Setfire Media – The Matchbox https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog Hot ideas for the web. Thu, 18 Feb 2021 12:21:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.6 Job Opportunity : In-House PPC Optimiser and Data Analyst https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/job-opportunity-in-house-ppc-optimiser-and-data-analyst https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/job-opportunity-in-house-ppc-optimiser-and-data-analyst#respond Mon, 06 Dec 2010 16:07:15 +0000 http://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/?p=609 Would you like a PPC role where you don’t have to deal with clients? A role where you can focus all of your energy on PPC, rather than spending half of your time producing reports and justifying your existence to someone who doesn’t quite ‘get it’.

This is a fantastic opportunity for someone to grow an already successful PPC account for a fast-growing ecommerce business.  Depending on your experience, you will either take full control of the account, or will be coached into doing so. If you can add value to the business, the role will offer excellent career potential.

Read this post from Platinum Web Marketing about PPC to get more undestading.

You’ll be working in a pretty down to earth team, where results speak much louder than words. Your overall goal will be to increase the revenue and profit generated from the clicks you’re buying and reporting will usually focus on this alone.

Candidate Requirements

Currently, the account has about 200,000 active keywords and 15,000 landing pages. To successfully improve the account (it’s definitely not perfect, so don’t worry about that), we feel the ideal candidate will have the following attributes:

  1. A high degree of attention to detail
  2. Very experienced with MS Excel and able to manipulate large amounts of data
  3. Have profitably grown PPC accounts in the past (not essential, see below)
  4. Excellent academic results (either science degree or exceptional school results)
  5. Be adaptable to different types of work and be easy going

Ideally, you’ll have experience of successfully managing large and complex PPC campaigns, but if not, you’ll need some experience of managing large amounts of data in some other area. If you want to learn how to keep your data safe, then try this site.

Contact us to apply

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New site launched – Spares Next Day https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/new-site-launched-spares-next-day https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/new-site-launched-spares-next-day#respond Mon, 15 Nov 2010 16:58:54 +0000 http://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/?p=601

We are pleased to announce the launch of www.sparesnextday.co.uk – a site offering consumables like hoover bags and moving on to a vast array of other domestic spares.

The challenge here has been in presenting products like vacuum bags for sale in a way that allows the customer to find their exact item easily, whilst offering a broad range of both genuine and compatible choices.  With an off-the-shelf ecom application, this becomes more and more of a challenge as the product range expands.

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Our Payment Service Provider Axiar is acquired by UPG plc https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/our-payment-service-provider-axiar-is-acquired-by-upg-plc https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/our-payment-service-provider-axiar-is-acquired-by-upg-plc#respond Wed, 25 Aug 2010 10:56:00 +0000 http://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/?p=592 Having built, managed and run Axiar for the past four or so years, we have now handed it on to UPG plc, the UK’s largest independently owned card processing gateway.

We have loved building and improving Axiar over the years including acheiving its status as a Level 1 PCI-DSS compliant payment service provider. Trading cryptocurrencies becomes a profitable business (learn more at bitcoinrush.info), so it is important to have a reliable payment provider. UPG is a great company and we know its in safe hands.

Standard release now follows:

UPG plc purchase Axiar

Universal Payment Gateway plc (www.upg.co.uk) thought to be the UK’s largest independently owned card processing gateway have completed their 3rd PSP acquisition in the last 12 months, following the successful acquisitions of the PSL portfolio and Secure Hosting Ltd. The purchase of Axiar Payment Solutions Ltd (www.axiarpayments.co.uk) in June 2010 increasingly adds to the portfolio of e-commerce specialist payment software companies.

Axiar has been delivering strong growth in the mid market e-commerce sector with a particular skill set in recurring payments for travel companies and high speed ecommerce merchants. The merchants being served by Axiar have been processing via UPG for some time and will continue to get the same great service. Of the transaction Miles Carroll, CEO of UPG plc comments “We are really happy to have completed the acquisition of Axiar and will see great benefit from the transaction. Axiar has a great reputation as a Tier 1 provider of payments and we see a really good fit within our stable of brands. We are proud of our service and have seen strong growth through the subsidiary brands and the movement of 2 existing PSP’s to the platform this year will make for a great year in 2010.” The sentiment was echoed by Jonathan Clark, MD of Axiar, “Like a number of PSP’s we have been using UPG as our route to the banks and found the service and systems to be excellent. The significant investment going into the UPG platform and the already rich feature set, made it the obvious choice for our clients; we are very pleased with the transaction and know our business is in safe hands”

UPG have been going through an expansion process and have added two new data centres to the pool in 2009 & 2010 with one additional data centre going live in November 2010. The business has invested heavily in IBM blade processing technology and Cisco networking systems and by Christmas 2010, over 100 new IBM servers and NetApps devices will have been deployed as part of the tech refresh; this investment in hardware and networking has made it possible to safely absorb the acquisitions into the gateway infrastructure.

UPG continues to enjoy double digit growth and has not ruled out further acquisitions during 2010.

Whilst exact numbers have not been released, it was confirmed that the deal was entirely funded from UPG’s cash reserves.

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Simple product filtering https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/simple-product-filtering https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/simple-product-filtering#respond Thu, 15 Apr 2010 15:23:28 +0000 http://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/?p=553 The new filter on kiki jamesWe’ve just made the first release of product filtering for our client Kiki James. When filtering is done well, it can give customers, particularly those unfamiliar with your catalogue, a much better idea of what’s available and help them work out they want to buy. To get the best out of your sales conversion rate optimization investment, choosing the right A/B testing tool is very important, visit https://indexsy.com/shopify-ab-testing/ to learn more.

Simplifying Choices

Our work for Kiki James demonstrates this pretty clearly. We targeted this work to the two most popular areas of the site. Previously, viewing a given page within these areas didn’t fully demonstrate the range of products available. Much of this information was hidden within a dense hierarchy of product types, colours and sizes. By including the filter on the category page customers should get a much clearer idea of the choices available. It also makes exploring the products a much simpler affair.

There were a number of interesting challenges – most notably making sense of the data on the site, in order to be able to sort in a way that would be accessible, particularly to new users, who make up the majority of Kiki’s customer base.

Creating the options

A good example would be the colour selector. To date, there are something like 77 different swatches available on the site overall. We chose to simplify the selection; a smaller series of generic colours were chosen, and all the swatches in the category were organised under those, giving us 10 colours to choose from. We followed a similar process with the shape and size selectors, organising the data into a smaller set of user-friendly choices.

What was most interesting is that once the data was shown in a more open fashion by the filter page, it made it much clearer to our client that they needed to change some of the existing product titles, as well as add some extra information to make the data work with the filter.

Quick launch

We focused on getting this released as quickly as possible; we were confident that this would be a real improvement over the existing site. But also, by releasing early over a limited part of the site, we have a chance see how our current implementation works, and tweak it before we roll it out further.

You can see the filtering in action on the Leather Photo Albums and Leather Journals pages.

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When to ask for user details https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/when-to-ask-for-user-details https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/when-to-ask-for-user-details#comments Tue, 06 Apr 2010 10:01:31 +0000 http://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/?p=537 When should you ask for information from your users? I recently came across two online apps that illustrate the right and the wrong way to resolve this question.

Firstly, we have Mockflow, an online wireframe tool. Includes versioning, collaboration etc.
home page for mockflow

So, if you’re wondering what this application’s like, how do we find out? They have a pretty good video on the homepage, that’s nice enough. And if you take the tour, you can see some screen shots that outline some of the functions of the site. Very nice.

But if I want to try it out, what do I get?

The next stage in the user flow for mockflow

Hooray, another sign up form. Those never get dull.

Contrast this with Dabbleboard, another online collaborative working tool. Here’s the homepage:

But how do you find out what it’s really like to use? Well, all you have to do is go to http://www.dabbleboard.com/draw, and you can start right away.
The initial page for dabble

Simple, and in terms of engaging your visitors, it’s much more better than asking for an email and a password. Of course, you do need to sign up to dabble board if you want to save your work; but by that point users will be much more committed to the application than someone who has read a landing page and watched a video.

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Scottish Ruby Conference 2010 https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/scottish-ruby-conference-2010 https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/scottish-ruby-conference-2010#respond Mon, 29 Mar 2010 16:34:23 +0000 http://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/?p=485 There’s a few tired faces around the Setfire HQ today, after an exhilarating weekend spent at Scottish Ruby Conference. We had a cracking time – we met up with some old friends, made a few new ones, and attended some great talks. Here are our favourites:

Other highlights included Getting the most out of ActiveRecord 3 with Arel, Breaking things with Ruby and Distributed Architectures with Rack, and, for Rob, listening to me snore. Poor chap.

Thanks to the organisers:

… and see you next year!

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Using Gmail to send email from your rails app https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/using-gmail-to-send-email-from-your-rails-app https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/using-gmail-to-send-email-from-your-rails-app#respond Tue, 23 Mar 2010 12:17:19 +0000 http://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/?p=468 We wanted to send via gmail for testing reasons. We develop locally, but we want to see how our emails would be formatted in a standard mail client. Which means we need a valid email to send from. The main problem we’re trying to avoid is our test emails getting canned as spam, which is more likely to happen if we’re just sending direct from a local machine.

If you’re using rails 1.8.6 or lower, you will need to use the action_mailer_optional_tls plugin or the actionmailer_tls plugin to achieve this result. We run all our apps on 1.8.7 for the time being, so happily we can use this simpler method.

Firstly, setup a test email account on gmail. This works fine for normal or apps gmail accounts. Then you need to add these lines to wherever you do your basic actionmailer config. In our case, we added this to our development.rb as we’re just using this to test email output for the time being.

config.action_mailer.smtp_settings = {
:enable_starttls_auto => true,
:address => "smtp.gmail.com",
:port => "587",
:domain => "domain.com", 
:authentication => :plain,
:user_name => "test_emails@domain.com",
:password => "your_password_here"
}

Voila, our emails are sent fine, which makes testing the output a great deal easier, especially if you have to produce html emails.

What we’re doing here is bascially just using standard gmail setup for configuing a mail client. Obviously you could just replace these options for another smtp server if you’d like.

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50 of the Best Websites Developed Using Ruby on Rails https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/50-of-the-best-websites-developed-using-ruby-on-rails https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/50-of-the-best-websites-developed-using-ruby-on-rails#comments Thu, 04 Mar 2010 15:02:13 +0000 http://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/?p=444 If you find yourself looking for Utah web design company near me we are going to suggest you some tools that will help you below on this article.

Rails has come a long way in the last few years, from the preserve of a vocal minority of maverick developers, to one of the most popular web frameworks around.

Its popularity is due to many things, but chief amongst them is the speed at which you can put together a site in Rails, as well as the intelligent and vibrant community that are involved in it.

Whilst there are some well known success stories using Ruby on Rails out there, the sheer number and diversity of Rails apps is astounding. In celebration of that, and partly to satisfy our own curiosity, we thought offer our round up of some of the best rails sites out there.

1. Basecamp

Basecamp
http://basecamphq.com/

An extremely popular, browser-based project collaboration tool.

2. Twitter

Twitter
http://twitter.com/

The ubiquitous social networking site.

3. Scribd

Scribd
http://www.scribd.com/

The world’s largest social publishing company.

4. Fanpop

Fanpop
http://www.fanpop.com/

A huge network of music, TV and movie fan clubs.

5. Geni

Geni
http://www.geni.com/

A great family tree building tool.

6. Penny Arcade

Penny Arcade
http://www.penny-arcade.com/

A webcomic, largely focused on video gaming.

7. Pitchfork

Pitchfork
http://pitchfork.com/

An online indie music mag.

8. Crazy Egg

Crazy Egg
http://crazyegg.com/

A heatmap tool that lets you visualize how users interact with your website.

9. Shopify

Shopify
http://www.shopify.com/

A popular e-commerce platform.

10. Github

Github
http://github.com/

A code hosting app with a strong social networking element.

11. Hulu

Hulu
http://www.hulu.com/

A TV channel streaming shows and movies from NBC, Fox, ABC and more.

12. Backpack

Backpack
http://backpackit.com/

From the makers of Basecamp, Backpack is an intranet for your business that lets you share anything and everything with your team.

13. Assembla

Aseembla
http://www.assembla.com/

A collaboration tool ideal for small teams.

14. Lighthouse

Lighthouse
http://lighthouseapp.com/

A superb project management app.

15. Wayfaring

Hosted by imgur.com
http://www.wayfaring.com/

A tool for creating and sharing maps.

16. CommunityWalk

Community Walk
http://www.communitywalk.com/

Another map creating tool, which lets users incorporate photos and comments into maps they create.

17. Insiderpages

Insider Pages
http://www.insiderpages.com/

A place to find reviews of local businesses, from dentists to restaurants

18. Rentometer

Rentometer
http://www.rentometer.com/

Enter your address into this site to compare your rent with other local properties.

19. Menuism

Menuism
http://www.menuism.com/

A place to rate restaurants and read food reviews.

20. Campfire

Campfire
http://campfirenow.com/

An instant messaging tool designed for project specific groups.

22. Podomatic

Podomatic
http://www.podomatic.com/featured

A place to access a wealth of podcasts as well as event listings for many cities worldwide.

22. 43 Things

43 Things
http://www.43things.com/

A straightforward site for setting personal goals and viewing the goals of others.

23. Big Cartel

Big Cartel
http://bigcartel.com/

A simple, but trendy e-commerce platform.

24. DoodleKit

Doodlekit
http://doodlekit.com/home

An uncomplicated and accessible website builder.

25. feed.informer

Feed.informer
http://feed.informer.com/

An app for adding news and feed content to your website.

26. Inkling Markets

Inkling Markets
http://home.inklingmarkets.com/

A highly original site with a unique take on question asking and answering.

27. Swivel

Hosted by imgur.com
http://www.swivel.com/

A site for sharing data in charts, graphs and tables.

28. Highrise

Highrise
http://highrisehq.com/

High-tech customer relationship management software.

29. Mypunchbowl

Mypunchbowl
http://www.mypunchbowl.com/

A suite of party planning tools for creating invites, buying supplies and much more.

30. oh, don’t forget…

Oh Don't Forget
http://ohdontforget.com/

A great way to send bulk and scheduled SMS messages.

31. Spiceworks

Hosted by imgur.com
http://www.spiceworks.com/

A free, but professional quality solution for all things IT, from network management to software reporting.

32. Urban Dictionary

Hosted by imgur.com
http://www.urbandictionary.com/

An online dictionary for pretty much every slang term used in the English-speaking world.

33. White Pages

Hosted by imgur.com
http://www.whitepages.com/

An online directory for business and personal contact details.

34. XING

Hosted by imgur.com
http://www.xing.com/

A place to network and make business contacts.

35. Justin.TV

Justin.tv
http://www.justin.tv/#r=ytWUZNE

A site where users can produce and share videos through their own “channels”.

36. Slideshare

Slideshare
http://www.slideshare.net/

A place to share PowerPoint presentations, Word documents and Adobe PDF portfolios.

37. Jango

Jango
http://www.jango.com/

A free internet radio station.

38. AboutUs

About Us
http://www.aboutus.org/

A comprehensive wiki for the world’s best websites.

39. Luminosity

Luminosity
http://www.lumosity.com/

A suite of online games for brain development.

40. Guitar Hero

Guitar Hero
http://hub.guitarhero.com/

Website of the hugely successful computer game.

41. Chow

Chow
http://www.chow.com/

A recipe repository complete with restaurant listings and videos.

42. Bleacher Report

Bleacher Report
http://bleacherreport.com/

A magazine covering all aspects of American sport.

43. Sortfolio

Sortfolio
http://sortfolio.com/

A place to find the perfect web designer for your needs.

44. More

More
http://www.more.com/

A style magazine for women, with fashion and make-up tips.

45. Howcast

Hosted by imgur.com
http://www.howcast.com/

A place to find instructional, how-to videos.

46. Miley World

Miley World
http://www.mileyworld.com/community/home

The home of Miley Cyrus’s official fan club.

47. iLike

ilike
http://www.ilike.com/

A site that provides concert alerts, recommendations and playlists, based on your favorite music.

48. Yardbarker

Yardbarker

http://www.yardbarker.com/

One of the best places to find sports news, rumors and videos.

49. Viewpoints

Viewpoints
http://www.viewpoints.com/

Find reviews on absolutely everything.

50. Tupalo

Tupalo.com
http://tupalo.com/

A place to find contact details and reviews of local restaurants, cafes, salons and shops.

And that’s really just the tip of the iceberg. With the latest version(Rails 3) imminent it’s clear that it shows now sign of slowing down just yet; no doubt we can expect to see even more exciting and sophisticated websites and applications added to this list in the future.

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Speak the Web https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/speak-the-web https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/speak-the-web#comments Thu, 18 Feb 2010 17:16:47 +0000 http://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/?p=412 The Crowd Listens
Photo by @gablaxian

Speak the Web came to a close last night in Manchester’s NoHo bar, with a five strong band of the Setfire crew there to take part. The event were definitely a refreshing change to some of the bigger, more expensive events that Speak the Web is partly a reaction to. Four speakers covered an impressively broad range of stuff – mobile, seo, html5 apis and Css3. The informal nature of the event lent itself to questions from the crowd and a definite lack of the them and us factor sometimes present at conferences. Oh and did I mention it was in a bar?

My favourite quote of the night was probably Andy Clarke’s gentle ribbing of the Brighton and London focus of many web dev conferences, with him pointing out they are not “the center of the f**king universe”. Hopefully with the success of Speak the Web and other events like Barcamp, we might be getting somewhere to shifting that focus.

I was a bit gutted to have to leave right after the event, being a bit over tired and generally a bit of a wuss these days. Nevertheless it was great to be there and I’m pretty sure that this isn’t the last we’ve seen of Speak the Web.

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A Slight Redesign https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/a-slight-redesign https://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/a-slight-redesign#respond Mon, 01 Feb 2010 18:05:32 +0000 http://www.setfiremedia.com/blog/?p=401 We’ve been making a few changes to our site over the last couple of weeks. We liked it a lot as it was, but we wanted to improve in three areas:

A Clear Offering

We wanted to make it really clear what we do, straight off the bat. We’re a software development house, and we specialise in Ruby on Rails projects, done in an agile way. What’s more, we’ve invested a lot of time in the past year or so getting really good at automated testing. We think this really marks us out from other companies in our space, so we wanted to say it loud and proud.

A Human Face

We’re proud of our people and they are the most important part of what we do. Sure, we do Rails – but that’s only because we happen to think it’s the best tool for the job. What we’re really selling is our expertise and experience – and this all comes from our great team, where you can get software developers for hire at Contract Devs for the best professionals around.
. So, we thought it was only fair to take a couple of snaps of them and our swanky offices for your perusal.

A Portfolio

Probably the biggest omission from our site was a portfolio page detailing the projects we’ve been working on recently, and the work we did. We’re not a quick-and-dirty type of place – we take on projects for the long term and work with our clients to achieve business goals. We hope our portfolio reflects this and gives a better idea of the work we do.

As with all projects, we wanted to be sure that our changes represented a real return on investment, so we kept ourselves to just a few hours to do these changes. It’s been great to see a few new leads come through as a consequence of just a small amount of work.

We hope you like the improvements – there are plenty more to come. Let us know what you think!

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