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The Steve Laube Agency

Helping to Change the World…Word by Word

The Steve Laube Agency

The Steve Laube Agency

Helping to Change the World Word by Word

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Does Google Like Your Web Site?

By Steve Laubeon May 4, 2015
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In case you missed it, on April 21st Google changed how they rank web site searches. If a site is not “mobile-friendly” it will no longer be ranked higher than one that is “mobile-friendly.” Some were calling this “mobilegeddon” because of the impact it would have.

What Does Mobile-Friendly Mean?

This refers to whether or not your site is optimized for a smart-phone screen. Sites that have what is called “responsive design” will recognize what type of device is looking at the information and change the image that is sent to that device.

This usually means that the menu changes from a bar across the top or side into a button near the top of the page that can be touched with a finger and the menu drops down. Also the page itself reformats itself to fit the screen. (Use your smartphone and type in www.enclavepublishing.com and see what it looks like versus what it looks like on a regular screen.)

To those of us who remember the early days of the Internet and HTML code it seems a bit like magic!

By the way, “mobile-friendly” does not include tablets, laptops, or desktops because those devices have large enough screens that the special responsive design is not needed.

Is Your Site Mobile-Friendly?

It is very easy to check and see if your site is compliant.

Go to the following Google site (https://www.google.com/webmasters/tools/mobile-friendly/) and type in the web site you want to check. The page will show you what yours looks like on a smart phone screen, if you didn’t already know.

Out of curiosity I tested about thirty author web sites to see what happened. Over half of them were not mobile-friendly. This means that the Google algorithm will move those unfriendly sites down the page. The sites that are friendly will be given priority.

This may not affect you at all because your topic is unique or your name is unusual enough that there is no danger of another site gaining ascendency.

Mine Is NOT “Friendly” what do I do?

For some authors their web site was designed and put up a long time ago. And it works, so why mess with it? It may be time to invest in a new design.

If you have a web master, talk to them about the cost of converting to a responsive design.

If you already use WordPress, but it uses a non-friendly “Theme” you might be able to convert the content of your site to another one without as much trouble.

Since I’m not an expert I would recommend someone like Laura Christianson over at Blogging Bistro who wrote an excellent article on this question a couple months ago (click here to read it).

Avoid the “I’ll Do it Someday” Syndrome

If you are one of those affected, I’m sorry. But try not to procrastinate. The power of the Internet is critical to you and your work being found. We cannot ignore the fact that Apple sold 74.83 million iPhones…last quarter (in three months). And Samsung sold 73.03 million phones …last quarter. That is equal to 10 phones PER PERSON for everyone living in Los Angeles, Chicago, and New York City combined.

Investing in your web site is sort of like a retail store investing in a good cash register. It is possible to do business out of shoe box, but it probably isn’t a good idea.

Plus you want to make your site inviting and engaging with everyone who comes to visit. Make each screen feel welcome.

Your Turn

Do you have a web master you would like to recommend?

Is your site mobile-friendly? If so, how hard was it to make yours “responsive”?

 

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Category: Book Business, Branding, Career, Communication, Marketing, Platform, TechnologyTag: Book Business, Google+, Technology, Web Sites

Fun Fridays – May 1, 2015

By Steve Laubeon May 1, 2015
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Some light-hearted fun for you today!

Read moreFun Fridays – May 1, 2015
Category: Fun Fridays

A Definition of a Successful Artist

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon April 30, 2015
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Recently I witnessed an artist (not a writer) put work out to the public that I believe needed some polish. Some of my close family and I agreed that it shouldn’t have been released without being improved first. However, this artist was being cheered by intimate friends and family. I’m not positive all of these people actually like the art itself. I think many of them just want to …

Read moreA Definition of a Successful Artist
Category: Art, Awards, Craft, CreativityTag: Art, Career, Success

A Simple Truth is the Key to Your Writing Success

By Karen Ballon April 29, 2015
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I sat down to write this blog and discovered something: My muse was mute. No, maybe said muse was still asleep. Actually, I think he (she? I’m never quite clear on that…) went on vacation and didn’t tell me. No postcard, no nothing. Seriously, I sat there, staring at the keys and… Zilch. Come on, I urged my weary writer’s brain, there has to be something I can write today. Just one bit of …

Read moreA Simple Truth is the Key to Your Writing Success
Category: CareerTag: Career, Writers Block

Time Travel?

By Dan Balowon April 28, 2015
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Most people find it astounding how long it takes for things to happen in traditional publishing. Even after spending months or even years writing, an author waits for weeks or months to hear from an agent, who if they agree to work together, wait weeks and months for publishers to make a decision and then finally a book is scheduled to be published a year or more in the future.  Sometimes two …

Read moreTime Travel?
Category: Book Proposals, Career, Get Published, The Publishing LifeTag: publishing, The Publishing Life, Time

Happy Birthday iTunes Store! Thanks for the Warning…

By Steve Laubeon April 27, 2015
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Twelve years ago this week (April 28, 2003) Apple announced the launch of a new way to buy digital music. The iTunes Store. (Click for the original press release.) It started with 200,000 songs available for purchase. (Today there are more than 26 million songs available for sale.) The iTunes software had been introduced a couple years earlier, but now it became a commercial venture. A place where …

Read moreHappy Birthday iTunes Store! Thanks for the Warning…
Category: Book Business, Economics, TrendsTag: Book Business, Digital Books, Economics, iTunes

Fun Fridays – April 24, 2015

By Steve Laubeon April 24, 2015
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The ultimate penguin gear. Hope it brings a smile to your day. [Click here if the sweater design is unclear.]

Read moreFun Fridays – April 24, 2015
Category: Fun Fridays

What Should I Wear to a Conference

By Tamela Hancock Murrayon April 23, 2015
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If you have been following my posts on this blog, you may be aware that this topic was prompted by a question asked on last week’s blog. One of our faithful readers wanted to know what to wear to a major conference. I didn’t intend to devote a complete post to this seemingly shallow topic until the answer she deserved became quite detailed. So here we are. I don’t believe God …

Read moreWhat Should I Wear to a Conference
Category: Career, Conferences, Get PublishedTag: Attire, writers conferences

Tools from the Front Lines: Emotional Memory

By Karen Ballon April 22, 2015
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You’ve heard it over and over: Show, don’t tell. And that’s appropriate whether you’re writing fiction or nonfiction. When you communicate emotions in your writing, when those emotions are vital to your scene or message, it’s more powerful to show them. Now, I’m not going to tackle the pros and cons of telling, or when and why it’s better to show. (I covered at that in a previous post, so go there …

Read moreTools from the Front Lines: Emotional Memory
Category: Craft, Creativity, Writing CraftTag: Craft, Emotional Memory, Writing Craft

It’s a Flat World After All

By Dan Balowon April 21, 2015
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As a preface to this post, let it be known that I really enjoy hitting my thumb with a hammer, pushing forks into electric toasters and tripping over things in my bare feet in the dark. It is that very masochistic tendency that prompted me to write this blog. _____ A favorite book for me in the last decade was Tom Friedman’s The World Is Flat, published in 2005. It simply made me think differently …

Read moreIt’s a Flat World After All
Category: Book Business, Economics, Marketing, The Publishing LifeTag: Economics, The Publishing Life
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