Do not buy the Palm Treo 750 PDA

May 26th, 2008

I purchased the Palm Treo 750 PDA earlier in the year. I recommend that you don’t purchase it.

This phone really is useless. Amongst other things, it is especially bad if you have a data plan connected to your phone. The amount of data use my phone has been getting since purchasing it has gone as follows:

Month 1: 200MB
Month 2: 330MB
Month 3: 590MB
Month 4: 330MB (this is the first 10 days of the plan for the month)

And this is with no difference in usage. No difference. In fact I was using mobile internet in month 1, after that I have rarely used it.

After calling Vodafone after the first 10 days to query my last account ($500 in excess data usage, including a $92 per day 6 day Trans Tasman business trip), I have disabled the e-mail account for my phone.

This phone is the perfect example of technology going wrong. In order to -potentially- resolve this problem I have to upgrade the phone to Windows Mobile 6. This involves a complicated process, which deletes all data on the phone.

I think this is a typical example of the poor way in which Microsoft software operates. Once something goes wrong it’s difficult to fix without installing a new version of the software. Even then, who knows whether it’s reliable.

Compare that to an upgrade for an operating system such as Apple’s Mac OS X. It keeps all your data, and you don’t have to worry about it mucking anything up.

Needless to say, I will be holding off using mobile internet again until Apple brings the 3G Apple iPhone downunder.

Don’t throw your money away on this phone, it’s terrible.


Your Web Strategy & Search Engine Optimisation

March 31st, 2008

We’ve had a lot of questions from new and existing customers recently about web strategy, particularly about Google and getting higher up the search results.

Search Engine Optimisation (or SEO) forms a big part of web strategy. It is a collection of methods we use to optimise your website for the search engines – with the intended consequence being that they will find your website better, and like your site better, and establish a “virtual relationship” with your site which gives you preferential treatment which you can’t just buy from them.

SEO is one of the technical sides of web strategy, it is a bit of a science and is designed to help contribute towards achieving your business goals. One of the main intentions is to increase the numbers of visitors to your website.

Why do I need more visitors to my website?

Why you need more visitors is really about a numbers game. The more people you have visiting your website, the more interest is generated online about your website, the more activity is on your website, and other parts of the internet pick up on that in various ways and this helps to push up your ranking.

When you go to a restaurant, do you go to the restaurant that is reasonably full, or the one next door serving the same food but virtually empty with a grumpy looking waitperson staring out the window?

Just like that restaurant activity leads to more new business, so too does your web strategy need to be designed to lead to more business for you. And this can be especially true whether you have 5 visits per day to your website, or 5,000.


Telecom Xtra Blocks Out Competitors

March 25th, 2008

It seems as though Telecom Xtra has made another, more significant than normal anti-competitive action by requiring all its customers to record into the Yahoo! Xtra e-mail system any e-mail addresses they use for their business.

So, if you have a professional e-mail address for your business, which is a service not provided by Xtra, you must now log all these e-mail addresses into Xtra’s system.

Under the guise of “Online Identity Theft Protection” or some such thing, Xtra has made it a requirement that in order to send e-mails from your business e-mail account, if your internet connection has been provided by Xtra you must log any e-mail addresses you intend to use, with the Xtra service.

At the same time, Xtra has announced plans for a stronger push into the business market, offering customers the ability to do all their business e-mail hosting and web hosting through Xtra.

Now, as Xtra will now know all e-mail addresses for all their customers, they can easily promote to them the “benefits” of changing their web hosting and e-mail services to Xtra.

Xtra now blocks, as standard, 50% of our services as a web and e-mail hosting services provider. Our customers must send all e-mails through the Xtra service, rather than our service. When a problem occurs with sending e-mail, our customers should be able to call us to resolve this. Rather, we have to send them on to the Xtra “Help”-desk, in order to get the issue resolved. Their enquiries are frequently sent overseas to people who have not been trained correctly, therefore the issue is sent back to us to resolve – which we can’t resolve as it’s not our service.

Needless to say, Xtra is limiting what its customers can do and restricting their ability to easily use a provider other than Xtra for their e-mail services.

In the interests of our customers, our interests, and the interests of other providers in the marketplace, we have lodged a formal complaint with the Commerce Commission in regards to what we see as being anti-competitive behaviour by Telecom in this matter. Watch this space for some action over this monopolistic behaviour in the future.


Invoicing

February 25th, 2008

We have recently transferred across from an internally developed invoicing system, to a third party web based application called Freshbooks. While transferring all our customers over to a brand new invoicing system is a daunting and particularly time consuming task, the time savings for us have virtually wiped out the time spent on data entry to date.

If you want a simple yet powerful application for your business invoicing, the money you spend on Freshbooks will be quickly gained back in the time you would have spent on invoicing manually in the first place. We can now automate a large part of our invoicing system that was just not possible before.

What a time savings to see invoices going out automatically every month.

If you are a client of OPMC who has recently received an invoice from us through Freshbooks, we would love to get your feedback.


Business Trip – Wellington to Sydney

December 12th, 2007

For Wellingtonians intending to do business in Sydney, I offer the following tips for a day or two in Sydney.

-Keep a budget umbrella on hand at all times. You can pick one up from the CBD on the day for $6, anything more than $10 is midnight robbery for these things. If it rains, it usually is torrential rain. In Wellington you can get a good judgement on whether it’s going to rain, or at least have some warning. In Sydney you might find yourself in the middle of thunder and lightening and drenched. Sydney CBD also does not have the sort of street awnings to hide under in the rain that Wellington does. Your only option might be to wait it out for up to an hour until it settles down – they are usually over quite quickly.

-Look up all your destinations on Google Maps before you go – http://maps.google.com – and compare this to where you’re going to be meeting people. If it says it is a 7 minute journey you want to be very wary of this because the traffic conditions can change in a heartbeat in Sydney, particularly before 9:30AM, 11-1:30 and 4PM onwards. The train system is efficient, but again if the walking part of the journey looks short it probably isn’t.

-Make sure you allow plenty of time to get to your meetings. Arriving early is better than arriving late.

-If you have a chance, I would recommend visiting a BNI chapter (http://www.bni.com.au) while you’re there, where you can meet 20-30+ business professionals for a structured but friendly business meeting and gain some new contacts or even pick up some work unexpectedly. I am at these meetings once every week and can invite you along as a visitor. Just contact me through the website @ http://www.opmc.com.au

-Wireless internet is not as readily available as is in Wellington with services such as Citylink’s CafeNet. If you are a regular visitor I would recommend buying a data card from Dick Smith from a company called “Unwired” – http://www.unwired.com.au. This is an excellent solution, there’s no contract and there is ubiquitous coverage in the CBD. Otherwise try a Vodafone store where you may be able to pick up a one month data plan for $20-$30 – no promises though.

-Plan your trips to meetings carefully, and take plenty of water especially in summer. Once you are in the middle of nowhere in some Sydney suburb with no shelter, no water and no idea where you are, things will go downhill quickly from there.

-Take a map with you of the area you’re going to, CBD or otherwise. Ask what approximate locatio


Online Sales and the environment

October 6th, 2007

While much of the interest around online shopping centres around convenience, we should take a moment to spare a thought for the environmental impact.

As shoppers and businesses are becoming more environmentally considerate, there is another reason to offer online shopping as an option, or even an alternative to the traditional retail store – its level of environmental friendliness.

Construction
The construction, and fit out of a store require a huge amount of energy and sometimes significant pollution. Each building block of the store needs to be sourced from somewhere. Transportation of materials to the store also contributes negatively to the environment.

Ongoing Use
The ongoing use of a physical store requires a significant amount of energy to run – much, much more than your run of the mill online store. Lighting also needs to be left on at night in many cases, to deter theft of product.

Customer Use
Customers visiting your store, unless they walk or ride a bike, are going to contribute to environmental pollution by having to drive to your store. The amount of natural resources required to get a customer from their home to your store must be rather significant.

With this in mind, when you’re thinking about your business options, or whether to open a store in the physical world or online, you should now spare a thought for the environmental impact.


Problems, concerns and risks about selling online

September 28th, 2007

We have many customers coming to us with concerns about selling online. Here I address some of these and provide some answers. Most of these centre around online credit card payments.

I’ve been told credit card payment online isn’t secure.

Firstly it’s important to note that nothing can be guaranteed 100% secure these days. All we can do is take precautions to protect ourselves and our customers.

Online credit card payments for goods can be secure, even more secure than your internet banking. However, problems with security can come from several sources:

-Lack of suitable methods for protecting customers’ information by online store owners.
-Lack of knowledge by store owners on what is needed to protect their customers credit card details.
-The unsecure storage of customer credit card information within the online store – easily accessed by malicious individuals.
-Viruses and other nasties hiding on the customer’s computer – when they enter their credit card details anywhere on the internet, this information is sent to a criminal who can then use the card to make purchases without the knowledge or consent of the card owner.

The problems are therefore divided into two areas of responsibility – customers and the store owner.

The store owner must make all reasonable efforts to provide a secure environment online through which the customer can make credit card payment.

But the customer must also take responsibility for keeping their credit card details secure – the responsibility of the store owner cannot extend to, for example, ensuring there are no viruses on the customer’s computer because this is impractical.

At OPMC we use a third party to process all credit card payments through our clients’ online stores. No credit card information is stored within the store itself – this helps keeps costs down and means the responsibility for safekeeping of credit card details is neither with us nor the client. Rather, we leave it to the experts, who are constantly investing in the latest technology to protect secure information from prying eyes.

While we do take this precaution with online stores, there is another option to stop you worrying about credit card security – simply don’t allow credit card transactions on your website!

I don’t want to sell online because credit card transactions are too risky!

Credit card transactions online aren’t any more risky than anywhere else, apart from when the conditions above are met and your online store, or customers’ card i


Starting a business network in Sydney

September 16th, 2007

I have been over in Sydney for the last 2 weeks and this trip has been focused more on establishing our network over here.

This has been a good challenge, especially as we don’t have an established network here. One might ask how you can start operating your business in Sydney if you’re not into big budget advertising or don’t have an existing strategy in place. The first thing I would recommend is BNI (Business Network International). This is a structured networking member organisation that has weekly breakfast meetings on virtually every day of the week in multiple locations across Sydney.

You will need to call ahead, but you can find out more about times and locations on their website at http://www.bni.com.au.

It is an excellent way to meet new business professionals, and who knows? You might establish a great new business contact by taking an hour and a half of your morning to meet 15+ other business professionals.


Technical Misadventures with Yahoo!Xtra Bubble service

August 20th, 2007

I have two e-mail accounts with Xtra, and it was recently brought to my attention that they had “upgraded” their system.

I went to log in to my Xtra e-mail, a relatively painless process for the last few years. I was confronted with a login screen and was relieved as I had read they had made some major upgrades that had had major impacts on customer’s services.

That was just the tip of the iceberg. I was then told that my web browser was rare, or something to that effect and that I would not get the optimum service with the browser I was using (Safari on the Mac). I chose to ignore this message, and continued on.

I was then introduced to what seems like a 5 step process:

1) Register
2) Download
3) Personalise
4) Summary
5) Get Online

Why do I have to go through this process to check my webmail? Something that should be a simple process which has just become seemingly impossible, inconvenient and annoying.

I was asked to enter my basic details – e-mail address, name and phone number. Despite entering this information correctly, I was given the following error messages:

Yahoo rubbish

Despite reentering the information again and again I realised I was not getting anywhere. So I switched over to Firefox for the Mac.

After the connection to Yahoo timed out, giving me an error message, I tried again and was confronted with the same page “Tell us about yourself” (I am a customer of yours why do I need to tell you about myself when all I want to do is check my personal e-mail?)

As the details were pre-filled, I pressed the “Continue” button. Once this was eventually processed, this time I was presented with a page asking me to confirm my identity. Ironically, the page is titled “Help us help you”. One would have thought the best way they could help us is to not require this sort of re-registration process to check our e-mails.

Another wait while the new “improved” Yahoo!Xtra service had a think about my security question and date of birth. Note at this stage I am still on “Step 1″ as described above and have been trying to check my webmail for 30 minutes now.

Success! Yahoo has processed this information and takes me to the next page! Which is empty…

I try to refresh the page to resolve this issue, and come back to my original issue on Safari, with some more errors thrown in for good measure:
yahoo rubbish

Pressing the “Continue” button again, I get an error message…again. And again. And again. I cannot use my e-mail.

35 minutes and counting, I am reluctant to continue but want to check


Wireless internet access in Sydney

July 29th, 2007

For those laptop-toting businesspeople expanding their business to Sydney, especially the Wellingtonians amongst you, you will quickly find that getting wireless internet access in Sydney is a chore. While cities such as Wellington have what I would consider to be an extensive wireless network in the form of CafeNet, Sydney has no such major provider.

Rather, there are a number of providers that are located sparingly across the CBD. As easily finding somewhere that provides wireless internet in the Sydney CBD is no easy task I recommend you take a look at the following:

Azure Wireless – While Azure appears to be cutting back their coverage in Sydney, they so have a number of places where you can browse the internet. I recommend you visit this page on their website, but suggest you visit the places recommended and ask them if their wifi is working before settling in.

Telstra – Telstra offers a comprehensive network of wireless hotspots, however be warned – the cost can add up quite quickly. A list of all hotspots was last sighted here.

Unwired – These guys also offer wireless internet, however it’s designed for those who have an Unwired Wireless Card. I would recommend this option if you are planning on spending a lot of browsing time on the go in Sydney.

Woolworths (opposite the town hall) – Go up the escalators in the middle of this store and you will find a small internet access area. You can prepay with some great rates here, and you simply sit down with your laptop in the allocated Wifi spot and get on with your business. It would be affordable to work here all day if you needed to, however I did have problems with sending e-mails using any SMTP server. Tech support was helpful but said I should be able to send through my own SMTP server, which I didn’t believe as I couldn’t get it working. This would certainly be the only downside of this option.