Blog

Social recognition for online learning

LinkedIn purchased Lynda the other day and I am surprised that no other online learning institute have thought about integrating socially. I study on multiple online sites, but none of them automate the courses I complete into any social networks, outside of them trying to promote themselves through referrer programs, which I’m encouraged to do. I mentioned it to the Treehouse guys, and I hope they do something about it, before Lynda completely dominates on LinkedIn.

I think this Lynda acquisition is a brilliant idea, possibly they over paid, but it’s a smart move by LinkedIn. I have read that they plan on suggesting courses when you get a promotion to ensure you have the right skills to do you job. But that seems counter productive, for job seekers, who I personally think benefit the most from LinkedIn. Instead, when you study and as you complete a course, your achievements are automatically added to your profile, so that recruiters and employers can find people with the skills they require. This could be done for any social network or recruitment site that showcases your credentials, in the same way as any learning institute, both online and offline, it promotes them , it’s good for you and everybody wins.

Automation of your credentials is useful, we sometimes hesitate to promote our new skills, for all sorts of valid reasons, so this way, so long as I have consented it just makes it credible, because everybody’s doing it. It would take me a significant amount of time to add all the courses I have completed to my LinkedIn profile, but automation takes away that hurdle, and if it’s happening as I’m learning, my skills are being presented as current as they possibly can be. Now doesn’t that just make sense? So lets hope for $1.5 billion LinkedIn are smart enough to not only offer courses, but showcase the courses already completed. This goes for all the other online institute out their too.

Reducing phone reach

If you’re like me, you reach for your phone without even thinking about it far too often, mindlessly switching between apps, distracted by the latest photo, video or micro writing. I can’t remember whose article I was reading, but some guy mentioned that one of the best things he ever did was take his wife’s advice to remove his Facebook app from his phone. I didn’t reach for my phone straight away, but it didn’t take me long before I found myself mindlessly scrolling through my Facebook feed, so I decided to take it off.

Facebook isn’t an app I save many stories, thats something I do on Medium and Twitter a lot. But I tend to just end up with a bunch of articles I bookmark or favourite and never really get round to reading. With Facebook off my phone, I still got hugely distracted by these other apps, and while I thought it was harmless, I realised I was holding up people wanting to use gym equipment I was on, while I was fiddling with my phone between sets. So I made a conscious decision to remove Medium. But I was not ready to say cheers to Twitter, it’s my realtime news, how could I possibly remove that?

A couple of irate tweets later, I realised that I have another bad habit, besides favouriting tweets I want to read later and never do, I tend to tweet on the fly and post stuff with little or no thought. Thats risky stuff, so I decided to take Twitter off my phone.

Instinctively I still reach for my phone, but with Instagram being the only social network I still have on the device, I tend to spend less time looking down and it has not only allowed me to be less distracted, but it is saving my battery life. I will confess that I spend most of my day in front of at least one screen or another, and I certainly still visit these sites (I am experimenting with not using Facebook at all, however thats a future post) and I still use apps like Instagram, but still this is a small victory, I really do reach for my phone a lot less.

Increasing Followers on Twitter

Listening to a the audible book – Mastering Story, Community and Influence, it is mentioned that following everyone who follows you, will increase your followers dramatically. I have always been really conservative about following people, so as to not flood my feed, but I wondered if it had anything to do with why I generally don’t see a rapid increase in followers. Admittedly, I don’t tweet very often, and don’t usually have too much information to share. However, I decided to give this a try to see how quickly I could increase my followers and I was surprised at some of the results.

I started by following everyone who followed me at the time. Unfortunately I could not follow everyone, Twitter actually stops you from following more than 1000 people per 24 hour period, as explained on the Twitter help center page. I had read after following their alert, that they also don’t allow you to follow more than 2000 people. So while watching my followers rapidly increase, I was going to be restrained by the 2001 accounts I followed. But it kinda worked, within a couple of days I had an additional 100 followers and counting.

Some of the new accounts almost instantly followed me, like they’re using apps that some how associate themselves with accounts I’ve recently followed. As I never had 2000 followers to begin with, I did use the recommended Who to follow accounts as I thought they would be relative to the people I had followed. It really took no time and very little effort to add and increase followers. There are a lot of dodgy followers now though and I’m surprised that Twitter has not banned them. I question whether my following those accounts gives them some sort of validation that they are legit. Who knows.

I have oddly discovered some really interesting accounts which I will continue to subscribe to, but for the most part I will be axing at least three-quarters of them as it’s almost impossible to keep up with the ever refreshing feed. I will still leave it for a couple of days, just to see how many new followers I get, but I do expect those numbers to drop just as quickly as they increased the moment I start chipping away at bring my total account more toward the 400 – 500 follower mark.

In conclusion though, if you want more followers fast, start following more people, but remember Twitter has set a limit.

Add a domain as your location in Instagram

I’ve had a few requests from people to show how I have added my domain to my instagram photos.

Domain on instagram

Add your photo, filters etc and once you’ve gotten to the final screen where you add your tags, description etc, there’s a link to Name This Location.

Domain on instagram

Click on that and you will see a list of locations near you.

Domain on instagram

At the top their is a field that says Find or create a location.

Domain on instagram

Type in your domain www.craigjamieson.com as a custom location, select Create a custom location and it will add it as your location.

Domain on instagram

The next time you post, you simply search for location and start typing your url and it should pick it up immediately and you add it.

Domain on instagram

The nice thing is when sharing on certain social networks, it includes your domain as the location.

The better part of 2013

Just about every person I talk to had a pretty rough 2013 and they’d just like to put it behind them and are hoping for a better year in 2014. I certainly had a challenging year and I could rant, but I’d rather attempt to highlight the most memorable moments of 2013.

I got out a bit and was lucky enough to see some of my favorite bands and entertainment. In February I watched the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Rodriguez. I got covered in colour during the We Are One (Holy One) colour festival and thoroughly enjoyed my first Roller Derby. Drove out to Pretoria to a Lego fair which inspired me to start working on a minifigure installation. I painfully pedaled my way through the Joburg city one night at Critical Mass.

I’d like to remember the people we lost and celebrate their life. From our president Nelson Mandela, to celebrities like Paul Walker and everyone’s favorite gangster James Gandolfini. You were inspirational and you will be missed.

RIP

James Gandolfini

This year we used the word selfie more times than we probably should have, and all due to the smashing uptake of Instagram, currently my favorite social network. Coca-Cola’s Share-a-Coke campaign was brilliant and while I’m still waiting to get my hands on a bottle of Coke with my name on it, it’s just been brilliant. Apple announced the release of many new upgrades to their products and I’ve not seen nearly as many people upgrade to iPhone as they have the 5s, I actually do not know how I lived without the fingerprint scanner before.

Craig Coke

#ShareaCokeza

I started the year strong, still dropping the weight and very quickly fell ill, but in the hands of the professionals I’m one organ less, but recovering nicely and getting back in shape again. I have gained a significant amount of muscle mass and I’m feeling great. I got a lot of ink, and most importantly started my back piece, which I’m hoping to complete in 2014.

We have watched some of the most amazing TV series this year, everything from Breaking Bad to Walking Dead has people talking and could very well see the revival of live TV. New series such as Ray Donovan, House of Cards, The Blacklist and Mob City have been great additions while we wait for new Game of Thrones and some final seasons of Mad Men and Californication.

Breaking Bad

I’m looking forward to 2014 and hope that it brings us all a whole lot more success, health, happiness and more of the good times.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Bean counting …

I was wondering which social network is getting me the most eye balls. And I was pleasantly surprised by the results. So while there no real value in this, cause engagement, the type of social network etc all come into play, I just took the most obvious number by which to measure my popularity online; and by my count, Linked In has the most people following me. Sadly Behance came last, but whose counting …

Linked In    1604 Connections
Facebook    1530 Friends
Twitter    1293 Followers
Google+    567 inCircles
Pinterest    481 Followers
Instagram    211 Followers
Dribbble    100 Followers
Behance    63 Followers

FNB site redesign

On the 14th July FNB launched their newly designed website. There have been a lot of negative comments made, which is to be expected given that people really don’t like change, but in fairness I have to commend the effort made by the team who have redesigned the FNB site, it is a huge leap forward compared to any other banking website locally (& abroad for that matter).

On the plus side, the site is responsive, fast, the use of text instead of images would be a huge help with that, clean(ish) and at least an attempt has been made to refresh it and keep up with current trends.

I haven’t had too many of the problems with my account, like some other people have reported, nothing is obviously broken. But I do see a lot of design and usability choices that I might have done differently. I’m not going to tear into the redesign, I think there are enough people doing that, but I will offer some advice, based on what I currently see online. I hope that this advice is taken into consideration as I really do believe it could improve the over all user experience.

Buttons
It’s not particularly clear what is a button and what is just text. You basically need to run your cursor over everything to see if it’s click-able and on touch devices that really presents a problem. If you are using text links, then underline them. If you have buttons, then make them stand out and have clear call to actions, so they cannot be ignored. Buttons sizes should be larger on touch device’s as your finger is the cursor.

Menus
Whether it be the main navigation menu, a sub menu or a list menu, again these need to be made obvious to the end user, as with buttons. Menus also need to show where you are. They should contain the most important functions of the site first, then secondary include things like about us, careers and other company information (you are mostly buying into the service, not the history of the company or it’s current job vacancies). With responsive designs, especially when focusing on mobile devices, menus should be easily recognizable and easy to use.

Navigating
When you click into many of the sections of the site, a modal like window appears and it has a close button. While that makes sense in some instances, it just doesn’t in others. For example, if you close the window to be taken to the home page, then why not just have an icon that has a house on it. If it’s a tab menu, then why have a close button?

If you are going to have several pages deep as you navigate, then at least include a bread crumb trail, so you can work your way back.

Fonts
The use of web fonts on the site ensure that it’s a lot more on brand, that the content is SEO friendly, will always show, even if images were turned off and best of all, it loads a lot faster. Given that the site homepage is secure (https://) due to the login form on the home page, this is a really smart addition. But they still haven’t got the balance of font weight and size right. On tablet and mobile devices, the text is tiny, which is a simple mistake easily fixed, just bump it up a bit for smaller screens, so you don’t have to strain to read it.

Use a colour scheme that makes it easier to differentiate between header, sub-header, body copy and links. Remembering that hover isn’t immediately recognized on touch devices.

Icons
One of the stand-out features of the old FNB site was the use of iconography and it has often been used as a shining example of what clients want when they reference other sites, so I’m not sure why they have hardly used any icons. Just like icons on road or airport signs, it would be easier to have some symbols that are easily recognizable on the site, so even if you have trouble reading, you know what to click. It would also help differentiate between what is a button and what is just text. Obviously this needs to be a consistent treatment or again it could confuse.

When designing icons, even something as simple as an arrow, make a little effort. A triangle is just a square cut diagonally and rotated. That’s just lazy. When you see all the curves used in the FNB CI (from what I can tell) surely some rounded arrows could be used.

If I had to take a guess, while speeding up the site must be a priority, user friendliness has to come in pretty close. If speed is the issue, then use sprites of png or svg graphics. You can even create a font, which includes all your graphics as vectors, which can be loaded in once.

Interface
The interface design is very confusing for me, I’m just not sure I understand what they were trying to achieve. But if I had to guess they were against the traditional scrolling website and they wanted the interface to seem more contained. The fixed header and footer was a poor choice, as was adding their logo on the bottom. Logos are commonly recognised as being home buttons and are best suited to being on the top left.  This isn’t to say that it can’t be done, I see fixed elements and logos being abused in all sorts of ways now that this functionality is better supported, but on a banking site, I’d opt for something more traditional myself.

Another odd element is the left hand side where page headers are flipped 90 degrees; it all just reads a little odd to me.

The element that bothers me probably the most is the search and login section. It sees really cramped and hard to tap on mobile devices. I’m sure real-estate was a huge consideration for the designer, this section s one of the most used features and just seems cramped at the top on the edge. A little padding around everything would make it easier on the eye and touch.

Loading
Remember loading bars on Flash sites? I’ve designed enough of them to know that you can do amazing things, but in HTML, they are a functional element for content heavy sites that load slowly. I understand telling people the pages are loading, but if you are going to have a loader, that is a bar that represents the amount of data being loaded and indicates how long you have to go, at the very least, make it work properly. And only use loaders if it’s really necessary, given the speed of the page loads, I don’t think it’s worth it on this site.

Social Media
I went and looked at a bunch of international banking sites and not one, not even PayPal have social media icons on their home page. While I am aware that FNB dominates as far as banks go in this space, it just strikes me as weird to add these icons to your home page. But if you are going to, then at least use the official icons as specified by the specific social networks. Facebook is probably the most aggressive about this, but even the friendly folk at twitter have some terms too. FNB are a very public online site and could well land up in trouble.

Responsive Design
I believe the use of responsive web design was the smartest choice made when redesigning the site. I’ve not seen another bank do anything close to making their layout work across multiple devices. There are so many advantages to using this technique and given FNB’s commitment to embracing technology, making it work across multiple platforms is a sure way of allowing users to access their site on any device. I actually think the need for a mobile app and a mobi site becomes redundant. What I would caution the team on though, is their current interface design and various layouts across the devices. I’m not sure if they have finished this yet, but across my devices, the site doesn’t quite adapt enough to call it truly responsive. I struggle with the font sizes, buttons etc as mentioned above. Regardless it functionally works across all my devices, which means I can bank anywhere, which is a huge win!

Conclusion
I could continue to do this all day, but I am sure that the team have got their hands full given the mammoth task of pulling something like this off. Again, it’s a huge effort and I really am impressed, as usual FNB are ahead of the rest of the banks online and I’m sure once people get used to where old features now are, the complaining will turn into compliments as they have made the effort, no other bank that I’m aware of has made toward a better online experience. I would personally love to work on a project like this and to the teams involved, keep going, it’s inspiring and you all deserve a good pat on the back.

Clone Wars

Today my Facebook account was cloned. I wish I had payed more attention when it happened to others, but not a whole lot I can do about that now, however, the least I could do is share with you how to prevent this from happening and what I go through in order to resolve this. I will continue to update this post as I try and sort this mess out, but for now, protect yourself before you are a victim of the clone wars.

You probably won’t know you have been cloned until one of your friends let’s you know. Trying to find the account seems impossible, unless a friend sends you a link, which apparently if the clone account reports you, you won’t be able to see it anyway.

To prevent your friends from getting requests, you need to stop sharing who you are friends with on Facebook.

Prevent access to your friends list as follows (you have to do this from a PC):

1.       Go to your own profile on Facebook (click on your name at top left next to your profile pic)
2.       Click on “Friends” tab just below your cover pic.
3.       On the right-hand side, next to the “+ Find Friends” click on the Pen Icon (Edit)
4.       Click on “Edit Privacy”
5.       On the selection for “Who can see your friend list?” select “Only Me”
6.       You could also select “Only Me” for “Who can see the people and lists you follow?” to make it even more secure
7.       Click “Close” and that is it!

Thanks for the tip from News 24: Prevent Facebook profile cloning

If you have been cloned, the polite thing to do is let all your friends know, so that they don’t accept friend requests from you. If anyone has any further tips, please drop me an email at craig[at]digiguru[dot]co[dot]za

Thanks

P.S. There can be only one!

Don’t be a square

Facebook is constantly evolving and one of the more recent changes is the way we handle images in posts. With the wall getting wider, the square we have gotten used to is now a rectangle. So I have started exploring how this new shape is being handled and how you can best design for it.

Square post

square

Rectangle post

rectangle

The rectangle is wider, which gives you more real estate in which to design. The aspect ratio is 16:9 like the average photograph, unlike polaroids and Instagram

1013656_10151416585716637_572472446_n

You can use larger images, I like to make them big so that when you view them in the gallery, they have some substance, but remember to keep the aspect ratio and that the larger the file, the longer the download.

large

Something else I have noted is that it does not crop right to the edge, so it might be a good idea to ensure your design does not go right to the edge.

crop

There is a border around the images, it’s not a light grey, but rather a transparent line as you can still see some of the image through the line. Remember to add that when doing Facebook design mockups. Just in case that confuses anyone, you do not need to add the border for your final image for Facebook, that’s a style the site applies, but in your actual mockup for client presentations etc.

edge

I still think these images are being used in other sections of Facebook, so don’t forget about the square, keep the focus of your image in that square space.

square-thumb

I am currently looking into how cover images are being handled as I have noticed some shifts in it’s usage too and will post something soon.

Friday free social media tips

It’s been a while since I posted something about social media, but I’m seeing far too much rubbish going on, so thought I’d give a few free tips this Friday

  • Get a life, so you have something to share on your social network
  • Nobody sets up a group anymore on Facebook, setup a page
  • Twitter is not an instant messenger, if you want to have a conversation, use Skype, Direct Message, pick up the phone etc
  • If you’re having an event, and you want people to know about it, setup an event on Facebook
  • Stuff that is polite to not talk about at the dinner table is more importantly not great for discussing on social networks, it’s documented, so keep your race, political, religious and other such views away, cause it’s easy to offend
  • Don’t set up a second (or third, firth, sixteenth) personal Facebook account with YOUR NAME 2, just setup a page and use that as your Facebook profile
  • Don’t be a dick!
  • Visual posts with images and videos get higher responses
  • You cannot run apps on mobile versions of Facebook
  • If you’ve got nothing good to say, say nothing at all
  • Treat people on social networks as you would in real life
  • Tell people to Retweet your tweet if you want more retweets
  • Social media sites are gaining popularity in search results
  • Low likes, tweets and + reflect poorly on your content, so if you’ve added these buttons to your sites during the “gotta-have-it” phase, if they’re low, ditch ’em, it’ll speed up your site
  • Building your Google+ profile is a great way to increase your search ranking on Google
  • Ask users questions if you want better engagement
  • Twitter followers drop off, it happens to everyone, don’t take it personally
  • Adding a full stop before the .@ on reply lets all your followers see your response, as twitter by default assumes that @ without the fullstop is a reply to the specific person, it’s better to reply, but add their twitter handle after your reply if you want people to see and you don’t want to .@
  • In internet slang, a troll is someone who posts inflammatory, extraneous, or off-topic messages in an online community
  • If you’re a DJ or a band etc and you don’t have money to burn on a website, build a strong social presence, it mostly costs nothing more but effort to maintain
  • Stop posing, pouting and pretending!
  • Share your photos at live events, add location and tag people who are with you, let everyone see what they are missing out on
  • Facebook is going to allow #hash tags in posts
  • Don’t harsh my morning mellow by ranting about traffic etc, social networks are not your soap box
  • Think before you drink, before you type, before you wake up the next day and want to die
  • Use @ and # tags on other social networks, so that when you share on networks that use these, it all works in synergy (far out man)
  • Stay cool now, over posting, is over baring and it’s kinda like over sharing
  • Try not to share only drunk moments, potential employers might not think you’re so cool, they might just think you’re a drunk
  • Home is not where the heart is, it’s some new app for Android, that’s not an app … we’ll never know until they make it for iOS
  • Your mom is the fastest growing demographic (over 55) on social networks
  • Pinterest will remove any pin deemed nudity or other such filth, even on a private board

I’m no social media guru, but as a digital creative director, I see a lot of shit on the internet, hopefully that counts for something. Otherwise just chill, it’s Friday, enjoy some free love!