Blog Archives

Exciting nonprofit website developments

Icon for Post #3507

NBN or no NBN, the internet just got bigger courtesy of Hootville which has recently developed four websites for Australian nonprofits working in community health, age services, vocational educational training (VET) and family violence.

family violence website development

Serious issues don't oblige creators to be boring.

First up let’s meet familyviolencehumeregion.com.au which brings together the many agencies and institutions that support people experiencing family violence in Victoria’s Hume region. (Think Shepparton, Benalla, Mansfield.)

The website aims to provide a one-stop shop for professionals or community members in need of assistance – thus the services directory. We aimed for a look that wasn’t dour or depressing – thus the colours and degree of slick. We aimed for a site that could further synchronise the sector – thus the calendar of professional training and development. We did pretty well.

VET RTO website development

Try attracting young students with an old website.

Next we head into the competitive world of VET in which Inner Melbourne VET Cluster competes. It now competes with the aid of a gorgeous new website. Let us be frank – this site is HUGE and complex – lots of different programs requiring explanation, bookings, payments and – oh – there’s a site within the site – but that’s another story.

This is one nonprofit organisation website that dramatically reduces admin time to deal with take bookings and payments. It also goes much further to persuade students, teachers, referrers and employers that IMVC is the right VET provider option.

community health service website development

Striking images dominate the homepage

Finally we head to the cool, gritty, diverse north of Melbourne where Merri Community Health Service lives. This is another large site for a broad-based community health service that aims to be inviting, retailesque and informative. The Merri HR team is also benefitted from a far superior online job application system.  

This site utilises online videos which Hootville produced. The unscripted videos are far more than straight talking heads and are scattered appropriately across the site but also live together here. Could you do with some videos like this? Unlike these videos, yours need not utilise Brett’s acting skills. (Top video 1.45m in – cue Oscar buzz.)

age services website development

The sector needs to recruit and retain like never before.

And then there’s this website campaigning for better aged care funding for client Leading Age Services Australia (LASA). The URL was Brett’s idea – there are three million Australians aged 65yo and older. That’s why the boost to age services is so vital. We also created an election specific tool allowing participants to email their local MPs.

All these sites are built to last – the WordPress content management system (CMS) we use means that these sites could last a decade. WordPress is most likely to be able to ‘play’ with any and all new developments. WordPress is sophisticated enough to be simple to update. We always include training in basic website maintenance. We recommend hosts but take not a penny from them. Post-launch our clients can choose between us and thousands of other WordPress-literate developers.

A bad website costs you more than you can ever calculate: staff, clients, donors, members, partners and influence. If your nonprofit website isn’t up to scratch stop wasting time wondering about how to take the first step and talk to Brett: 03 9017 1062.

Tagged ,

Advice for developing a new website

Icon for Post #1966

One key inspiration for our perpetual grumpiness is the appalling state of many nonprofit websites. Too many are simply too bad. Why? Lots of reasons but first is that nonprofits do not correctly brief, select or work with their developer.

Hootville Communications is very dubious about website developers which we declare  despite making part of our living developing websites. Developers are privileged in that they know soooo much more about websites than their clients which can lead to…less than optimum performance.

Over the next few weeks we’ll help you keep website developers honest with some savvy questions. Otherwise you’ll get the site they want to build for you – the quickest, fastest and most profitable. 

And yes, dear developers, in future future weeks we’ll tell nonprofits what they are doing wrong.

Q2. What features would you recommend?

A. The developer better have some strong recommendations or you’ll end up with a boring online brochure. Chief among the smorgasboard of ideas: social media sharing technologies such as Sexy Bookmarks, eNewsletter such as MailChimp, online payment, bookings and donations systems, embedded video, Google Analytics, Google Maps of key locations, embedded Twitter feed, pop-up banners, integrated Facebook, easy SEO options such as HeadSpace2 to enable Google-friendly page names and tags. You want lots of suggestions based on the developer’s experience. You needn’t utilise them all but you are paying for their wisdom. Are they wise?

web developers offer buffet of options

You want a buffet of enticing options; including some you've not had before.

Why do you want all these features? Because having and utilising them means your site is worth visiting more than once. It turns your website into a 24/7 employee and that the money you invest gets a better return. We’ve all been trained by some companies to interact with them via the web; perhaps to book an appointment or pay a bill. In fact we often prefer this. Your site should do the same. Without features your site is likely to be feeling pretty lonely, pretty soon.

Let’s say you want to offer online bookings on your new site. If you use a well-established CMS (see question one below) you will have a range of options for this purpose. This is similar to the range of apps you have for your smartphone which all offer largely the same thing, such as choosing a restaurant. Each app is competing for your custom and is reviewed online by nerds. Read and consider these independently of the developer. The more you know, the smarter your questions; the better your choice.

In a way this is a trick question – you are asking this to see if you the developer will supply more than technical know-how.

 

Q1. What content management systems do you work with and why?

A. Your content management system (CMS) is fundamental to how your easy or otherwise your site is to build, maintain and expand in the future. You use the CMS to present your words and images on the web as a working website. It will determine how many options you have for features such as online payments, online shopping, booking systems or social media sharing. The CMS will determine if your site remains cohesive with ever-evolving technologies. It will also determine the mental health of your web editor.

website developers

These guys think their suits are sooo special.

A website is not like a Saville Row suit – you don’t benefit from having it handmade from scratch by one artisan. Think of it as a quality car, assembled from dozens of tested, proven parts from various specialist manufacturers, enhanced by some (relatively minor) choices you make, all under the experienced eye of one car company which takes ultimate responsibility and most of the profit. (We hate car-analogies but in this case it’s a valid one.) 

Hopefully the developer will answer “WordPress” or another proven CMS such as Drupal or Joomla! though we cannot vouch for these platforms. If they talk of their own special CMS which only they develop and maintain, walk away. Run away if they explain that their system is superior to say, WordPress which drives 19 million sites. Slam the door behind you if they start explaining that you must pay ongoing fees for use of their CMS.

You can save yourself from a whole lot of wasted meetings by clarifying this straight away. Developers will generally have a preference. This is their preference, not yours. Don’t be swayed without great reason.

Do some homework by asking owners of great (not good) websites about their CMS. You may be surprised at the passion of the responses. And be sure to ask the person who actually updates the site – not the boss or the techie.

Tagged , , ,

new websites fail to please

Icon for Post #1579

The site we built for the Australian age services sector campaign. We also helped develop the campaign itself.

Nothing Hootville does is more complex than creating new websites. (See our latest collection at the end of this article.) It touches upon every aspect of an organisation, requires contributions and cooperation from every department, involves a thousand decisions by inexperts about specific, complex webby issues.

Everyone has an opinion but few people start with a clear criteria about what they want – though they know what they hate. Good outcomes are far from guaranteed.

website redesign disatisfaction

As in marriage, satisfaction is far from guaranteed

No wonder a recent post in HubSpot blog stated that one third of 152 in-house marketers were disatisfied with their brand spanking new websites. Gosh. Websites are too expensive, too important and too resource-intensive for 33% of us to be left with a hangover.

Poster Mark Volpe provides a few ways to avoid disapointment. We’ll throw in these of our own.

1. Treat your website as an employee. Like a human employee, websites should have functions to fulfill such as taking booking and payments, promoting volunteering, automatically taking new memberships, steering email enquiries to the appropriate department, media liasion centre and so on. Suddenly your new site should be measured against much more specific criteria. Most sites don’t go far beyond providing lots of words. (More on this on Brett’s upcoming article for the Fundraising Institute of Australia magazine.)

2. Don’t consult any more broadly than required by law. It’s not politically correct but we are dead against more than two or three people throwing their two cent pieces in the spoiled broth, if you’ll excuse the mixed metaphor. Honestly; how many people in your organisation advise your accountant or lawyer?  There are too many decisions to make (starting with choice of content management system) to explain the selection criteria to inexperts who are generally more concerned with aesthetics than functionalities. We’d like to see the CEO and senior marketing and communications people involved. That’s about it.

community health service website developer

We built this for community health service Inner South Community Health Service

3. Use third party providers. Your developer or ISP provides a free eNewsletter function that can be a part of your new site. Great. Even greater; it’s free! Well guess what kids; it’s free for a reason: it’s bollocks. Same can go for online donation technology, publication display, polls, embedded videos, membership systems, online stores, ticket booking systems and so on.  Your developer should knowingly help you browse through the options but  should also listen to your opinions. Companies that specialise in providing a specific function (say MailChimp and its eNewsletter system) generally create superior products which are more regularly updated. Your website might intergrate four or five applications (or functions) provided by third parties. (Are you getting a sense of how many decisions you have to make, how many issues you have to come to grips with and why you want a small decision-making team?)

4. Don’t trust your developer. Imagine you are building your home. Would you simply say to the builder: “Build us whatever you usually build.”? Of course not. Anyone who has ever engaged a tradesman knows that unless you specify every detail you will get what suits the tradesman.

Sure the best tradies will guide you through each decision. (Of course when they do, we get impatient and complain at the size of the bill.)

family violence website development

Family violence alliance website by Hootville.

Most times though, you’ll get the easiest, most profitable range of options for the tradie. Web developers are no different plus usually come to your project from a technical perspective – not a marketing perspective, a communications perspective or a PR perspective.

The best outcomes come from being an informed client, willing to research, listen, evaluate and communicate.

Recent sites we’ve built:

For a regional family violence alliance.

For a community health service.

For another community health service.

For an RTO and VET provider.

For the age services sector.

For a little side business we run.

This is the sort of stuff we talk about in Online Savvy 101.

Tagged , ,

Australian non profit internet awards.

Icon for Post #1250
Internet awards for non profits

Like the Logies but for websites.

 

Isn’t it time your genius was recognised? The Australia New Zealand Internet Awards 2011 has categories for non profits which are doing smart things on the interweb.

Register your interest and the giant, oversized novelty cheque could be yours.

Tagged , ,

The dark art of SEO

Ever wondered how to get a first page search result on Google? Well the answer ain’t always steely determination and a dash of luck as this New York Times piece explains. It’s lengthy but worth the read if SEO at all interests you. Non profits are fortunate to generally have less SEO competition that our civilian pals in fast moving consumer goods or financial services. That said, a little effort from some of us may yield marked improvements…. Read More

Tagged , , , ,