Archive for the ‘Zoom Creates News’ Category

The Tasting Panel featuring BellaSvago and Zoom Creates

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

BellaSvago™ and Torkscrew™ are two brands that we at Zoom Creates are extremely proud of. From inception to product name to brand/identity to voice and messaging, we’ve been there from day one. Two beautiful logos, one lovely e-commerce website, to-die-for product packaging that’s sure to impress and a plethora of printed materials, including business systems, marketing sell-sheets, advertisements, large format and tabletop signage, as well as point of purchase concepts. These are just some of the fruits of our labor over the last 7-8 months.  Each and every Zoomer had some part in this and we all feel very close to the project for many reasons. The first is that the inventor of Torkscrew (a fabulous all in one screw cap/corkscrew/champagne/beer bottle opener) is our very own Leisa Bates, one of four Zoom Creates principals and our finance extraordinaire. (You can read more about Leisa here and Torkscrew here.)

If you combine a super cool kitchen/wine gadget with an idea that sprung out of a great mind that we know and love… you can imagine the heart and soul that went into this project. Long story short: Torkscrew and it’s parent company, BellaSvago, is growing and making their mark on the world. Enter The Tasting Panel magazine, whose May 2010 issue features a full page editorial outlining the  Torkscrew Story and touches on the minds behind the brand (that’s US). Please enjoy.


Does good SEO mean bad design?

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Over the years, I’ve heard from more than a few people that “good Search Engine Optimization cannot co-exist with aesthetically appealing design.” In other words, the site that remains after being fully optimized is not as good looking as the originally designed site. Why is this?

I think we can all agree that search engine results are important. In fact, statistics claim that up to 85% of online shoppers use search engine results to find what they will eventually end up purchasing. This means from search bar to search results to click through to purchase, or something like that. Because of this, having a website that will show up in search results is of utmost importance. SEO is the “man behind the curtain” that makes those websites appear in the search results. When we speak about “optimizing” a website, we are speaking specifically about preparing a site to show up as often and as close to the top of the page as possible when a user is conducting an applicable internet search. How is this done?

Allow me to explain…

Keywords and phrases: These are chosen based on the who, what, why and where of your site. What is your site about? What is your product? A keyword best describes what the content of your page is. This is one of the most important pieces of optimizing a site.

Meta tags:
There are many types of meta tags, but the most popular of them are the description and keywords meta tags. Meta tags go in the head section of the page. The meta keywords tag should contain a list of the most valuable keywords and phrases used on the page on which it is placed.  Each page should have a meta keyword list specific to that page.  The meta description tag is a description or summary of the page.  In many cases, this description is displayed by the search engine to the person searching for your keywords.  It should use your keywords and suggest to the user that this is the page they’re searching for.

Image Alt Tags:
An image Alt attribute is a textual description of an image. It is used by screen readers to describe the image, but also by search engines to determine the image’s relevance.  Because “an image is worth a thousand words”, keywords used in alt attributes are heavily weighted.  And because computers are not very good at analyzing the content of images, they rely on the text of the alt and title attributes. To fully optimize the graphics and website, it is important to insert a readable keyword phrase within the Img Alt Attribute.

Title Attributes:
Just about any html element in a web page can have a title attribute.  These are like img alt attributes as they are used to describe the element on which they belong, and are also read by search engines.  They should contain valuable keywords.

Title Tags:
The Title tag of a web page should always contain the most important keyword phrase of the page. This is because it will aid in getting higher search engine ranking results.  Titles should also be inviting and descriptive to encourage people to click on them. “mywebsite.com – home” is not inviting or descriptive.

Text:

Text:
Text plays a key role in determining a website’s page ranking; it is thus of vital significance to optimizing a website. Text for a site should contain plenty of important key words and phrases used in different ways. A generic rule of thumb: keywords and phrases should appear at least three times. but don’t go overboard. Over-using a keyword could look to a search engine like keyword abuse which could lower your page rank, so don’t over-do it.

With that being said, I want to circle back to my original question: why do so many of the properly optimized sites appear so unattractive to look at (IMO). For example, this site comes to straight to the top of the search results for “hot air balloon”, but what it HAS in optimization, I feel it LACKS in design. Ads all over, copy galore, is this even a real site? I do not feel extremely confident about this site. It feels more like a bed for advertising than anything else, which is the exact opposite of what any legitimate site would want their viewers to feel.

However, on the other end of the spectrum, when searching for “dog”, the site below came up in the search results at almost the very top. To me, the site has a better look and feel, is easier on the eyes and I come away feeling a little more trusting in the site itself. It’s still busy, yes, but it is obvious that some thought was given to the user experience and making the site a little easier to navigate. “A” for effort.

What is the solution? I am of the school of thought, as I believe most reputable design agencies are, that SEO is something that should be considered from the get-go. The reason for this is that if left until after the site has been designed and developed, the only real option is to begin adding things to the site. This would mean that although perhaps the original vision for the site was dead on, the afterthoughts being added here and there and everywhere will ultimately cheapen the overall look and feel of the site. If SEO is considered at the onset, the proper keywords, phrases, tags, links, text and so on can be built in, all while maintaining the branding, aesthetic appeal and positive user experience. While some feel that optimizing a site is the LAST thing that is to be done, there are those among us that believe all things work TOGETHER for good.

Conclusion? Let’s do the brand, message and website a favor and think of SEO as part of the big picture, rather than something that is done after the fact. As with anything, there are times that optimizing a site will be the last thing that is done, or maybe due to circumstances, a site isn’t built for SEO at the beginning. With the right team of professionals (ahem, Zoom Creates) having a beautiful site built from the ground up while still being fully optimized for the highest search rankings is not a pipe dream, but in fact, a reality.


Zoom Creates a Self Promo—For Reel

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

Yesterday our amazingly talented, patient, smart, nerdy, impatient, committed, ingenious, thoughtful, creative, resourceful and brilliant development team put the finishing touches on the Zoom Creates self-promo reel. These guys are absolutely unbelievable. We described our vision for the reel and they told us: “That’s impossible. You can’t do that. The technology doesn’t exist. You cannot change the laws of physics. We will need super-computers, expensive software, years to write code, more chips, salsa and milkshakes than you can afford.” Then, five minutes later (slight exaggeration) came back to us with a solution–an ingenious solution: open-source software. The only hitch was they had to teach themselves how to use it. And that they did. They figured out how to use Blender for the 3d animation and Kdenlive for the video post processing. Sprinkle in some Flash and great ideas of their own (watch the mouse pointer jump from one panel to the next and the animated atom) and there is no stopping these guys.

They even used math! Lots of math. That was the most mind-boggling thing I witnessed. I like math and all but if it were me putting this thing together, I think I would have approached it more organically, finding the music then individually timing and positioning the pieces. Not these guys. After the look and feel/animation comps were completed, they looked at the music, the number of pieces and the frame rate etc. and gave each piece a number and had it all laid out on a table with little pieces of paper. Independently, Kurtis worked on the music while Kris positioned all the pieces and when they put them both together, it was like magic. The animation synced up with the music almost perfectly. It was unbelievable. These guys know what they talking about. Well done, lads.

This entire project has been such a great team effort. Everyone here at Zoom Creates contributed. The countless hours of concepting, discussing, designing, scheduling, production, learning, listening, laughing and collaborating have truly produced a project to be proud of. Not only does it show off some of Zoom’s best work, it is a portfolio piece in itself.


Writing your first Chumby widget

Monday, February 1st, 2010

tic-toc-goes-the-clockSo, you got your first Chumby and have browsed through the 1500 open source widgets, and now you’re ready to contribute to the open source community by writing your own widget. There’s lots of resources out there, so we’ll just cover the basics here.

Here’s what you need:

  • A Chumby
  • Adobe Flash or other developing environment for creating SWF files
  • An account at Chumby.com

Open up Flash. Set your size to 320 x 240 and frame rate to 12 frames per second. In Publish Settings, set the Player to Flash Player 8 and the Script to ActionScript 2.0. Chumby allows widget up to 100kb in size, which is plenty of room for code, but can get tight when working with audio and video.

For this tutorial, we’ll make an analog clock. But there are hundreds of clocks already! Yes there are, but I like to have every other widget be a clock, and I’ve only found about a dozen clocks that I really like. That is one of its primary functions, after all.

First of all, set up your assets. You’ll need three clock hands, positioned in the center of the stage, with the registration point properly set. Name them hourHand_mc, minuteHand_mc, and secondhand_mc.

OK, now the code:

onEnterFrame = function() {
	dt = new Date();
	//set hour hand
	hrs = dt.getHours()+dt.getMinutes()/60+dt.getSeconds()/3600;
	angle = hrs*30;
	if (angle!=hourHand_mc._rotation) {
		hourHand _mc._rotation = angle;
	}
	//set minute hand
	mns = dt.getMinutes()+dt.getSeconds()/60;
	angle = mns*6;
	if (angle!=minuteHand_mc._rotation) {
		minuteHand _mc._rotation = angle;
	}
	//set second hand
	scs = dt.getSeconds();
	angle = scs*6;
	if (angle!=secondHand_mc._rotation) {
		secondHand _mc._rotation = angle;
	}
}

Let’s break it down. On each frame we create a new date object. Then we get the hours of the date object. We also add in the minutes and seconds because we want the hour hand to move a tiny bit every second, not just once an hour. Next we convert the hours into degrees by multiplying by 30. (360 degrees per 12 hours makes 30 degrees per hour). Next we check if the hour hand needs to be changed. It should only be changed once every 12 frames, not every frame. Using this if statement prevents unnecessary redrawing of the screen, which can save processing time and make a widget run more smoothly. Though, you’ll probably not notice any difference in this simple example.

The minute hand and second hand go through the same process.

OK, save it, publish it, and upload it to Chumby.com, but don’t make it public yet. Add it to a channel on your chumby and try it out. You’ll undoubtedly find lots of things to tweak with your clock. Did you even give your clock a face? Maybe it needs a tick sound, or a gong on every hour. Maybe you don’t want a typical analog clock. Changing the code for a digital clock should be pretty easy.

This is a simple example, but it should get you on your way. In my next post, I’ll write about creating a configuration file, and playing with the accelerometer. (unless I forget or change my mind). Until then, make a cool clock.


Digital agencies start taking the brand lead.

Thursday, December 31st, 2009

marauz_100_ideasIn the last couple weeks, two digital agencies have won two very large brand accounts, ones that would typically go to traditional agencies with digital capabilities.

Says Brian Morrissey of BrandWeek, ” Design software company Autodesk tabbed AKQA for digital and traditional work, and Ameri-prise Financial hired R/GA as its lead agency. Such assignments are still the exception to the rule. Most clients aren’t ready yet to trust digital shops with their brand strategy, according to many agency executives. Yet the general expectation is that this will slowly change, particularly as digital initiatives become core not only as marketing channels, but also as internal drivers of innovation.”

It’s no secret that in the agency world, we’ve all been waiting for the exact moment that interactive agencies would finally come to the forefront and nab all business usually distributed to traditional agencies. The consensus is that yes, this will happen, but the process is a slow one.

Enter Zoom Creates: as an interactive agency with strong digital capabilities, we too are excited for the “interactive takeover”. The major value add Zoom Creates brings with our digital capabilities is that we are still extremely strong in Brand/Identity/Strategy. We continue to hone our skills in all areas to ensure that when we are called upon, our skill sets are sharp and we are ready to rock.


Social Media Revolution

Tuesday, December 29th, 2009

I came across this video about a month ago and was so impressed by it, I went ahead and pulled the stats out to use in client interaction. Take a few moments to take this in… well worth the time out of your day to see the real impact social media is having on the world as we know it.


Getting Jollified

Friday, December 18th, 2009

Hopefully everyone has had a chance to check out “Jollified” — Zoom’s Holiday AR application. I’ve had almost as much fun playing with it as I did working with the Zoomers to create it. This project truly was a collaborative effort and a learning experience for both Design and Development. We loved the idea of combining a new digital technology like Augmented Reality with something low tech and hands-on like letterpress printing. We took our inspiration for the design of the site from Letterpressed cards and incorporated the texture of the toothy paper, the scrolly flourishes, and the muted colors all used with that style of printing. We then had to figure out how to make something that we created digitally look like it had been printed by hand, one color at a time. We did some experimenting and learned a lot of techniques in Photoshop to replicate the effect that is achieved in Letterpress printing when the texture of the paper shows through the ink. With a letterpress printer you must print each color one at a time, this can result in a slight overlap when two colors are next to each other. So, we also figured out how to use Photoshop to create this look. But the real fun came when we started turning files over to the development team and began to collaborate with them to turn our old style look into a high tech application. If you haven’t already, definitely take minute to get Jollifed!

Jollified


Get Jollified!

Wednesday, December 16th, 2009

‘Twas the weeks before Christmas and all through The Zoom,
Zoomers were fighting off holiday gloom.
The projects were done, to the clients with care,
In hopes that AR would soon be there.

When out on the Internet arose such a clatter,
When asked, Zoomers said, “Why nothing’s the matter!”
Away to the laptops they flew in a flash,
Started the webcam and cleared all the cache.

Zoomers engaged in the holiday fun,
Added hats, beards and noses, each and everyone.
Twas a Jollified Christmas, brought straight from Zoom,
From there on out, no more holiday gloom.

From our stockings to yours, we are pleased to bring you Jollified, a festive holiday Augmented Reality flash application. Not unlike elves, we have been tinkering and fussing over Jollified for weeks, in the hopes of bringing you tidings of cheer and well wishes.

To get Jollified, please watch the video below and then visit the official Jollified website. Play around, snap a photo of your Jollified creations and share the merry with family and friends.

‘Tis the season to get Jollified!


“Twitter” is named Word of the Year

Monday, November 30th, 2009

twitter-bird-wallpaper

Each year, the Global Language Monitor announces the most popular word of the year. The monitor uses an algorithm to track social media searches, internet searches, etc. to determine a word’s popularity.

This year marks the first year that a technology word has taken first place; usually the most popular search terms are related to events happening in the world. “Twitter” has surpassed “Obama”, “H1N1″, and even “Michael Jackson”.

For more information, read the entire article here.


Are Facebook Fan Pages effective? Survey says yes!

Monday, November 23rd, 2009
facebook-tshirt
Facebook Fan Page Benefits
Still need convincing? Here are 6 reasons why you should consider creating a Facebook fan page and the search engine marketing benefits it can bring:

1. Pages are public.
Most of Facebook is behind a login, preventing search engines from indexing. However, some Fan pages are not behind a login and thus search engines can index the page. Hopefully, people will stumble on the result in SERPs, visit the Facebook page, and then get to your site via the link (see reason #2).

2. Pages include links.
Because the pages are public, you can get some nice facebook.com link credit. You can’t use an anchor text, but hey, it’s free.

3. Send “updates to fans”.
One of the greatest features is that you can send “updates” to fans whenever you want. It’s a nice way of building a database of interested users. Send messages about new products, updated website, etc.

4. You control the page.
Making the page before a Fan or a competitor is critical. You want to be able to send the messages, edit or remove sections, and control the information to an extent.

5. News feed.
When a someone joins a Fan page, it’s published in their News feed for all their to read (unless they have turned this off). It makes someone joining your Fan page somewhat viral.

6. It’s free and easy.
Making a Fan page takes just a few minutes – add some information, URL, and upload the logo and you’re done. You can make your page here.

Finally…
PR is currently one of the few forms of marketing thriving during the recession so 2009 will inevitably see Facebook fan page activity increase as companies compete in the current climate. We will check back in 6 months time to see how the top 25 Facebook fan pages have changed, if Obama is still leading the way or Homer can steal the crown…keep you posted!

Thank you Mashable!