THE PENDING DRAFT

Style Guides Podcast

January 22, 2015

Styleguides.io provides a ton of useful resources on Website Style Guides. You find pretty much everything from Articles to Books, Talks, Tools or Examples. If you’re building Style Guides and didn’t know it yet, you should check it out.

Today Brad Frost announced a new Podcast, where he and Anna Debenham will interview folks making Style Guides. In the first episode they talked with Jina Bolton, Senior Product Designer at the Salesforce UX Team and although i’m usually not that much into audio podcasts i gave it a try and really enjoyed it.

Style Guides with Jina Bolton

The Web Field Manual is a nice and very extensive collection of links and resources – curated by Jon Yablonski, Garret Wieronski and Geoff Tice – for everyone working on the web. Or, in their own words:

The Web Field Manual is a curated list of resources focused on documenting only the best knowledge for designing experiences and interfaces on the web. It is an ever-expanding collection of knowledge and inspiration for web designers, by web designers.

Web Field Manual

An interesting read of the history of Helvetica, how it was developed and became one of the most used typefaces of the twentieth century. Starting in the 1830s with the first sans-serif’s all the way to 2013 when Apple introduced Helvetica Neue Ultralight as the default System Font in iOS 7.

History of Helvetica

Curtis McHale – How do you bill an unscopeable project

January 19, 2015

Just stumbled upon this article by Curtis McHale. Somewhat related to what Chris Lema had to say about his 3 point approach, but this time less about estimating properly but rather how you can bill such projects to your clients. Worth a read.

My experience has been that when as a client sees the money get lower they start getting picky about what actually gets done. You’d think it would be the same as they pay you hourly and the total cost mounts.

But it isn’t.

Curtis McHale – How do you bill an unscopeable project

Cabel Sasser XOXO Talk

January 18, 2015

Cabel Sasser gave an honest and personal talk at XOXO 2013 about how they started Panic and became what they are today. It’s always easy to look up to people who “made it” and to think everything was easy and just fell in place for them. From the outside everything looks easy. But there’s always a great amount of work and struggle behind every success, that you don’t see. Nice to get that “behind the scenes” perspective.

Found via Manical Rage.

Chris Lema on Estimating without Requirements

January 17, 2015

Estimating is one of the harder parts of any web business. Estimating without requirements is even harder. I don’t know about you but i often found myself just quoting something, out of the blue, without even realizing how wrong my numbers where, only to find out later on when it’s already too late. Over the years i learned how to phrase my offerings and contracts more precise, educating my clients that some things cannot be known at the beginning of a project, that they understand that those estimated hours really are only estimates etc. but yet it still feels wrong if you have to come back to a client and let them know you need double or more time than what was initially agreed upon. Proper contracts are important, but they only bring you so far. Things happen, things out of your responsibility will go wrong and even those things should also be taken into account when estimating your time. If you run a business you need to be as good as you can get about estimating properly, if you like it or not.

Chris Lema, who wrote a lot of brilliant things about pricing and estimating before, shared his “3 point estimating approach” which he describes as follows:

I use a 3-point estimating approach that I know others use. But often when I come across other’s estimates I find that they’re using the three points differently than I do. And the result is that if you use three incorrect points, your estimate will be wrong as well.

He explains in more detail what he means by this in a short video and it’s one of the best explanations on the topic i came across so far.

Chris Lema – My Approach to Estimating without Requirements

Poststatus with a new domain and Membership Club

January 16, 2015

After a long period of silence, Brian Krogsgard relaunched Poststatus and announced a Membership Club which will launch soon and comes with all sorts of goodies. Read everything about the relaunch here and go check out that Membership Club. Poststatus didn’t take a long time until it became one of my main resources when it comes to WordPress News, so i’m very much looking forward to what he has in store for us and will probably also sign up for the Club, when it’s launched.

Matt Cutts from Google on WordPress & SEO

January 15, 2015

Matt Cutts from Google gave a talk at WordCamp San Francisco 2009 about WordPress & SEO. While this is pretty old and many things have changed since then (remember this new Google Wave thing he mentions) it’s still an interesting watch.