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Your Digital Footprint

Having a significant digital footprint of quality content is not a guarantee of success as a designer in these modern times but it certainly helps get you noticed. Design-Design provides an overview of Simcoemedia’s digital footprint.

Digital footprint in this particular article refers to the breadth and depth of web content produced by a company or individual related to relevant subjects – though it is usually used in reference to a trail of logins, web locations and cookie data that can be used by companies to target advertising. When we talk about web content we could be discussing static web pages on a subject such as design eg basic overview pages of a company website or dynamic news based content such as latest product updates on a content management system. We can also be talking about the use of social media to contribute to information about us as individuals, a company or brand – so our tweets, contributions to LinkedIn, our input on Google + and Facebook add to the extent and image of our footprint. There are also other forms of digital content such as photography, audio, video and even PDF documents that can be linked to our brand or personal information – so sites like iStockphoto.com, AudioJungle.net, YouTube.com and individual sites such as www.audio-echo.co.uk [a Simcoemedia website] all help in contributing to a network of documents, MP3 files, videos and images linked to the Simcoemedia brand and image as a creative multimedia company.

Momentary Lapse of Reason: A Quick Warning

The proliferation and ease of publishing content in the public domain throughout the web should also be considered too – a momentary lapse of tweeting can lead to some serious offence, such as Jimmy Carrs recent lack of judgement in making “car crash jokes” around the same time as a tragic event on the M5 near Taunton. The result of your own lack of judgement could be potential loss of business or even something more serious events such as investigation from the police as two seventeen year old boys found out recently when they added racially charged comments to their Twitter feed and were subject to legal action.

The examples given are fairly extreme but with the power of the web, and ease of access to it in the western world, comes responsibility to ensure that what you publish is in line with your own strict [or conciously liberal] policies on what is appropriate within the law and within your public image.

An Example: Simcoemedia Design Consultancy

Over the last 10 years Simcoemedia has built up a solid reputation and brand as a creative multimedia agency which both reinforces company values to existing clients and attracts new work. Much of the work in establishing this has been built up online through the use of the following media:

Portfolio or bloging websites

Simcoemedia runs several independent websites containing design portfolio items, design articles, audio-soundtracks and film reviews. The content on these sites are all original and generated by Peter Simcoe as part of ongoing creative output in one form or another. They are particularly valuable in that the direction, management and contribution to Simcoemedia branding are completely unique – there are no other companies with vested interests in sharing any revenue or search listings. On the downside, they take time to establish, optimise for SEO and populate with appropriate content and links before they are noticed by search engines as having any importance. Here is a list of these sites:

Stock Websites

For creative people, uploading audio, video and images to stock websites to sell to the public [they may be other designers, video producers or publishers] provides another channel of exposure for your work. Being part of a large online shop in one form or another does group you with the rest of the creatives and community so it is harder to stand out amongst the crowd but with larger numbers of people involved comes larger budgets and more investment in advertising with a greater reach. iStockphoto has a worldwide reputation with creative networks such as The Envato Network gaining ground in popularity. As a contributing artist to these global network websites I am able to have a profile page with links to my other portfolios that provide SEO value through the ability to add a profile page and link to pages with a good page rank [and even if theres a no-follow tag disallowing 'link juice'*, external links are still important], increase in my digital footprint and provide reassurance to potential buyers by the fact that I have passed the rigorous standards of websites such as iStockphoto.com.

* Link Juice, in simple terms, is the value search engines place upon the recommendation or linking of an external site to another – eg if Microsoft or Apple were to directly link to my website without the addition of a ‘no follow’ tag, then search engines would think that I must be an important site because I ve been linked to by a very important site and will increase my Page Rank [importance on the web] and therefore my search engine rankings.

Social Media and Other sites

As we get closer to social media in our discussion regarding digital footprint, the lines between professional and non-professional activity can more easily be crossed and therefore more caution is urged. Just because something is freely available and can publish any thoughts you may have on any subject does not mean it should be used. I have a pretty strict policy on social media use – ie do not allow anything to be published that you would not be happy for your clients to read or view. The list of social media below is in order of priority and preference I place on it along with a brief summary of its use:

Digital Footprint Diagram

Below is a diagram of Simcoemedia’s digital footprint – you can also download the Simcoemedia Digital Footprint Diagram in PDF format. Larger circles indicate priority in time and content whereas smaller circles are considered to be of lower priority. Twitter is linked to many of the sites and can be seen on the footer of Simcoemedia, Design-Design, Audio-Echo as well as being fed into Facebook, Linked In and other sites – you can see Twitter’s main stream as a dotted line connecting many of the sites together. RSS feeds are broadcast from WordPress based websites and are fed into sites such as Linked In – titles also appear in the footers of all Simcoemedia WordPress based sites.

Simcoemedia uses many different sites for different purposes and goals. Some sites require updates and effort put into creating content more than others – others remain static for longer. Design-Design, the blog you are reading is updated once each month at least and new articles require detailed attention and significant time to produce. Simcoemedia Design Consultancy website is updated when certain projects are completed that add to the overall portfolio breadth and depth – not all projects make it to the porfolio as some skills, design styles or methods are already covered.

Conclusion

Expanding your digital footprint in the ways I have described and illustrated above assist your business in the following ways:

  • Allowing you to expand the different types of relevent content around a subject such as design and optimise these pages through the use of keywords and titles so that you can be found in as many search engine results as possible. Using different websites is a good way of keeping a focus upon different ‘angles of attack’ in terms of appearing in search engine results
  • Allowing you to exchange the maximum number of focussed, relevant external links between sites to improve Page Rank and search engine results for specific subject areas
  • Allows users to find your content by having a presence on channels that different groups of people may be familiar with eg many of the Facebook users I link to as friends do not use Twitter and would not necessarily know about certain design activities unless I linked them together so that my Tweets appear on my Facebook Wall

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