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Half of the time my clients have it in the bag, they’re established and organised with a structured plan of action …and a regular printing company. Other times the clients are business start-ups or new-to-marketing with all the enthusiasm in the world but little idea which order to do things in. My tip of the day to help ensure you get the most from your graphic design budget is to make sure you find you printer before you brief your designer.

But why?

Artwork SpecificationsThere has been a recent rise in budget printing companies who, although great for small businesses who need their graphics printing on shoestring budgets, do not conform to industry standards. Most printing companies work to specific sizes such as A6 or DL. Some budget printing companies however have their own slightly different sizing (probably to maximise the amount of prints that can be made from one sheet of card). A business card or flyer from one of these companies may be a different size to that you might be expecting…or what the designer is expecting when laying out the artwork if not told in advance. If your prints ends up coming back with the email address cropped off because the designer was given the wrong sizes that’s money down the drain!

In addition to this, there are finishes and detailing that some printers do not offer and if a designer knows this in advance they will avoid incorporating into the design. If on the other hand you want your designer to incorporate something special, perhaps some spot-varnish or custom cut-out sections, you will need to ensure you select a printer who can perform these tasks before the designer starts work, otherwise you may end up having to pay the designer to alter the artwork retrospectively.

The key thing to remember is this…

Once you have chosen your printer and the product you want creating ask the printer for ‘spec’ (artwork specification) and tell your designer before they start the work, it could save you money in the long run.

RSS iconA client asked me the other day “what is an RSS feed”?

A buzz has been floating around their office but none has yet got to grips with this web tool so keeping it simple, here’s an explanation.

In brief, RSS (short for Rich Site Summary) is a format for delivering regularly updated web content. Many news sites, blogs and other online publishers syndicate their content as an RSS Feed for readers to access via an RSS reader or mobile device. For example our very own website updates can be delivered by RSS feed (click to view it). Continue reading »

In the past I have had beef with my RSS feed, it on occasion threw up an XML Parsing Error. I found myself searching Google and forums for a clue to the problem and it seems I wasn’t the only one. The web is smothered with people having the same problem…

But worry no more as the solution is buried deep within the belly of the web at w3it.org. They discovered a snazzy snippet of code which you paste into your RSS files and it seems to do the trick, it got my RSS feed up and running in seconds. I hope it works for you too…

Get the fix:

http://www.w3it.org/blog/wordpress-feed-error-output-solution-how-to/

Whilst trawling the web for some method of placing my most important posts at the top my wordpress website I came across the plugin AStickyPostsOrderER by AndreSC, a plugin which humbly states it can reorder your posts on categories, per tag or site-wide instead on the default index page only. Continue reading »

So, you decided you want a website designed and built. You’re maybe considering hiring me.. or another designer but you want to know how it works first. How long it will take to get your website online? How will I know what you want? When do you pay for what? Well here is a brief guide to how the web design process works. Continue reading »

So you’ve spent a solid amount having a designer or programmer (or both) build a website for your business and you’re chuffed. It looks wonderful, works exactly as you’d hoped and you’ve just finished adding all your content. Now imagine you go to work tomorrow and it’s all gone. Continue reading »

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