January 31

Typography

 

Today I have been largely looking at typography, it’s uses, implementations and tools. Below are the highlights of what I have come across.

As always, we’d love to hear ideas and suggestions from you – just drop us an email to journal [at] omelett.es and we’ll take a look.

 
 
January 30

UI and 404’s

 

It’s been a bit quite today on the interesting link front I’m afraid. Most of today has been looking at updates for the new Tactile CRM website and the links below reflect mainly UI and user testing stuff I have been looking at.

As always, we’d love to hear ideas and suggestions from you – just drop us an email to journal [at] omelett.es and we’ll take a look.

 
 
January 30

What is VRM

 

A good questions, and one we tried to answer in 64, 32, 16, and finally 8 words, at last night’s VRM Hub meeting.

Data

I’ll not go through everything, but the long and short is that VRM (Vendor Relationship Management) is a way to control your own personal data – who has access to what, notify others of changes (such as your phone number changing), and a whole lot more.

Ideally your data is stored ‘in the cloud’ you own it, not organisations you deal with, and you can remove access whenever you want, as well as being able to move your data with you at will.

Check out the VRM one pager for a [slightly] more in-depth understanding.

 
 
January 28

Inspiration

 

Most of today I have been looking for inspiration for the new omelett.es website. The links below are mainly to sites I have come across as being well designed.

As always, we’d love to hear ideas and suggestions from you – just drop us an email to journal [at] omelett.es and we’ll take a look.

 
 
January 27

Why O2 need VRM

 

Background: I have recently had my iPhone replaced under an insurance claim, however it had a faulty battery.

I have been left feeling frustrated and let down by O2 (who have already made my life difficult in dealings with them in the past) trying to get it replaced.

Woman pulling out hair: frustration

This is the process I have been through to get it replaced:

  1. Call to O2 to ask how to replace it – told to take it to store and it will take 4-5 days and I will get an replacement iPhone whilst I am there.
  2. Take phone into O2 store only to be told it will take 7-14 days and I get a really crappy old Samsung handset as a replacement (Samsung handsets are fine, it’s just the replacement one I received is old enough not to have predictive text, a web browser, or email – hardly a suitable replacement for an iPhone).
  3. I am told I will be called when the phone is back and kept up to date.
  4. After 7 days I spend a whole day calling the store to find out about my phone, no answer.
  5. I call O2 customer service who tell me they can’t find out anything about the handset as it was brought in the store.
  6. I finally get through to O2 store and am told they don’t know anything.
  7. After the weekend (yesterday) I call the O2 store again and ask for an update – I am told I will be called back.
  8. O2 store guy calls back to say they have had my phone back for 3 days and tried to call me (not true as I don’t have any missed calls, voicemails and I chased them in the interim about said handset).
  9. Go to store to pick up handset only to be told by inept store person that I need to bring passport, old phone etc.
  10. The store manager tells him he is wrong and I get my phone back.

I don’t think that I have asked for anything particularly out of the ordinary, and a system where I could have tracked this query from start to finish with input and updates from O2 call center, O2 store, Apple Repair, and myself, would have cut down the amount of calls/communications and let me feeling informed and confident about the issue.

This is (as I understand it) a basic example of a VRM implementation – I could have setup the query, pushed them my phone/email to keep me updated, we could all have seen what everybody said and I could have kept track of the repair in a similar way to online delivery tracking.

A reasonable part of this could easily be implemented (excluding the contact details push) using exisiting technology (we’re trying to acheive something similar with our Resolve RM product), why don’t more companies do it?

 
 
January 26

Promotion

 

Marketing and promotion have been the focus today – how to increase personal and business brands.

As always, we’d love to hear ideas and suggestions from you – just drop us an email to journal [at] omelett.es and we’ll take a look.

 
 
January 20

Great example of typography & modal dialogs

 

I’ve been researching into new designs and features for the Tactile CRM website and came across The Typographic Desktop Reference website:

The Typographic Desktop Reference

Straight away the site gets to the point and shows you what the product is all about – I’m seriously considering purchasing the book – but also, it has a great way to show pages within the book when you click on them:

Typographic Desktop Reference (Modal Dialog)

These ‘popups’ are commonly know as ‘modal dialogs’ or ‘lightboxes’ and are a great way to display information and gain user input without cluttering the page and requiring page reloads.

 
 
January 19

Welcome and why omelett.es?

 

Welcome to the new blog for omelett.es – we’re the company behind products such as Tactile CRM and Spend Meter.

We’ve previously blogged about the process behind Spend Meter and will continue to do so as we setup the new company and get things going. There will be plenty of other things here, but we wanted to show people the process and how easy it can be to do.

If you are interested, we called the new company omelett.es as our internal systems and framework are named omelettes. We thought we’d take it instead of spending ages thinking up names as we could easily register the domain and company name.

 
 
January 12

Would you buy from these people?

 

The brief: Tactile CRM’s website is need of an overhaul, and as part of the plan this year we’re measuring and reporting on the the changes we make to see what is and isn’t succussful. We want to increase our conversion ratio on sign ups so we’re currently doing some market research on sites that people have felt comfortable buying from and leaving the credit card details.

The current list includes:

Are there anymore you have brought from, or can suggest?

 
 
January 12

New Feature: Reports and Graphs

 

We’re pleased to announce the second of two new features you’ll find in Tactile CRM this week – new graphs and reports.

Tactile CRM is a great way to manage your sales process and keep on top of clients. Now with the new graph/reporting facilities you can now easily keep track of your sales history, pipeline, and use the information to find out your most profitable sources of leads and type of work.

We’ve also added extra data below the graphs to see the exact values and now allow you to change the date ranges too.

Tactile CRM: New Graphs

This is the first release of our new reporting module and we’d love to hear your feedback and suggestions for further graphs/reports.