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WEB BANNERS - a “How To”

Posted By admin on April 28, 2009

 Web Banners are a great way to promote your site or show on the web. By encouraging a “STEAL THIS BANNER” campaign you can encourage your friends and supporters to embed these banners. The embeded banners when clicked with bring the surfer to YOUR SITE for more information. This “How To” gives you a step-by-step. This assumes that you already have a jpg or gif graphic like the one below.

 09jwbnr300


1. SIZE IS EVERYTHING
Popular sizes are between 100 - 250 pixels wide. (The one above is 300 pixels wide. ) This enables the person “stealing” the code to easily embed it in the sidebar of their blog or site. It is also generally advisable to have a choice of banners. For instance 100, 150, and 200. The banner example we below was created for Jungle Webs.

2. SAVING TO A SOURCE PAGE
 

a. If you have your own website… just designate a page (that may or may not be for public view) for your images to be placed. Here is an example of the banner page for Jungle Webs. 

b. If you have a public blog… upload the image within a post.

 

c. If you have a free picture posting or sharing site such as Flickr… post it there.

This provides your image with a “home” or location on the web.

 

3. IMAGE INFORMATION

 

By right clicking on the image and checking “properties” most of the information that you will need will be displayed. You will need the following information to create your embedded banner.

 

a. Location of the image.

b. Location of your site or where you want the visitor to end up when they click it.

c. height & width (in pixels) of your image.

 

4. IMAGE & CODE

 

This is the banner with the code and explanation below.

09jwbnr250
 

<a href=”http://junglewebs.com”target=_blank><img src=”http://junglewebs.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/09jwbnr250.jpg” alt=”09jwbnr250″ width=”250″ height=”63″ /></a>

Looking at the code above… you will find the important information to fill in below to create your code

·    href=”http…” - this is the link you want the reader to go to when they click the banner. In the case here it is… http://junglewebs.com

·    target=”_blank” - opens the site in a new window.

·    scr=”http…” this is the location or home of the image. In the case here it is… http://junglewebs.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/04/09jwbnr250.jpg

·    height=”" the height of the image.

·    width= “” the width of the image.

Here is an open version of the code for you to place the information for your banner.

 

<a href=”YOUR WEB ADDRESS” target=”_blank”><img src=”YOUR IMAGE LOCATION” alt=”" height=”" width=”" /></a>

 

 

5. CREATE A COPY & PASTE TEXTBOX

The box below makes it easy for your visitors to steal your banner for their site.

 

 

Here is an open version of the code for you to place the information for your banner to create a copy & paste text box.

 

<textarea name=”code” cols=”50″ rows=”5″>PLACE EMBEDED CODE IN THIS AREA</textarea>

 

For more on HTML Code tutorials… GO HERE!

There you have it! 

A Web Presence - the DIY way

Posted By admin on October 20, 2008

TERMS

Static Site - A site that is purely informational.

Dynamic Site - A site that is both informational and interactive.

WYSIWYG - Stands for “What You See Is What You Get”. WYSIWYG Site editors are visual based.


a. Why have a blog on/as your site?

  • It’s Free! Most blogging sites such as Blogger, WordPress and TypePad are free. Just sign up for one and you are on your way.

  • It’s Easy! Anyone can publish on a blog. All blog site editors are mostly WYSIWYG based.

  • It is Interactive! Especially through the visitor commenting section.

b. Why own a Domain?

  • It is Affordable! You can buy a domain for under $10 a year at most registrars. Jungle Webs is currently offering domains starting at $7.49 a year!

  • Easy Name Recognition. Lets face it… it is easier to remember YOURNAME.COM instead of YOURNAME.BLOGORFREESITE.COM.

  • Comes with TONS OF FREEBIES!

c. Basic website needs.

  • Interesting Visuals.

  • Clear Information.

  • Easy Navgation.

d. A blog & a Domain - Now What? Part 1.

So, you took the plunge. You bought a domain (hopefully from Jungle Webs). But, you are not ready to commit to hosting yet… and you have a blog on a public server (like Blogger or Wordpress, etc…). Now what do you do?

THE EASY-LAZY WAY
“Forward” your domain.

What does this mean? Well, when you forward your domain to “point” to your blog, folks typing in http://yourdomain.com will magically arrive at your blog. This way you still have a nifty DOT COM and still keep the traffic you have built on your free public server.

Easy Steps To Forward Your Domain. (assuming you bought it at Jungle Webs) BTW… clicking the pictures will make them full size.

1. Sign in to your Jungle Webs account.

2. Look under DOMAINS and click “Manage Domains” or “Manage Domain Forwarding”.

3. This will bring you to the Domain Control Center where you will…
a. Check-mark your domain name.
b. Click “forward”.

4. That will bring you to this page where you will…
c. Click “enable”.
d. Type in your blog address in the blog (e.g.) http://yourblog.blogspot.com
e. Click “OK” and in about 15 - 30 minutes your domain address should point to your blog.


That’s it! Tah Dah!

DID YOU KNOW: That buying a domain at Jungle Webs gives you your very own FREE EMAIL ACCOUNT?

e. A blog & a Domain - Now What? Part 2.

So, you took the plunge. You bought a domain (hopefully from Jungle Webs). But, now you ARE ready to commit to hosting because you want more control over your images, music, video, etc.

1. Buying Hosting:

What kind of hosting you buy will depend on your plans for your site. The first 2 considerations are:

  • Size of the hosting server.

  • Amount of data transfer offered.

Most economy plans offered these days offer quite a lot of server space to hold your data. For instance, Jungle Webs offers Economy Hosting with 5 gigs of space with 250 gigs of transfer at $4.79 per month. This is usually fine when you are first starting up.

What is “data transfer”?

Whenever someone visits your site… the moment they pull up your page… the amount of data that is on the page (graphics, etc) that is appears on their computer screen is the data that is transferred. A standard web page actually has pretty small amounts of data… however, if you have a popular site it could quickly add up. If you have music or high resolution images it could really add up fast.

2. Setting Up Your Site:

Option 1

You could design your site using programs such as FrontPage, Dreamweaver or GoLive. They are great programs but they do demand a steep learning curve and cost a lot of money. There are also FREE WYSIWYG editors and Site Builders available on the net. There are also simpler DIY editors that you can set up your site with for a small monthly fee.

Option 2

You could also install FREE blog software on your server and use that as your site. This is a simpler (and cheaper) way and the learning curve is as lot gentler. Plus, programs such as WORDPRESS gives you the option of setting up a static page as your front page. Here is an example.

Also, if you had already set up your site the FREE way using a blog as explained above… you can migrate it to your server.

3. Should I use a Windows or Linux hosting server?

My advice is to go with a Linux server as most of the newer site setups prefer this because of the databases used to set up the site.

I got Your B.I.T.S. Pt. 3 right HERE!

Posted By admin on October 20, 2008

TALE END - marketing a new play Part 2!

(or… How we got over ourselves, experimented in web marketing and sold out 3 out of 5 performances at Rogue 2007)
by Marcel Nunis
(independent playwright/director/producer)

(reprinted from theatrejnerique.com)

EDITOR’S NOTE: We have included this article (and a few more coming up under the B.I.T.S. section.) To read the first part of this series.. click HERE & HERE.

Mind you, even though the intent was to Create excitement (or at least intrigue) with the creation of a brand new play there was really no “diabolical” plan on how this would be accomplished. So, everything was just one step beyond the “willy nilly” stage. What would be the “hook”… apart from the fact that it was a new play? It was 4 months from “premiering” at Rogue 2007… and a completed play didn’t even exist yet.

Epiphany: You can’t sell a product that doesn’t exist!

Then… BOOM… one morning (after a 4 week drag) there was a sudden burst of creative energy in play writing. Within 7 days the play (at least the first draft) was completed. I can only guess that my creative doodling with the video helped unblock me.

*The success of our “art” has always been dependent on “buzz”.

So, now I had a product. (Yeah, chide me for calling it that… but ultimately, if you are selling tickets to a show… you have a product.) Now the promotional thrust began to take shape. 2 words came into play AWARENESS & INTRIGUE.

LET US START WITH AWARENESS

The show had been cast by this point (3 months and counting) and workshop readings were underway. I had asked the cast to post about their experience as the process of creation was taking place… warts and all! (The workshop and rehearsal process turned out to be a “love fest” but that’s beside the point… if things got challenging and ugly they had the freedom to blog about it.) Though it did take a while… the cast did finally warm up to the idea.

Blogging
Theatre J’Nerique has had a website since the late 90’s. It was pretty much a “static” site that operated as an electronic billbord of sorts. Since we hadn’t produced for a while all the “news” there was at least 3 years old.

Adding a blog to it (which is really easy to do) made the site a lot more interactive and immediate. The fact that readers can comment also gave the potential audience member a direct buy-in into the show. * The idea is that if you follow something long enough… you’ll want to catch the “final product.”

(* All “art” is the skillful craft of manipulating thought and emotion.)

Poster
A poster had already been created for the show. (2 and a half months before.) Instead of limiting it to just a “hard” print form… a digital form was also created and placed on our blog. Readers were actively encouraged to “steal it” for their own blogs or sites.

MySpacing
I had my own MySpace account that I never paid much attention to. I didn’t much care for their blog format (Blogger and Wordpress seemed more accessible and immediate) and it always seemed like more of a “dating network for a 13 year old mentality”. On the plus side… everyone and his uncle has one and it seemed a great way to send out bulletins to a “captive audience”… if for nothing else maybe a way to get more readers hooked on to the blog at the company site.

The “target audience :

a. the usual suspects (local theatre nerds)
Friending” target A:
Start with your friends in theatre… then move to “harvest” their friends. (Chances are they are into theatre themselves.)

b. a brand new audience.
Friending” target B:
Hit “locals” (within a 50 mile radius) who are involved in other disciplines of the arts - poets, musicians, etc. (You’ll be amazed how many of those in the other disciplines have never been to theatre… this gives them the perfect reason to check it out.)

Then, just about anyone (within a 50 mile radius) that would respond to your request to “add” them. The rationale was that if only 20 percent of your “friends” took notice of you… that’s 20 percent more than you had before.

“Other” Sources:
Apart from MySpace bulletins… articles and notices were also posted in local “citizen journalism” e-zines and email forums from time to time informing of something “interesting” was occurring at our site. (BTW… owning our own domain provided a central and easy to remember location for people to check in to see what was happening at their own convenience.)

Video:
During the workshop period it was also decided that another VIDEO should be produced and posted. This brought even more immediacy to the awareness that “something exciting” was brewing and in the works.

AWARENESS COMPLETE
Two months before mounting the show our site was averaging 200-300 hits a day. All of this was successful in creating “intrigue” and an audience “buy-in” for the show.

As we got closer and closer to mounting the show a promotional VIDEO was produced which was sent out on bulletins on MySpace.

AND IN THE END…

… our run at the 2007 Rogue was a success. Through the buzz we had created via various means we sold out 3 of the 5 performances that were slotted to us. Plus good audience reviews also helped.

We didn’t have to sell our souls either… all we did was pour in an equal amount of energy and creativity into creating buzz as we did into creating our show.

Arts Marketing - B.I.T.S. Pt. 2 - marketing a new play!

Posted By admin on October 20, 2008

TALE END - marketing a new play!

(or… How we got over ourselves, experimented in web marketing and sold out 3 out of 5 performances at Rogue 2007)
by Marcel Nunis
(independent playwright/director/producer)

(reprinted from theatrejnerique.com)

EDITOR’S NOTE: We have included this article (and a few more coming up under the B.I.T.S. section.) To read the first part of this series… CLICK HERE! BTW these principles can be applied to ANY form of Arts marketing.

As a creator of new works it used to frustrate me to no end that theatre companies would not even look at a new piece unless it had already been produced. So, in the 1990’s I formed my own production company. Well, that solved that problem… sort of.

Over the years as an independent producer I learned that one has to wear hat upon hat in order to be effective in the real world of the arts. I, at first reluctantly had to learn skills which (shudder) was not part of my craft. (Come on… just let me write… that’s all I wanna do!)  In time, I got over it and embraced those other skills (graphic & web design, etc) as part and parcel of my chosen gig.

FAST FORWARD… … to the Fall of 2006. I was writing my first new play in 5 years. I had come head on up against a creative wall in the writing. While waiting for that engine to be jump started again, I decided to begin marketing the not yet completed new work. (This is a trick that I have used for years. It’s called “PUT YOUR BIG FOOT IN YOUR BIG MOUTH SO YOU HAVE TO DELIVER THE GOODS!”) Works like a charm everytime… at least where completing the piece is concerned.

sidebar: I had read somewhere that playwrights are notorious for doing this. British playwright Alan Ackbourn would actually book a London theater for a run just to force himself to write the damn play.

OPEN MOUTH… INSERT FOOT
I had already begun blogging about my frustrations on my personal blog… this post is an example. I decided that (to really motivate myself with the possibility of grand humiliation) I would go full bore and blog about it on the theatre company site. I had recently redesigned the company site (adding a blog to it) and figured that at least our stalwart supporters would find reading about the “process” mildy interesting.

I had also recently acquired some great video editing software (don’t ask how) and decided to teach myself this new skill. So, with a borrowed DV camera I produced THIS VIDEO and uploaded it to Daily Motion and YouTube. I also embedded the video there. All this cost me was the investment of time (2 days.) Surely this would create tons of interest in this brand new (and not yet completed) project.

::crickets chirping::

OK… we hadn’t produced a show in a while (3 years to be exact)… so, a total of 7 regular readers to our site saw the video in the first week… and a couple of curious YouTubers. It was time for a strategy.
STRATEGY (creating a promotional thrust)

I decided that I didn’t just want to hook in the usual suspects (theatre nerds) but also perhaps bring in a BRAND NEW audience to my (yet completed show) that was slated to be mounted at the 2007 Rogue Festival in March. (If you are shooting for grand humiliation… go big, I say.) So, I devised a promotion strategy.

sidebar: In so doing I was reminded of this… Every discipline of the arts is a medium of communication.”

Anyway, this is what I came up with:

Create excitement (or at least intrigue) with the creation of a brand new play!! (Note: The exclamation points… this generally means “create excitement”… at least I was excited by this. BTW… if you are not excited about your own “product”… don’t expect anyone else to be.)

How Would I Accomplish This? The Internet. (Afterall, not everyone is surfing for porn… you’re reading this, right?) This “new media” has hardly been tapped by the arts community (at least effectively)… if nothing else, this would be a worthy (and affordable) experiment.

TOOLS I WOULD USE…

BLOGGING: From the standpoint of a potential audience the interactive nature of blogging provides a personal “buy in” to a project. (Come on… how many of us buy those “special edition” DVD’s just to watch those “making of” mini features before actually watching the main feature?) So, in effect I was using this tool to give readers a “making of” as it was happening and creating a personal “insiders scoop” to the show.

MYSPACE: Everyone has one these days and it’s a great way to “harvest” potential audience through “friending” and to send out bulletins to broadcast what is happening.

VIDEOS: With the rise of YouTube the potential grows to create “promotional videos” the way the “big guys” do. Everyone loves visuals… especially if they move.

LOCAL E-ZINES: In Fresno (where we are located) there is a great “citizen journalism” site (that is now owned by the local paper) called FresnoFamous.com where anyone can post articles or blog.

EMAIL DIGEST OR NEWS LETTERS: Again in Fresno (where we still are located) one exist called Mindhub.org that many in the “creative class” subscribe to. (Talk about a potential audience!)

I was still creatively blocked where the actual writing of the play was concerned… so why not exercise my creativity elsewhere? (Really, I didn’t even have a title for the play yet.) The choice was between dawdling and picking my nose or perhaps jump start (and perhaps get unblocked) by exercising those muscles in another area of communication.

B.I.T.S. Pt. 3

THE TAO OF B.I.T.S. (Butts In The Seats)

Posted By admin on January 22, 2008

ARTS MARKETING of THEATRE
(or… the Internet - it’s not just for porn anymore)

by Marcel Nunis
- from the original post at Theatre J’Nerique in 2006
- revision 2008

As a playwright, director and producer in the theatre I was plagued for years with these nightmare questions:

How do I push the show without “selling out”?
Will I compromise my “art” by marketing my show aggressively?
How do I compete with big media for an audience on a budget?

Let us first admit to our own sins. Yes, there does exist a snotty “holier than thou” attitude in the world of the arts. We roll our eyes over a marketing budget and campaigns. We protest with excuses like… “That’s going to cost too much!” or “This show is brilliant enough to sell itself!” Then we capitulate “within reason” insisting on “traditional arts marketing” (posters, flyers and press releases) and exercise care not to “go overboard and compromise our art” through “aggressive and crass” commercialization.

Our show opens and performances are barely selling a third of the house with audience members made up mostly of family, friends and “supporters”. Our show eventually closes and we are relieved that it broke even.

In the meantime, someone else’s show opens. We hear the first weekend is bringing in “sold out” crowds. We turn up the second weekend to “support our comrades” only to be met with lines wrapped around the block. In fact, we are one of 30 people turned away at that performance.

We envy their success (never admitting it outwardly) and inevitably discuss (gossip) in hushed tones about the “pedestrian quality” of THAT show while drowning our sorrows at the local bar without having even seen it yet.

“Did you see their poster? She was almost naked in it!”
“Those people in line are not a REAL theatre audience… they don’t even have a subscriber base like we do.”
“We don’t need a hit… we are artists!”
“Can you believe they used the Internet to market their show… with promotional videos??”

The discussion eventually descends into moaning about “the death of theatre” and how the mediums of film, TV and videos are destroying the communal shared experience of “live” performance.

Let us take a few steps back, shall we? Perhaps we need to be reminded of several important factors concerning the craft we are engaged in. This cuts across the board… whether we practice theatre as a hobby, armature, professional, or student. These factors concern ANY level of theatre including, academic, community, dinner, repertory, fringe, independent, profit or non-profit. In fact, many of these factors also apply to almost any discipline in the arts.

FACTOR 1- Every discipline of the arts is a medium of communication.

Through our various mediums we utilize creativity to communicate… stories, ideas, issues, etc. Our mediums are dependent on an audience to communicate these ideas to.

CONCEPT: Without an audience… our “art” does not exist.

Just because we have rehearsed our show for 4 to 6 weeks does not mean anybody is going to turn up to experience it unless they are aware that it is happening. This is where the next level of “communication” comes into play through effective marketing and creating a buzz.

FACTOR 2 - The success of our “art” has always been dependent on “buzz”.

It can be argued that “showbiz” as we know it today was invented by The Bard and his peers over 400 years ago.

CONCEPT: SHOW-BIZ is the business is 2 words and equal attention needs to be paid to both!

I’m even willing to bet that in the earliest recorded history of western theatre, buzz was a major factor in getting the word out for a show.

DIOMEDES: We really have to check out that new play at the Theatre of Dionysis!
KADMOS: What’s it about?
DIOMEDES: A guy who kills his father and marries his mother. Totally scandalous!
KADMOS: Yeah, everyone at the market is talking about it! That wacky Sophocles… what will he think of next?!

I will argue that until 40 to 50 years ago, practitioners in the arts were always on the cutting edge of marketing. Until the early 60’s many of the “hit” songs on radio were show-tunes from Broadway shows (which in turn helped sell those shows at the theater box-office).

Then a malaise set in and there seemed to be a collective rise in the “victim” attitude all around. It is true that the popularity of film and TV diminished the box-office returns of “live” theatre. Plus, trends and tastes in music were changing, showtunes began to lose it’s popular voice and it became expensive to advertise in the new media.

So, do we roll over and play dead or do we pick ourselves up and exercise creativity developing new methods with a brand new affordable medium (hint: the Internet) that puts everyone on a level playing field?

FACTOR 3 - All “art” is the skillful craft of manipulating thought and emotion.
A playwright does it through the structure of plot and design of language. The director does it by conceptualizing an emphasis that he/she wants to explore in the work and communicating it to his/her cast and crew. The actor does it through the physical control of his or her instrument. Designers (set, lighting and sound) do it through the cunning arrangement in their areas of stagecraft.

Let’s face it… there is a lot of creativity and innovation involved in creating our “product”. Shouldn’t the same energy and emphasis be given to selling it?

FACTOR 4 - At least 95 percent of those “great plays” we learn about in theatre history did great box-office!

Sure, there were some that were “closet masterpieces, flops or were “just ahead of their time” but most of them were successes at the box-office. (Some of those “ahead of their time” flops came back to do boffo box-office.)

Even “great works” have to be effectively marketed to create a buzz to get B.I.T.S. Then, the strength of the show (product) further amps up the buzz to create more “sold out” shows. Really folks, “Death Of A Salesman” (a serious non-musical drama) that “American theatre classic” did good box-office.

Perhaps all of us in the theatre (and in the arts in general) need to rethink how we market our craft. I truly believe that a new day is emerging. The novelty of movies, TV and videos have reached a plateau. Audiences are ready to get out again and partake in “live” performance once more. Theatre can become a vital (and profitable) medium again. It really does not matter the style of theatre you engage in… it can all be vital once more.

We just have to put aside our stuffy attitudes and fears and strike out to once more become innovators. Not just within our craft (and the products we create) but also in marketing them. Perhaps if we are willing to learn once more we can take note of the techniques utilized by our brethren in rock and roll, film, etc and pounce on the new affordable media like the Internet which is capable of reaching out to a new audience.

Our choice is to rise from the embers or to diminish into the ash of irrelevancy.

B.I.T.S. Pt. 2