Archive for the ‘Web’ Category


Neal Advertising Wins A Hatch!

Tuesday, October 13th, 2009
Chad and Hatch

Hatch Award

We’re proud to announce that Neal Advertising received a Bronze Bowl at The Ad Club’s 49th Annual Hatch Awards. What project won this award you ask? This blog! UnderTheBigTopics.com was the only blog to receive an award in the blog category.

The Hatch Awards celebrate excellence in our creative community recognizing the best and brightest advertising agencies in New England.

Congratulations to illustrators Alexis Pacelli and Bryan Woodbury, designer Danielle Pikus, developers Jason Narciso and Jesse Friedman, art director Chad Foster and the rest of the Neal Advertising team!


Gear Up, We’re Hunting Twitter Zombies

Friday, August 21st, 2009

Twitter Zombie Bird

I can reach in to a proverbial “hat” of web posts and pull out dozens about Twitter Best Practices. In an effort to prevent from having to repeat myself, I’ve linked to a few below written by trusted industry leaders (linkbait anyone). The idea behind using Twitter best practices is that you are a business or person who wants to create a community to share and improve your brand. Before you can do this you have to figure out who you are; The Leader, The Follower or The Zombie.

A common question that always seems to come up among friends or colleagues is “You’re surrounded by zombies and you can choose only one weapon, what is it?” A lot of people go for the shotgun but you have to realize that you’re eventually going to run out of ammo. The next choice is usually a sword or machete. How does this apply to Twitter? Well…

In any chaotic post-apocalyptic world where citizens are threatened by brain eating zombies (social network), you have individuals who set themselves apart as authorities. These people lead us and motivate us to keep the community alive. Everyone else are followers or zombies. The follower should not carry a negative stereotype, however. Followers are good, with out followers we wouldn’t have leaders. Followers are the backbone of any community and should be considered extremely important. Zombies on the other hand are lifeless beings existing only to feed off everyone else. This is especially true on Twitter.

Let’s start by asking: “Why Are You On Twitter”. The answer is usually one of the following five answers.

  1. Your friends, family or celebrity crush is on Twitter and you need to know what it’s all about
  2. You’ve been on Twitter for a while, tweet about being bored in a doctor’s office or what crazy thing your kid is doing but haven’t really figured it all out yet
  3. You’re a business owner or representative and are on Twitter to deliver important content, answer questions and increase reach to your customers or clients
  4. You’re a professional and have something to offer to the world (or at least you think you do) and you want to be apart of a community of like minded tweeps
  5. You’re a spammer and want to sell, drive traffic or eat brains

You’re probably not a 5 because I don’t think Zombies can read.

1’s and 2’s welcome to Twitter, I hope you enjoy your stay.

3’s and 4’s I want to tell you a secret. Being on Twitter or any social network isn’t about gaining as many followers, fans or friends as possible. It’s about creating a community where active users can be engaged and gain something of value you from you, share that information with their community and create advocates of your brand. I would choose to have a small number of active users with strength and authority in their community over 10’s of thousands of zombies following me.

This is a point I try to make to all my clients and students. Tweeps who are desperate to increase their followers by any means possible aren’t providing any value or substance to you or anyone else. They’re greedy and eager to reach a rather pointless goal, because they believe this is what makes you an authority. The truth is that anything worth doing is done over time with a lot of effort. These Zombies only act to create more zombies. By following them and countless others you lose sense of what’s real, start aimlessly wondering the universe and gain and give nothing.

There are of course exceptions to any rule. However I fear a Twitterverse where everyone is speaking and no one is listening.

So what’s your favorite Zombie weapon? I like http://topify.com they make it easy to kill zombie followers right from your email account. If @topify isn’t available for some reason I’m a big fan of a riding mower!


Law Talk Blog

Tuesday, August 11th, 2009

We are proud to announce that “Law Talk Blog” went live this evening. Neal Advertising worked closely with Attorney John Sheehan to create a well designed, prominent blog that will prove to be a valid law resource to it’s users.

Law Talk Blog published by Attorney John Sheehan

This website will provide an easy and functional place for John Sheehan and his team to write, engage and help the local people.


Fun with Google Analytics (Part 1 of Alot)

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

Web analytics can be defined as the measurement of data relating to an Internet website. This includes the number of visitors, number of pages viewed, how much time the visitor was on your site, etc. We can use this information to examine and improve your website and its content. It is also very important tool to utilize when you are analyzing internet advertising and Search Engine Marketing campaigns.

There are a number of services out there that provide analytics reports of your website. At Neal Advertising, we are partial to Google Analytics for its accurate reporting, ease of use and the amount of available data. Today we’ll take a look at 3 basic metrics. 

The total amount of web pages that were viewed on your site in a given time period is referred to as page views. If someone visits your site once, but views 15 different pages, your site just generated 15 page views. When using this to analyze your website, you also need to look carefully at the number of pages you have on your site and the content on each page. You can also delve deeper into this by looking at which individual pages garner the most traffic.

An individual or browser that views your site is measured by a unit called a unique visitor.  If an individual visits the site more than once, it is only counted as one unique visitor. This is a great way to measure your websites traffic, giving you an accurate reading on your audience size. 

When Google calculates your time on site, they take the total amount of time that each visitor spends on the site before exiting the website. If you view 2 pages for a total of 10 minutes or 20 pages for a total of 10 minutes, your time on site will be the same. Every website is unique and thus, the amount time a visitor spends on your site gets will vary. When analyzing this metric, it is important to look at the number of pages, content of those pages and your ultimate goal or purpose for the website.

As with any web metric, Google Analytics is not 100% accurate, but it is a great tool to measure the effectiveness and stickiness of your website.


Print Is Not Dead

Tuesday, June 2nd, 2009

Design!Print is not dead

I hear a lot of people saying that print is dead, and the digital age is taking over. This is something that I disagree with. I am aware that technology is very abundant in advertising, but just because technology has become the new way to advertise doesn’t mean that the art of print design is dying out.

Print design in mainly used in advertising to create products such as posters, billboard, direct mail, magazine ads and much more. What people don’t see is the other side of print design that is needed to make a business run. Business cards are a good example. The design of them is extremely important to a business. That little card that you leave behind is the first impression people get of your company. It gives your company personality and helps support its brand and image.

Let’s take a step back from business cards and think about what is the most important thing for a company to have. A logo. Your company’s logo is what identifies your company. Without it a business is not branded and advertising will not be as beneficial. A logo makes you associate with the brand. That logo will go on anything and everything your company creates throughout print or web.

I am not saying that technology is bad; it is a wonderful tool and I think it has a lot of great benefits. The best way I think of web design and print design, is to see them as two different things. Web design is a new tool to advertise your brand, but the root behind getting web advertisements recognized by consumers goes back to good print design. So while print advertising may be dying, print design itself is not dead.


The Ad Club Reunion

Friday, May 8th, 2009

picture-6Neal Advertising was happy to help The Ad Club out in promoting the greatly anticipated Ad Club Reunion taking place June 22nd at the Cyclorama. Working with The Ad Club team, we designed and developed adclubreunion.com. The site integrates video, photos from the past, superlatives, social media links such as a blog, twitter and facebook and a really fun “Who would you like to see at the reunion” application. Check out the site and consider attending the Ad Club Reunion which is open to agencies, media, clients and anyone looking to network and have a great time!

adclubreunion.com


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?”

(more…)