so watch this space!

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