Archive for the ‘competition’ Category

posted by Andrew Hartley - Business Consultant & Entrepreneur on Aug 15

I want to thank anyone who helped Third Floor Cards for their commitment in voting in LifeBlue’s “Get a new Design” contest! If you were following the action, you’ll know that after a short stint in third place, Third Floor Cards ended up finishing a strong fourth! While that means that Third Floor Cards did not win the contest, LifeBlue offered a “second-chance” drawing for anyone who posted a review of the LifeBlue website on their blog and sent them an e-mail telling them so.

You can find my review of LifeBlue’s site at the following URL:
http://www.aviationofbusiness.com/AoBBlog/lifeblue-web-design/2007/08/06/

And the result was:
Third Floor Cards was selected at random in the second chance drawing! Also, check out the rest of the contestants on LifeBlue’s Wall of Shame…

So even though we didn’t “win” the contest, Third Floor Cards will still receive a redesigned website! We couldn’t have done it without all of your help in the voting portion… and all of your good thoughts and hopes for Third Floor Cards! So, again, thanks so much for your help.

Come soon to see the redesigned website at http://www.thirdfloorcards.com - I don’t know how long of a process it is to do a professional redesign of a website, but you’ll know when it’s done… it won’t suck anymore! :)

Fair Winds,
Andrew

posted by Andrew Hartley - Business Consultant & Entrepreneur on Aug 6

As I mentioned in a previous post: Re-designing a never-quite-finished-in-the-first-place design, I entered one of my sites (Third Floor Cards) in a contest to win a free site re-design. Lordy, does that site ever need it. We rose through the ranks pretty well, enjoyed a short stint in third place, and then were knocked back down to fourth, where we’ve been sitting for a couple of weeks now.

With a little boost, I think Third Floor Cards can still make it to third before the end of the competition, but second and first are out of the question for our little site.

That being said, Life Blue has offered a second chance to the less fortunate websites out there - like TFC. The remainder of this post is a critique of LifeBlue’s website, which will garner me an entry into their second-chance drawing. Watch for the “web design” link -> that little beauty buys me five entries into the drawing! Talk about a neat marketing trick to improve your Search Engine Optimization (SEO).


Life Blue’s website, in my opinion, is quite well-made. It’s intriguing to the eye, as the top banner changes into a new design focus each time you click a link, but the site’s “motto” - Is your life Blue? - stays front and center throughout. Additionally, there is always a form on the right side of the screen - “above the fold” - allowing you give the web design company your contact information so they can contact you for a custom quote.

I found the site easy to navigate and interesting to read. The writing is concise and has some humour, the text is easy on the eyes (as is the rest of the site), and there are a plethora of links to get you pretty much anywhere you are interested in going on the site without much fuss. The only confusing bit to me was on their Portfolio page, where the links in the left column were there to limit your search of their portfolio examples to their design focuses of creative design, application development, search engine marketing, content management systems, and e-commerce. Since the rest of the left-column links on every other page were so similar, I was confused when I clicked a link and it just reloaded the portfolio page. Perhaps a better explanation of what clicking the links on this page does would help… it took me several clicks to realize what it was doing.

Overall, though, I think it is a very well-designed site, and whether I win in the second-chance drawing or not, I may be contacting Life Blue for my web design needs in the future.


I did two “web design” links! Think that’ll get me another five entries in the drawing? naaah.

Fair Winds,
Andrew

posted by Andrew Hartley - Business Consultant & Entrepreneur on Jul 12

A long headline for a short request:

One of the online businesses that Jill and I have never yet been able to get off the ground (because of our lack of time/funds and my lack of knowledge) has entered a contest for a free website redesign.

Please click the link below to vote for Third Floor Cards (www.thirdfloorcards.com) as the worst designed website in the contest… the winning site gets a free re-design. If 3rdFC wins the contest, it’ll be a redesign for a site that never quite got designed completely in the first place.

If you comment that you voted (and leave your e-mail) - and 3rdFC wins the contest (please vote every day) - 3rdFC will send you a coupon to buy a card for $1.00 (including shipping - THAT’S 80%+ off!) from the newly designed site!


Web Design Contest Vote

Fair Winds,
Andrew

posted by Andrew Hartley - Business Consultant & Entrepreneur on May 5

An airplane is an amazing piece of machinery.  During some portions of a flight, it is required that the pilot make large changes and major corrections to the path of the aircraft.  Takeoff and landing are obvious places where this comes to mind.  This is called “hand flying” the airplane.

At other times, however, it is unnecessary to “hand fly” the plane - during straight and level “cruise” flight for instance.  During this phase of a flight, the pilot will use what’s called “trim” to make very slight corrections to the flight path of the airplane.  If the plane is descending slightly, the pilot will use “nose up trim” to stop the descent.  If climbing slightly, “nose down trim” may be used.  Some aircraft have trim for rolling (aileron trim) and turning (rudder trim) as well.  Keep in mind here that I am not talking about any kind of “auto-pilot;” this is just a way to more carefully and precisely control the plane once it is in “cruise” flight and flying at a single altitude and in one direction for a length of time.

This can be likened to a business (as always!).  At some points in the life of a business, like during the startup and initial growth, it is necessary to “hand fly” the business - you as an entrepreneur (pilot) must “control” the business more directly and make larger changes to its direction.  In an airplane this is during takeoff and climbout and only lasts a few minutes.  In business, it may last a few years. 

Additionally, if you plan on selling or in some other way “exiting” the business, you will, again, need to “hand fly” for awhile.  You may not be “hand flying” the business directly, but you will be directly and significantly involved in the process of finding a buyer and negotiating a fair price for both of you.  This roughly coincides with the approach and landing of an airplane - again a time when the pilot must be significantly involved in the aircraft’s control. 

Most other times during a business’s “flight,” small corrections and tweaks are all that is necessary to keep the company moving in the direction you want it to go.  This is, of course, assuming you have a good business plan (flight plan) and a good team (crew).  You also must be in a well-designed company (stable aircraft).  See my post on Tradeoffs for more on business design and aircraft design.

There ARE times during cruise flight when a business (or an airplane) DOES need to be hand flown - any time a change of direction is necessary.  In aviation, it is all about navigation or avoidance of other aircraft (which are subjects for other posts), and in business it is during times of change, when a new direction is needed to grow to the next level or to outmaneuver competition.

Times to hand fly an airplane / business:

  • Takeoff / Startup
  • Climbout / Initial growth phase (combination of trim and hand flying)
  • Change in direction / New business opportunity
  • Traffic avoidance / Response to competition (can be proactive or reactive)
  • Initial descent / Considering exiting (combination of trim and hand flying)
  • Approach to landing / Decision to exit made (combination of trim and hand flying)
  • Landing / Exit of business (sale or other exit strategy)

The reason it is important to understand this is that is is possible to “hand fly” an aircraft (and a business) when it should be “trimmed.”  It is very easy to “overcorrect” when you hand fly an aircraft during cruise flight… this will cause large changes in altitude and direction because the pilot feels the need to directly control everything the aircraft does with relatively large control movements.  But in a stable aircraft, small adjustments with trim allow the plane to “fly itself” - and that is exactly what aircraft (and businesses) should be designed to do.

posted by Andrew Hartley - Business Consultant & Entrepreneur on Mar 17

My wife and her father often play Dr. Mario, an old eight-bit Nintendo game.  In this game, each player starts with a number of “germs,” each one of three colors: blue, red, or yellow.  The goal of the game is to eliminate all of the germs from the screen.  To do so, you must either stack up (vertically) or line up (horizontally) four blocks of the same color.  The blocks are actually pills; some are all one color - most are half one color and half another.  They come in any combination of two of the colors above.  Players can move and flip the “pills” to get them lined up or stacked properly to eliminate the colored germs with same color pill (or half-pill).  The pill’s and germs disappear when four or more of one color are lined (or stacked) up.

What is interesting about this is that when playing in competition, it is possible to “plop” on the other player by arranging your pills so as to make more than one line disappear with one move.  The other player will have two (or three, or four!) “half-pills” drop down at random on his/her side of the screen.  These plops generally land in inconvenient places and are inconvenient colors.

Why the hell am I giving you a crash course in Dr. Mario, you ask?  For this reason:  The competitive style of playing the game is uncanny in its parallel to entrepreneurship and business.  Stay with me here…

 Business is competitive by its very nature.  So the competition aspect of Dr. Mario draws an obvious similarity; however, there is much more!  Due to competition in business, there are constant “plops” in your business from your competitors… these “plops” are neither convenient nor avoidable - they happen no matter what you do.  They are totally in the control of your competition.

Now it gets truly interesting.  What you do and how you react to these “plops” often determins your success in the game… just like in business and entrepreneurship.  If the “plops” distract you from your ultimate goal of eliminating germs, your competition will beat you in short order.  On the same token, if you ignore the plops and play as if they aren’t happening, you’ll also get beaten.  To win the game, you have to change your actions to take the plops into account while always keeping the germs in mind.  If you can eliminate the germs while dealing with the plops, you have a good chance of winning.  By the way - sometimes the plops are actually beneficial.  Just like in life, luck plays a role.

My wife consistently wins at the game… often she wins three rounds straight - “skunking” her opponent.  She also regularly comes from behind after being ruthlessly “plopped” upon.  She is a master of adjusting her actions and strategy based on the reality of the game - always focusing on the end goal of eliminating the germs.

We need to do the same in business - focus on our goal, but always see the reality of our situation.  Only a combination of the two will lead us to success so we can “skunk” our competition.

Fair Winds,
Andrew

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