I feel dirty today

Today, I’m setting up a client for web hosting.  I have two favorite hosting companies for the clients that are mindful of their costs.  One is Site5.com, and the other is Media Temple.  Both are great companies with excellent service and servers.

Unfortunately, putting an SSL certificate into the fray manages to make them both, well, less palatable.

Site5 does not sell SSL certs, which requires that you purchase the cert from a third party and have it installed on Site5.  Yes, of course that’s doable, but rather a complicated affair.  When thinking in terms of the longevity of the account, the likelihood that the client will have to deal with renewals in the future, and all that, it’s just setting the client up for hard times in the future.

Mediatemple offers SSL certs, but for $120/year.  Uhm, wow, well, jeez, that’s almost twice as much as the industries leading hosting rapist, Godaddy.  So that just stinks.

So I’m pondering what to do at this point.  Bluehost….meh. 1and1….meh.  Some smaller outfit with great prices….meh.   ……………….  OMG…Godaddy?  Gulp.

I feel like a lemming right now. *sigh*

Time Tracking

As a freelancer, my entire revenue source is dependent mostly upon time tracking for clients.  This is rather new to me as I’ve only been at the freelance thing for a few years now.  At first, it was a bit of a chore, but now it’s just second nature.  What makes it easier now is the tools I use to conduct that activity.

I interface mainly with two time tracking systems, Freshbooks and Basecamp.  Freshbooks is really top notch for Accounting/CRM/Billing, etc… This is one of the best systems out there, and is affordable.  Basecamp is really more of a project management system, but has a time tracking component that some companies use.  As of March 2012, Basecamp will be phasing that feature out of the ‘Next’ version they are rolling out.

For both systems, I started using the online time tracking tools they had. That was pretty onerous, as you could only do one task at a time.  Rather clunky IMO.  Luckily, I’ve discovered some nifty desktop apps that really make time tracking a snap.  On both systems I can start timers and pause them, and have multiple timers at any point so that I can switch between clients on the fly and track all that time without having to make an educated guess on how much time I spent.

The Freshbooks timer is called ChronoMate.  It’s a lovely MAC OSX app that integrates seamlessly with Freshbooks, and let’s you track your time easily.  It let’s you create timers, but also clients, projects, tasks and expenses.  It’s a dynamite app.

The Basecamp timer I use is TrackRecord. Track record is just as snazzy as Chronomate, but can only be used for time tracking.  No client/project interactions on this one.  It lets you do multiple timers at once (though only one tracking at a time) as well.

Both apps are essential in my day-to-day client management, and have taken the burden out of time tracking for me completely 🙂

Pixel Perfect UI

Ok, so I’ve spent countless hours tweaking CSS, refreshing the browser, taking a screenshot, opening the screenshot in photoshop, copying and pasting that screenshot onto a master design PSD file, and setting the opacity to 50%, then repositioning the overlay…..iterate and repeat for hours….

Ok, my day just got much shorter and less redundant….

http://www.pixelperfectplugin.com

A firefox/firebug plugin does ALL that for you….WHOOOOOOT!

Thank you to the folks at Open House up in Canada…I definitely bought you a beer for this one!

 

Google Apps for your business and why you should bother

Recently I’ve converted a bunch of clients over to Google Apps.  Usually, they came to me saying, “Hey so-and-so said that I should use Google Apps for my business.  Can you tell me why I should bother?”

At first, I didn’t have a real clear answer.  I figured, well, they already have email, they already can use Dropbox or some such system for file sharing, and they likely are already using either their gmail or yahoo calendars to manage stuff.

Well, that little voice in the back of my head that represents the operations manager in me said, well, there’s got to be a reason this system exists, eh?  Figure it out dumbass…

Ok, well, here’s an attempt at explaining it to the masses.

Why Google Apps for businesses?
As a small business owners, we find ourselves in need of various systems to run our businesses, right?  When we had that previous ‘corporate’ job, there was The email, The file server, The shared calendaring system that allowed us ants to communicate in some sort of coordinated effort. Plus the IT department/guy/dude/gal, what have you that helped you out…ALL the time.

Well, why not have that for our own business?  I’ll tell you why, it’ll cost you 1/2 a million dollars to do what the corporate world did for you.  You got that kinda cash around?  Not me.

I’ve been poking around with my own email on my own server, using Dropbox or YouSendit to share files with, and a calendar…that’s what iCal is for right?  Now that I’ve got team members, there is a gap.  I can’t really share my calendar effectively, nor give them email that’s easy to get to and install on whatever system they are working on.

So, steps in Google apps.  GA allows you to create a team environment in the cloud, where you can manage company emails, documents, and calendaring.  Here are some of the benefits to all these aspects of google apps for your business.  If you have ten or less users, then it’s free!  Otherwise, it’s $50/person/year, which is pretty reasonable considering the actual costs of a system like this.

Email

  • One Interface.  All your company emails are managed from one admin interface.  From this main administration window, you, as the company owner, have complete control over the users on your team, as well as what email addresses they can interface with.
  • Multiple Emails.  If you have multiple email addresses on multiple domains, you can gain access to them all by logging into gmail, or using desktop software such as Outlook, Apple Mail, or what ever you are using.  The gmail interface really gives you the most features. Your main gmail account allows you to send and receive from all the multiple email addresses you might have, as well as create sophisticated filtering/labelling system to reduce the amount of emails that hit your inbox, thereby saving you some time every day.
  • Labeling.  You might think that most email systems allow you to create folders to store your emails, and have filters, etc… Most do.  The difference is gmail does it with labels.  Rather than have actual ‘folders’, you have labels. You can assign more than one label to an email, thereby putting the email in multiple ‘folders’ without actually making duplicate emails…sound like a good idea?
  • Branding.  By having your staff utilize the branded emails, your online presence, via your staff, will be more cohesive.
  • Accountability.  You can always log in and review the communications that are sent on your company’s behalf.  While looking at someone else’s email seems like an ethical no-no, as a business owner, you sometimes need to see what sort of interactions your employee/contractor is having on your behalf.
  • Reliability. Google servers are incredibly reliable.  You won’t have to worry about servers going down.  Also, if you use the web based interface, you’ll never have issues sending or receiving emails from any computer, or while traveling.

Documents

  • Central Repository. Google Docs is a great repository for shared documentation.  You can create and share word like documents, spreadsheets, power point like presentations, drawings, and even web based forms.  If you and one of your team members were to look at the same document at the same time, you will both see the actions and movements each other are making…aka real time sharing.  Neat stuff!
  • External file storage. You can also upload your own files to the server, though there is a cap on the amount of free storage.  However, it’s a great place to store important documents that you can access from anywhere.
  • Google Drive (updated July 1, 2012) – Google Docs has been turned into Google Drive.  This is a vast improvement on Google Docs.  It adds the ability to more effectively store non-google docs files on the server.  Plus, it adds the ability to selectively sync files with your desktop, much like Drop Box.  That’s a HUGE plus in my humble opinion.

Calendaring

  • Robust Calendar. I’m sure you may be familiar with google calendar already.  It’s really the same for google apps, just that you have more sharing features with your team members. You can specify which team members can see, or see AND edit your calendar.  Also, if you currently are using a personal gmail for calendaring, it can quickly and easily be imported into your new google apps account.
  • Super compatibility. If you’ve never hooked up your desktop/mobile calendar with a google calendar, you are missing out.  It’s compatible with most, if not all systems out there.

There’s other cool stuff too. You can manage your Google Analytics/Places/Plus accounts from this main account.

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Well there you have it.  Google Apps for the masses.