Archive for March, 2009


Web Standards in the Work Place

Tuesday, March 17th, 2009

Your mission, Jesse, should you decide to accept it, is to create, manage and enforce web policies that will ensure the integrity of Neal Advertising.  As usual, should you or any member of your I.M. Force be captured or killed, the secretary will disavow any knowledge of your existence. This blog will self-destruct in five seconds. Good luck, Jesse.

Almost 2 years ago I was brought on to Neal Advertising with a specific mission in mind.  What everyone didn’t know was that I’m apart of a “group” that has a very specific goal.  To create a better internet where a set of standards are used to better a users experience and clients product.

The beginning was chaotic and slow.  I had one employee under me who was very good at what he did but it was still just the two of us.  I quickly began to impart my want and need for everything to be compliant, but it wasn’t easy to get everyone on board.

I was fighting an uphill battle. My team members and colleagues didn’t use standards in the past so convincing them the extra work and limitations we’d be putting in place was worth wasn’t easy. However, I knew if I could just teach everyone about standards they would understand and be happy to adopt the policies I was trying to put into place.

The graphics team at Neal Advertising is comprised of some the most talented individuals I’ve ever had the pleasure to work with.  Their designs are amazing and their ability to grasp the crude ideas in my head and bring them to life are exemplary.  However, they never had to design for standards or general accessability before. Most of the designers started in print and were later asked to simply design websites.  Before I arrived almost everything was developed out in flash and just embedded on a page.  There was no thought put into usability, standards, seo, or anything other than creating stunning and impressive graphics.  Then here I come pulling the rug out from everyone and asking it all to be different.

I set up a meeting to have the interactive department and the graphics department meet, learn and converse about standards.  I presented the idea of standards compliancy, how code should be written a certain way.  How standards benefits the user and client on many levels including usability, functionality and over all web happiness.  My speech went on for about 30 mins until my first question.

“So we have to do all this extra work, so…. Why are we doing this again?”

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Local Radio Personalities– Who Needs ‘Em?

Tuesday, March 10th, 2009

Do you know who needs them?
Every single radio station across the entire country, is who needs them. What do they bring to the table? A full course dinner with dessert. In real estate, the word is LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION……IN THE WORLD OF RADIO, IT STARTS WITH CONTENT, CONTENT, CONTENT!

Every personality on a radio station has a job to do, and that job is no easy task. They have to create unique content every day to engage their listening audience. That personality is the moderator of a “community”. A community analogous to communities you find online, like blogs, Facebook, and Twitter. It’s people who can relate to that DJ, whether its their programming including views on subjects, poking fun at people, news events, satirical opinions- the list goes on and on. What’s most important is that they add value to the station, and changes the “vanilla” flavor to something that adds “spice” for the listeners. There is such a disparity between “cookie cutter voice tracked programming,” to a personality who can relate to the local community and listeners alike. It is like going from one end of the spectrum to the other. Yes, radio stations CEOs can save money by eliminating the talent on air and replace it with voice tracked programming, but at what price? You save a salary but you deteriorated and cannibalized your audience as a by-product. That same audience you worked so hard to acquire.

crusaders-of-content2So let’s get back to the original question, why do radio stations need them? Their unique content becomes the personality of the station and an integral part of the fabric composing their listening audience. Their loyal followers are the audience that advertisers are attracted to. Local programming, talented DJs, unique original content are just some of the important ingredients that go into the recipe for a successful radio station. Top the cake off with a talented well trained sales department to market this to their agencies and advertisers, as well as a strong digital component; and behold, you have a formula and blueprint for success, and one helluva cake! See what jacobsmedia blog says about promoting local radio. The digital component is where there is a tremendous uptick in potential. It changes the face of terrestrial radio like a facelift and brings radio into the new millennium. The unique generated content on the radios respective web site allows the interaction with the audience but on a new platform. Some stations have a webcam set up in the broadcast booth(link to story), others are streaming, and still others are providing UGC that do not fall under the FCC regulations. Watch an interview online with a guest in its entirety without the timeline given on terrestrial radio. Today the consumer is in charge of what they want to listen to and what they want to watch. If radio stations hit those aforementioned benchmarks, then they have successfully engaged their audience. And that is something they have to earn! (more…)