A Few Words About Our Host

Drew StaufferAn industry design veteran who has successfully conquered both coasts, Drew Stauffer combines innovation with web standards to bring a blend of usability and creative vision to every project. As Director of Development for Wildfire Productions and CEO of Alibi Productions, Drew leaves no development stone unturned. He has published many articles on web standards and has been featured on WebProNews and Google News, and his companies count The Hyatt, BMW, and Michelin among their many satisfied clients.

Recent Posts

CSS Reboot: Alibi Productions

Posted on Thursday, February 01, 2007

Alibi Productions was my first website ever and over the years it has changed faces many times. Jan. 1st 2007, Alibi was re-designed and re-launched again. This time around Alibi was developed specifically for website promotion and online marketing. I decided to give back to the community that made me who I am with informative knowledge and tips that can help any website grow and expand. Check it out and see if you think I changed things for the better.

Burned by My Passion

Posted on Wednesday, January 03, 2007

I really enjoy cooking. Throughout my life I have had a few cooking jobs, but the stress that goes along with working in that environment kind of killed it for me. Now, I’ll only enter the kitchen in the privacy of my own home. A few months ago, I finally bought a nice set of stainless steel cookware. I’ve wanted a quality set for a long time, but I always had roommates that wouldn’t use the same care as I would and instead of being overly anal about it I decided to just wait to buy anything.

Quality Content: What It Is and How to Get It

Posted on Wednesday, December 06, 2006

All too often people write their content to appease the search engine gods in order to rank well. Quality content isn’t written for search engines, it isn’t blocks of text bloated with keywords and targeted phrases; quality content is well thought out content that actually applies to the user. When brainstorming your quality content ideas think about these factors:

Posting for Comments

Posted on Friday, November 17, 2006

Writing articles and posts for blogs is a great way to articulate your thoughts. Being involved with a community is the best way to get trusted information and insight from your peers. What do you do when no one ever comments on your posts? I was recently reading some posts from seoroundtable about topics that are being covered at PubCon. I was immediately intrigued with an observation that Rand Fishkin made. He pointed out that, when writing posts, if you have a “matter-of-fact” point of view you aren’t really promoting comments. If you want community involvement you need to pose questions, which makes sense…right?

Are you more likely to post comments on a blog that poses questions, or do you read blogs for more general information?

Brian Bielmann Joins Wildfire Productions

Posted on Friday, November 10, 2006

World-renowned professional surf photographer Brian Bielmann has teamed up with Wildfire to develop an online database, which will allow users to purchase all the superior surfing shots that aren’t in the magazines. Even better, you can hire Brian or any member of the team to come along and document your life and surfing adventures.

If you love surfing, you have to check out yoursurfshot.com.

Previous Page  

Next Page



Topics Of Discussion



Who I Read



What Keeps Me Busy