by Jeff Harmon
on Feb 12th, 2007

Showing my support for Hillary Clinton

I just got this email. I am not sure what I think about the 2008 elections yet, but I had to post this on my blog:

The Democratic National Committee is currently polling Americans through the Internet to determine the electability of Hillary Clinton for the presidency of the United States in 2008.

If you would like to show your support for Hillary and encourage her to run for President of the United States in 2008 please click the link below:

Click here to show your support for Hillary Clinton

by Jeff Harmon
on Feb 8th, 2007

How to get Mormons to watch your movie.

My 13 year old sister sent me an email notifying me of the movie “Amazing Grace”. It is not an LDS (mormon) film, but LDS President Hinckley and the first presidency all watched it! Read this:

It isn’t often that LDS President Gordon B. Hinckley gets to go to the movies, but there he was Thursday night, taking his reserved seat with an unobstructed view of the big screen.
The hushed crowd at the Gateway Theaters in Salt Lake City rose to their feet as the 96-year-old Mormon leader walked slowly in, but he laughed and said, “Sit down.”
Hinckley and Thomas S. Monson, his counselor in the church’s governing First Presidency, about half of the 12 apostles, their families, friends, filmmakers, entertainers and community leaders, filled the large theater for a free screening of “Amazing Grace.” Click here to read the whole story

Here is a link to watch the trailer if you have not already seen it: Click here to watch the trailer.

So it comes out on the 23 of this month. As far as I can tell this is a grass roots marketing Campaign. I can tell you. Whoever was smart enough to get the leaders of the LDS church to watch this was brilliant. I am guessing that move alone will bring in a couple hundred thousand customers.

There I go, turning it into a marketing thing. The movie looks fantastic, I will be there on opening day.

I just read a good post by Guy Kawasaki. He gives 10 things to avoid when trying to promote your company online.

I decided that he must know what he is talking about because websites that make you re-type your email address, don’t let you use usernames with “@” symbols, give you unreadable confirmation codes, and don’t work unless you are on internet explorer DRIVE ME NUTS! If you are learning internet marketing you should read these.
Yet I don’t know if I agree with Guy on is his veryt “do not”: Enforced immediate registration. When we released iMemoryBook in November we started out with a very nice system that allowed you to dive into and create your book without registering. You could create an entire book and it was just saved in your cache. Yeah, we thought it was the greatest idea ever. An incredible 30% of traffic landing on beta.iMemoryBook.com were going right into the online bookmaking application! They would play around, even get started on a book, but then they would forget to click the red call to action: “Save this book” (after clicking “save this book” they would move into the registration process. Because iMemoryBook is so new, many people come to the site, love what they see and then say, “I will do one of these books later.”

Unsatisfied with the registration rates, Ben and I decided that we wanted to experiment with asking for their email before we let them in. PhotoBucket has been extremely successful with this technique and is now gaining 80,000 new visitors a day! The idea here is that when a potential customer comes in for a visit, “just taking a look at our system”, we can continue to keep in contact with them by Email until they are ready to create their iMemoryBook. We want an email list. We also decided that our email list is going to be fun and helpful. We will NEVER generate an automatic newsletter. Each one will be handcrafted to be exciting and interesting.

So to the dismay of Neal, Dwain, and Paul–who had spent an enormous amount of time creating the online bookmaking application so that you didn’t need to be registered to use it, we are now testing the “forced registration”. Thus far conversion rates have tripled! I think it is working well.

Other Possibilities:
I am still not certain we have done it just right. I sometime wonder if we should add an opt out option at the bottom of the registration that says: “No thanks… I just want to look” like Screenit.com? Here is a screen shot (screenit needs a makeover):

Here is an example of the

The funny thing is that I have never registered for Screenit, but I have used them dozens of times to learn if a movie meets my standards. Perhaps we should create something like zohowiki, a link that says “log in as a demo user”. Here is another screenshot:

Here is Zoho's Demo user option.

Zoho once did this with ZohoWriter(like MS Word but online) and sheets but now it is gone. I wonder if the “demo” user wasn’t working. I thought that they must work, that is what got me to start.

What I like most

I lean to this option because it would give our potential customers the chance to see a book that is full of content. Currently when you start an iMemoryBook there are no photos and they are very generic. I like the idea of them being able to view, edit, and play in a book that has already been started. It might help them catch the vision.

Two Problems

I see two downfalls with the Zoho’s demo plan: 1) This option could possibly make it harder to get emails so that we can follow up. I can see myself, very interested in the service, but because I have now seen the system I don’t have any reason to register because I am not planning on making a book today. It is very important that we have an email to follow up with periodically. 2) Our demo books would have thousands of users on them at one time, I can see that causing a collaboration nightmare.

I am not sure how we will have our registration page in the end. It will take a lot of testing to learn which way is best. If you have any suggestions I would love to hear them.

by Jeff Harmon
on Jan 16th, 2007

Neal has a new blog

Neal finally started writing in his blog again. He changed his web address to nealharmon.net. It is about time. I like the look. I am excited to see what Neal has to say. I will change his link on my blog roll.

by Jeff Harmon
on Jan 12th, 2007

Firefox Shorter cuts

I have been spending more time on the internet in the past 6 months than in my entire life combine. I just found a list of shortcuts for Firefox on Computer Productivity. I was looking for the quick key to switch between tabs. Ctrl+tab. Sweet.

by Jeff Harmon
on Jan 3rd, 2007

Marketing Lesson from Amazon.com

A while ago I wrote a little report on Amazon’s new ad system ClickRiver.

Today we received a gift in the mail from ClickRiver, the new pay-per-click ad system for Amazon. They gave us Eats, Shoots & Leaves: The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation by Lynne Truss (I wonder if they noticed that every time I write it is a grammatical and punctuation nightmare). The book is Amazon’s way of saying “thank you” for FamilyLearn’s participation in the BETA release of ClickRiver. How fantastic is that!

I can tell they are working very hard over at ClickRiver. We can all learn a lesson from this gift.

by Jeff Harmon
on Jan 2nd, 2007

Boise State - The Play that could kill the BCS

“How bout dem Broncos! david slew goliath yeeeah baby!” This is a text message I received from my friend in Boise immediatly after the Boise State vs Oklahoma Tostidos bowl game last night.

During the game they mentioned that the Governor of Idaho (my birth place and home state) was at the game and said, “This game is the biggest thing to hit Idaho since the potato.”

It was fun to see Idaho potato commercials on timeouts. I also noticed that 20 of the team members are from Idaho.
I have never seen a better game. Here is the Boise State winning play, that I believe, could be the end of the BCS bowls and the beginning of a much needed playoff system.

My favorite play of the game was on 4 down and 18 for Boise State. It was do or die and Boise did it with 7 seconds left to the game! Here is a clip of all the highlights from the last 2 minutes of the game.

Will this Boise State game be able to turn the tide toward a playoff system? What do you think? I would love to know what you think and why.

Creating an appropriate post to Wikipedia will take you some time. Here is how I did it.

Everything begins with research:

  1. Register with Wikipedia and study their suggested readings (takes about 30 minutes):

    The five pillars of Wikipedia
    How to edit a page
    Help pages
    Tutorial
    How to write a great article
    Manual of Style

  2. Find and read about other companies related your company. Note what you like about the articles and what you don’t like. I am a very visual person so this helped me more than the tutorials.
  3. You can learn the basic write up language for Wikipedia in a short time, but I suggest that you snatch an article that someone else has already posted and then click “edit this page” and copy out all their content. You can now use this content as a template for your posting. Replace their text with your text, their images with your images, and their links with your links. In the end you will have created a well organized article.
  4. Properly site any content you use.
  5. External Links: You can link them to official pages on your website, your blog, and recent articles about your website. These links are very valuable so choose them carefully and make sure that they are appropriate to the cause of Wikipedia.
  6. Don’t sell ANYTHING. Wikipedia is an encyclopedia. The greatest danger of writing your own article is that you are partial to your business. Be careful.

Each post you make is just the beginning. Over time others will refine your article and correct your mistakes.  Please comment if you have had experience with Wikipedia.

by Jeff Harmon
on Dec 29th, 2006

Once you go iMemoryBook, you won’t go back.

Today I read an article by Draco Draconis on Self Publishing. He talked about Kevin Kelly’s article on lulu and blurb. I really wanted to comment on Draco’s blog but he has made it just about impossible to write anything unless you know him personally. I suppose in the end I was just hoping for a link from him about iMemoryBook 2.0 :)

I especially liked Draco’s mention of what is happening in the self publishing industry:

“…people start out by ordering one copy of a personal book, they quickly come back for more. Ordering 50 or more copies is not uncommon. Furthermore, once people discover how easy it is to make a book, they make a lot of them. Maybe several a year.”

We are finding the very same thing. The iMemoryBook has taken some time to get going. Virgin products are always difficult. Even my oldest brother was telling me how many projects he wants to do but it just feels like it is going to take so much commitment, funny enough he hasn’t even done one book yet, when he gets started I think he will change his mind. iMemoryBook is so easy to use.
I have now created or am creating over 7 book projects, from a baby memory book to my sister’s wedding memory book. It is addictive and feels like you are accomplishing something good for your posterity.

by Jeff Harmon
on Dec 28th, 2006

Using Google Picasa to help create your Memory Book

Ever get frustrated that you don’t have a simple system to edit (i.e. crop, color, brighten, redeye removal…) your photos? Perhaps you don’t have $600 to buy Photoshop + 40 hours to invest in learning how to use it. Maybe you are like me, taking dozens of photos per month just to let them sit on your PC, waiting for when you have time to organize and edit them. If this is you (and you have not heard of Google Picasa) then you are going to thank me for this blog post.

Over a year ago Neal told me about Picasa. I downloaded it out of curiosity and was thrilled when it automatically found and organized every photo on my computer. Picasa found photos I didn’t even know I had. I have yet to find such a simple system for editing, printing, emailing, and preparing my photos for my iMemoryBook projects.

For example, here is a photo of me fighting to catch the garter at my friend’s wedding. You can see that the photo is dark and barely viewable (I am the one in the middle. I did catch it:)

Here is the same photo after 10 seconds of editing in Picassa:

The difference is night and day and it didn’t take more than 5 minutes to learn!

Getting Picasa:

Click here to download Picasa to your computer (it takes less than a minute).

After you have downloaded Picasa, let it go and find your photos on your computer. (If your photos are still on your camera just click import in the top left corner and go get them).

Using Picasa for your iMemoryBook:

  • Select all your best photos for your current iMemoryBook project (hold down CRTL to select more than one.)
  • Click “Add to” in your bottom tool bar.
  • Select “New Album”
  • Name your album: “My Personal History Photos” (This example is if you are creating a personal history)
  • Continue to add photos to this album until you have all the photos that you want.
  • Select your photo album in the “library” and click “Export” in the bottom right side. (I usually export photos to my desktop so that they are easy to find)

Great. You are almost done.

  • Log in to your iMemoryBook account.
  • Click on your “Photos” tab in your book.
  • Click “Upload Photos”
  • Click “browse” under “upload multiple photos” (this is the best photo uploader I have ever used)
  • Select ALL of the photos in your newly created picasa album.
  • Click “Open” and wait for your photos to upload.

Your done!

You can also use Picasa to create CDs, blog entries, and order prints from over 10 different online photo stores.

Picasa is FREE and considered one of the best bargains ever.

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