Archive for the 'free tools' Category

It’s finally here - Day 1 of the 30 Day Challenge.
Watch this to learn about Ed’s ‘Magnificent Symphony in Four Parts’. Awesome stuff.

I’ve been keeping an eye on how ClickHeat has been going over the last week or so, and I thought it was time for an update.
As a basic click-tracking program, it has been useful on a day-by-day basis to look at where people have been clicking. However, there are some ‘issues’ with this particular program.
If [...]

I knew that would get your attention… Seriously, that’s how I felt about an hour ago… when I finally discovered Google Analytics.
How could I have missed this for so long? I had heard about it before, as an offhand reference in a blog or a forum, but didn’t really pay much attention. That is, until [...]

How do you know what your visitors are clicking on?
To some extent, your stats will tell you the answer. WordPress Stats (apparently) shows you all the links people clicked on… though I’m not quite sure how accurate WPS is. However, this doesn’t necessarily tell you if people have clicked to join your newsletter, clicked on [...]

Today I have launched the Woman vs. Web e-mail updates!
Am I the only person who still calls it e-mail, instead of email? My grammar lecturer at university was very strong on this point… but that was a few years now - perhaps conventions have changed
So - back to the topic at hand. Everywhere [...]

I was just about to write another post - then I realised I hadn’t spoken about the 30 Day Challenge yet. GASP!
Okay, so some of you probably already know about it - but then again, some of you might not! Basically, the 30 Day Challenge aims to show you, over the space of a month, [...]

I have just discovered Squidoo and HubPages. Wow. Talk about making it easy to publish content online.
For those of you who haven’t seen these sites before, they basically offer you free registration and then let you create endless one-page ‘lenses’ or ‘hubs’ about a niche topic. They also offer a number of different ‘modules’ that [...]