Posts Tagged ‘great chefs’

Great Chefs Virtual Products

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Great Chefs television has over 500 DVD’s for their multi year television show, so when I was contact to build a great website for Great Chefs, the first thing I needed to do was update 20 years of DVD’s to standard angles with modern artwork.

Working with local 3D artist Joshua O’Neill, I created artwork for dozens of series and hundreds of discs in a fraction of the time it would have taken to setup photographic settings for the discs.

Where I’ve been

Hey all, I know that I’ve not been posting here as often as I used to. Part of it’s the amazing summer that we’ve been having, part is a huge work load that I’ve been trying to focus on to guarantee the success of some amazing projects.

Huge thanks to Dallas Curow for letting me work on her great new website and an equally big thanks to house 9 design for letting me do it! I would love everybody to pop over and see the great new work at Great Chefs, sign up for their Twitter feed to win great prizes, cook books and DVD’s! I also found time to start work on my new portfolio site http://christopherross.ca, comments are always welcome.

Thanks all, I’ll be getting back into a regular posting schedule this week and look forward to hearing from all of you.

Great Chefs new iPhone Cookbook

Screenshot 2009.07.03 19.38.03

Great Chefs new iPhone Cookbook

I’m so excited to let everybody know, the new Great Chefs Great Salads cookbook is now available on the App Store from Apple for just 99 cents! The cookbook includes over 20 great recipes from the hit television series, all geared towards helping us beat the heat with some wonderful simple recipes we can share with a salad.

You can download it from the Apple App Store.

Four Simple Reasons Your Website Can’t Sell Anything

Your selling something nobody wants

Look, let’s face it … not everything is sellable. If you’re attracting a thousand people a day your website and nobody buys? Maybe your product simply isn’t something people want. One way to check if this is the case, use Google Analytics to see where people abandon your process.

It’s too expensive

Remember you’re competing against thousands of stores selling similar products, are you competitive? Did you remember to account for shipping costs? Apple’s made a fortune selling stuff online for just 99 cents. Take a look at great applications like The Moron Test which just keeps selling.

Your sale process is complex

Take an honest look at your website, how many clicks does it take to get from the first page to the final sales confirmation page? Is it easy or do people have to think about the process? When I built the new Great Chefs website, we added a lot of great free recipes and daily cooking videos but the real power of the site is a fast, easy to understand sales process using Google Checkout.

They don’t trust you

OK, saying that you have a great product that people can easily buy and it’s priced right then there’s only one reason left why people don’t buy from you (assuming you have people coming to your website) … that don’t trust you.

WordPress or Bust!

Wow, it’s been a busy couple of weeks working on the Great Chefs website and I have to admit that I’ve been delinquent in updating thisismyurl.com as well as a couple of my other properties because of it. Even worse, my RSS reader is packed with literally thousands of unread articles that I’m trying to get to. Speaking of which, check out 20+ WordPress Recipes (Codes), it’s a great collection of WordPress cheat sheet theme codes that any designed would love to have. ThemeShaper has a great tutorial on building WordPress templates and how to start with the index.php file, now that you know how to code it, check out 30 Great Uses of WordPress and  build something equally amazing!

OK, I gotta get back to work and finish a great new website for a jewelry store, a personal coach, a small restaurant and of course more work on the Great Chefs!

How to make money online

Fresh Post at thingsidoformoney.com: How to make money online

 

What if there was an easy way to make money online and you didn’t have to pay to learn how? Well that’s the idea of my website, thingsidoformoney.com and I’m glad that you’ve taken the time to come by and read a little bit about how I personally make money online.

 

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Quick Menu Plugin for WordPress

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The Quick Menu Plugin for WordPress is a free download I developed to help my great friends at Great Chefs keep track of important links such as links to their Analytics accounts and online email.

The tool quickly added a new menu to the side of your WordPress administration panel in which you can easily add or remove up to 10 special links. You’re welcome to download the plugin for free, to help make your website work even better.

WordPress Plugins & Themes

This week was a pretty productive week for updating and editing my WordPress related content here on the website, I updated most of the plugins and a few of the themes to modernize them. In a few cases minor bug fixes but mostly just ensuring they are ready for the new WordPress 2.8 release.

Theme Updates

You can always find links to all my themes in the theme directory, but here’s a run down of some of the changes:

Great Chefs Great Restaurant Web Theme
New! This is a completely new theme for my website and hopefully will be my first contribution to the WordPress directory. It’s designed for restaurant owners and chefs who are looking for a perfect theme for their restaurant but could easily be used for any variety of websites.

One Night in Paris
I recently updated the One Night in Paris theme and redid a significant amount of the front end including a redesign of the index.php file.

Community Friendly Theme
Minor changes to the code designed to make the theme more compatible with 2.8

Plugin Updates

Get Image from Post, a Free WordPress Plugin
New! This is a simple plugin which allows users to return an image from the related post.

Get Better Excerpt Plugin for WordPress
New! The Get Better Excerpt plugin works almost identical to the built in get_the_excerpt() and the_excerpt() functions except it returns whole words.

You can of course see all my plugins in my plugin directory on thisismyurl.com or by visiting the official WordPress website at http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/profile/christopherross where I sincerely hope you’ll download and vote for my plugins.

For a bit of shameless self promotion today, I’d love to remind everybody that I’m available to develop custom WordPress themes and plugins for your organizations. Sponsoring a free theme giveaway is an easy way to dramatically increase links to your website and give back to the community.

Great Chefs Great Restaurant Web Theme

great chefs great restaurants wordpress theme Great Chefs Great Restaurant Web Theme image

Building a great website for your restaurant used to be really hard but one of the wonderful things about working with the great people at Great Chefs Television is that they want to make running your restaurant easier by helping to improve your image with this free website theme for WordPress.

How to use it

Step one download the free template and install it on your WordPress website, it’s really that easy! The theme features a rich, savory graphic from one of the hit TV show’s episodes but you can easily change it to anything you’d like by replacing the photo stored at /images/header.jpg.

Cool Footer

great chefs great restaurant footer Great Chefs Great Restaurant Web Theme image

Along the bottom of this theme, I’ve coded a special loop which checks for the most recent five posts which feature a photo and it displays that photo as a link to your article or menu item.

Please feel free to download this theme for free or preview it here on thisismyurl.com.

Google articles in the news

As everybody here knows by now, I spend a lot of time reading about Google to make sure that I can help my clients get the best search engine positioning but what a lot of people might not realize is that not everything I read in a given week has any commercial value at all, sometimes it’s just nifty little notes like the fact that Google has increased the white space around it’s logo, most likely not something the average surfer would notice but it signifies a change at the big G, so it’s worth noting.

There’s a really interesting article about job aggregators, not so much Google but a great piece on how the industry works (and will be working) as well as a neat look at the process of aggregating content. 

Two neat pieces Google’s decision to add images to AdSense, the first at Search Engine Watch and another at WebProNews. I can’t stress how important it is for professional web masters to read both of these websites daily, it’ll save you hours of sifting through less informative articles. MarketingVox takes a slightly different approach to the same story, well worth the read if you’ve got a few extra minutes but as usual, Jordan’s summed it up the best at Marketing Pilgrim (Google Adds Image Ads to AdSense Link Units).

On a slightly less AdSense related kick, Live From Google I/O 2009 will let you see the inner workings of the worlds largest search engine, I love these types of posts because it helps remind us all that Google is about people, not data. The Google Analytics blog exposes Top Ten Myths About Google Analytics while Matt Cutts has a piece on Searchology that makes it sound much less like a cult than the name implies.

Well, that’s me for the week. If you’ve not already seen the new website please take a look at the new Great Chefs website and let me know what you think, also please remember to download and vote for my plugins, it’s an easy way to let me know you appreciate what I write and program. Have a great weekend!

WordPress Wednesdays

Are you looking for work as a WordPress developer? Automattic, the makers of WordPress put together a neat little post that’s showing WordPress is now an in demand skill on Elance, the popular freelance marketplace website. It’s also worth noting however that WordPress runs it’s own cool little employment board over at http://jobs.wordpress.net/ where prospective blog owners try to meet up with WP gurus. There’s another wonderful, secret mailing list … OK it’s not a secret but most people don’t know about it called WP Pro  where a dozen or so job requests a week come across your email box.

Here’s a wonderful piece that combines my love of gaming with my love of WordPress,  Peter’s done a great job of making the process of setting up an online gaming community clear and easy.  If you’re running Windows Vista and you’re struggling to get WP to work, there’s a neat piece here.

Darren put together a nice new theme for writers, but more importantly it’s worth checking out his site simply to see what every WordPress website should look like. Back to work now, I’m using WordPress to build a new website for the Great Chefs television program, so be sure to check it out in a few days!

The Vomitorium and Data Mining

This is an article about a vomitorium and how money can be made by people just like you and I by getting a little dirty and mastering a poorly practiced art. It’s called data mining.

In the old days of the Roman empire, the great chefs of Rome all had to start somewhere and where they started was the vomitorium which oddly, it exactly what you might have already assumed … it was a place for guests to vomit. See, the Romans loved to drink and loved to eat so much that they’d excuse themselves from the party and head off to a small room and force themselves to throw up.

Pretty gross.

The room was usually just off the kitchen and the top chefs of Roman culture would then go through the vomit of their guests to determine what foods they should be cooking. I guess you could say that it was a little like modern retail inventory control, by looking at what had been expelled they knew what products the guests ate and in turn what needed to be replenished.

These days I don’t think you’d find Ramsey or Oliver poking through the remains of a guests sick but I’ve worked in enough kitchens to tell you that a waiter would get thrown out of a modern restaurant if he didn’t show the chef what a customer didn’t eat during a busy dinner order. It’s not as effective as the vomitorium but a little more social.

On the web we have a similar capacity to look at what our guests are doing on our site and what they’re not doing. The fancy name is Analytics and it’s all about looking at what a customer is doing, what they’re not doing and what we (as the web content provider) is doing wrong.

web stats improvement 300x140 The Vomitorium and Data Mining imageTo the right is a real screen shot from the last month of traffic to my website. The blue circles represent the total number of visitors I’ve received each day over the past month and the blue line connecting them helps show the dramatic curves. This would be impressive enough if my website only received dozens of visitors but it receives thousands of visitors every day, so a spike of this measure is an amazing bonus for me but it’s more than a nice pat on the back, it’s a data mining dream and just like the chefs at a party I’m busy combing through thousands of new visits to determine what (if anything) I can do to improve my website for future visits.

First, I look at the hourly reports created by the WP Stats plugin it’s free and it’s timely. To be honest I have no idea how often it updates but every hour I pop over to my stats counter to review four key performance indicators:

  1. Total Traffic – this tells me how I’m doing overall
  2. Top Posts and Pages – what are people reading
  3. Search Engine Terms / Referrers – how did people find me 
  4. Clicks – what did people do once they read my content

With that information in hand, I look at the posts I’ve previously written but have not released (I’ve always got about 75 articles in reserve) and much like a comedian on stage, I try to determine which articles will be most helpful on certain days.

Next, I look at the Google AdSense data for my traffic. I do this at least three times daily, it tells me a few things. First it tells me if I’ve made money but it also acts as a verification method on the data provided by WP Stats. Often the plugin reports ~10% more traffic than AdSense, not sure why but the two reports combined tell me what I need to know.

us map 300x166 The Vomitorium and Data Mining imageAt least once a day I look at Google Analytics for the day previously and compare my notes to the results. Again I look at the total traffic, how people found me etc. but I also look at unusual spikes in traffic and a geographical breakdown in traffic. This week? I’m huge in Russia, Texas, California and New York … what does Vermont have against me?

So what does it all mean? Maybe I just have too much time on my hands or maybe I’m too obsessed with my website but I don’t think that’s the case, I think by keeping a close eye on what readers are after it helps me refocus and ensure I’m reaching the maximum number of people. For example … last week I launched a new website called seocheck.getawaygraphics.com that I thought would be pretty popular but only 15 people have been to the site in 10 days vs. over 100 downloads for my latest WordPress plugin since last night.

What does your data say about your website visitors?