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Launch of blackrockgp.ie

March 9th, 2010

Blackrock Medical Practice has launched a new website which can be found at www.blackrockgp.ie.

This website has been designed in order to provide information on the services on offer at Blackrock Medical Practice. The new website for Blackrock Medical Practice is in addition to them moving to a new surgery which is conveniently located opposite Guardian Angels Church on Newtownpark Avenue in Blackrock, Co Dublin.

The surgery has been offering General Practice services in the Blackrock area for over 30 years and we wish them luck in their new location and with their new website.

Launch of fitness4performance.ie

February 16th, 2010

We have recent launched www.fitness4performance.ie. This website allows fitness4performacne to advertise their range of services such as Fitness4Golf , Pilates Classes and The Body Balancing & Strengthening.

The websites simple navigation structure allows users to easily find information on the site. This site has a full content management system that allows the owner to update their site and to add new pages as required. We wish Fiona all the best with her new website.

Launch of movemarket.ie

January 26th, 2010

MoveMarket.ie helps you find a courier to move your goods or a bus or transport company to get you where you want to go. MoveMarket allows couriers haulage companies and transport providers bid for business that otherwise might not have been available to them leading to enhanced route planning efficiency and better utilisation of fleet capacity.

MoveMarket.ie approached Chilli Design to design a crisp site with the purpose of matching haulage companies with customers who want to move goods within Ireland and further afield. There is no charge to the customer to use this site.

Launch of grinds.ie

January 21st, 2010

Grinds.ie

Grinds.ie is a free website that allows tutors to offer grinds to students. The website has been set up in response to a gap in the market for a place where students and tutors can find each other for grinds with an upto date list of tutors.

Grinds.ie approached Chilli Design with the requirement that we develop a simple easy to use site that will allow students to search for tutors that will provide them with grinds. We have also undertaken a viral marketing campaign using social networking to attract students and tutors to the website.

Youtube and Promotions

October 5th, 2009

A video posted here on You Tube shows the power of viral marketing for the Black Eyed Peas. This video has been viewed 14 million times and rising. Granted that most small to medium enterprises will not have accesses to the resources of the Black Eyed Peas and their record company, there are a few ideas that you make get from this video.

  • Business Promotion

A short video of your premises, an introduction by the owner managing director or even staff or happy customers can work wonders for your marketing campaigns.

  • Product Promotion

How about posting a small video on how to use one of your products, new product previews, promotional videos supplied by a manufacturer or customer success stories.

  • Services Promotion

How about a short video tutorial, a demo of your staff performing a service or maybe customer success stories.

All you need is access to a camcorder and some patience; why not give it a try?

Launch of colaistelaighin.ie

September 11th, 2009

We have launched a website for Colaiste Laighin . Colaiste Laighin is a privately run Irish College who offer Junior Cert & Leaving Cert courses with classes directed towards preparation for state exams. Good Counsel College’s private campus, located just outside New Ross town, offers a unique opportunity to create a Gaeltacht atmosphere and provides a true learning experience for all students in the Sunny South East.

Chilli Design was commissioned to build a website for Colaiste Laighin that would allow them to present details of their course online. A key requirement of Colaiste Laighin was the ability to update their website and as a result this package includes a Content management system.

Facebook and Twitter

July 22nd, 2009

There is a lot of press about Social Networking services lately and Facebook and Twitter are commonly mentioned in the same breath as social networking. This article is a follow up from my interview on Mid West Radio this morning.


Facebook


Facebook is one of many social networking sites; other popular ones in use in Ireland include Bebo, Linkedin, My Space. There are at least 500,000 Facebook users in Ireland and there are 250 million worldwide. It is ranked as the 6th most popular website in the world.


The idea of Facebook is that you become part of an online network of friends, co-workers, school mates and college friends. You then create a profile which is like your own personal home page with pictures of events and information on what you are currently doing. From your homepage you can also install applications that allow you to interact further with your friends by sending messages, playing games such as scrabble, poker, sending gits and over 30,000 other applications.


Facebook has been banned in a number of countries for periods of time, it also has been banned in a number of colleges and workplaces throughout the world due to the amount of time that people spend online.


An example of a famous Facebook profile is here.This profile was used to help Barack Obama to win the US presidential election. He has over 6.4 million supporters.


Twitter


Twitter is a social networking/micro blogging service that enables its users to send and read messages known as tweets. Tweets are text-based posts of up to 140 characters displayed your twitter homepage and delivered to your subscribers who are known as followers. Users can send and receive tweets via the Twitter website, or via their mobile device.


A tweet is basically a short message of less than 140 characters that will be displayed on your twitter home page it is much like a text message but is displayed on your profile page. In recent times twitter has grown exponentially and many businesses and individuals are beginning to tweet.


The most followed celebrity online is Ashton Kutcher who has nearly 3 million followers. His profile can be found here.

Launch of Machineshift.com

May 16th, 2009

We have launched Machineshift.com on behalf of a client. Machineshift.com is a marketplace allowing dealers and private individuals to advertise their machinery for sale in Ireland and the UK.


Machineshift.com allows dealers and private individuals to easily advertise their used machinery, used tractors, used construction equipment, used forestry equipment and a range of other machinery.The ease of searching in Machineshift.com makes it very easy to use for no technical users and the ability to enlarge pictures makes it possible to examine pictures of all machines on the site. The site also includes a built in currency convertor that ensures that all rates are up to date.


We have also undertaken an online marketing imitative for Macineshift.com and they are now well ranked in Google for a number of key search terms.

Quick Tips to Choosing a Domain Name

May 15th, 2009

1. Keep it short

Although some places allow you to register a name with up to 63 characters, you have to keep in mind that people need to be able to remember it, and easily type it into their browser. Try to register the shortest name that your customers and visitors will associate with your Website. The general rule of thumb is, keep it under seven characters if possible. (Not including the suffix.)


2. Dot What?

There are many different extensions available right now. For businesses, we recommend a .ie suffix. It is the first extension that most people try when searching for a Website in Ireland. Also, since it is unique to Ireland it shows that your business is operating in Ireland for a while.


3. Avoid Trademarked Names

There are two really good reasons for this. First, it’s not very nice. We have all heard the stories about the zany guy who thought ahead and bought “some-huge-multi-million-dollar-company.com” and sold it to the company for enough money to retire on. But, remember that those companies, like yours, have spent lots of time and money creating their brand, and what goes around comes around. Also, companies are no longer opening their pocketbooks to get their names back. They are calling their lawyers.


4. Register Your Domain NOW

Domain names are being snatched up fast. You must register soon unless you want to get stuck with “the-domain-name-that-no-one-wanted.net”. You do not have to have a Webmaster or an ecommerce department or a Web design consultant. Just get out there and register before you loose the opportunity to get the name you really want. Click here to check your domain name availability.


5. One May Not Be Enough

Sometimes, it isn’t a bad idea to register several similar domain names. If you have “yourname.com”, register “yourname.ie” so no one else takes it. You can register your full company name and a shorter, easier to remember version. Some people even register common misspellings of their company’s name. (You don’t need a separate Web page for each. Several domains can point to the same Website.)


6. Character Types

Just a reminder. Domain names can only use letters, numbers, and dashes. Spaces and symbols are not allowed. Also, domain names are not case sensitive.


7. Ask Around

When you have settled on several available name choices, see what your friends and clients have to say. A name that may make perfect sense to you may be too hard for other people to remember. Is your domain easy to say? Is it hard to spell? Do you have to explain why you chose the name?

And remember; if you think that if you have found the right domain name, but you’re not quite sure if it’s the one… register it anyway before someone else does!

A Brief History of Chilli’s

May 1st, 2009

Welcome to chillidesign.ie and our new blog. I hope over the coming months and years we will simplify the web design process for our new clients and continue to serve our current client’s with the same high standard of services as before.

As my first blog entry I am putting together a brief history of Chilli’s to give you an idea of some of the inspiration behind our new domain name and our rebranding from www.cmm.ie

Christopher Columbus, in his unproductive search for riches across the Atlantic Ocean in -1492, mistook America for India. He named the natives Indians, and he also took the liberty of placing an improper label on what was to become one of the Southwest’s most popular vegetables.
Believing he had found an exotic form of black pepper, Columbus took plants back with him to Spain and told the Europeans it was “the world’s finest pepper.”
Pepper, most commonly in the form of black and white grindings, is a woody vine native to the East Indies. Chilli - green and red, and a different species entirely - has its roots almost 10,000 miles away.
Columbus’ chilli excavations probably took place on one of several islands near the North and Central American coasts. However, most historians agree that South America, chiefly Bolivia, is the source of the original chilli plant.
Tracing the plant’s exact journey over time to North America is difficult. Ancient tribes of people might have carried the plant onto the continent, or Spaniards, hoping to settle the land along the Gulf Coast, might have planted the continent’s first crops.
By the mid-1500s, thousands of acres of chilli plants, by then called peppers, had been planted in Europe.
Seeds from the chilli plant began following European travellers to North America, and soon many farmers were learning to grow their own chilli crops. Along the way, new crossbred chillies evolved.
The plant became a staple of American Indian crops, and in 1696 it practically saved dozens of tribes in New Mexico, according to “The History of New Mexico” by Charles Coan.
The famine of 1696 destroyed crops, killed livestock and threatened human lives, but the chilli plant thrived and helped feed people who otherwise might have starved.
In the late 19th century, chilli was growing both wild and tame along the Rio Grande in West Texas and southern New Mexico.
A major early technology boost to the crop came in 1888 when a horticulturist from the New Mexico College of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts - now New Mexico State University began experimentation into the crossbreeding and hybrid growth of chilli, according to the university’s Chilli Pepper Institute.
Within a decade, several new artificially created breeds of chilli sprouted up across the Southwest.
In 1906, the first known transplantation of New Mexican chilli occurred when Emilio Ortega, a sheriff from California, took chilli seeds from New Mexico back to Anaheim and coined a name for his new pepper. Known as the Anaheim, it is a variety of the plant that still grows in New Mexico today.
Just five years later, an agricultural guru created the strongest breed of New Mexican chilli. Calling his product the No. 9, Fabian Garcia’s pepper was the most durable crop in the south until crossbreeding technology strengthened in the late 1960s.
Today, the chilli — encompassing more than 65 different varieties and colours — is the state’s most valuable processed crop. More than 1,500 farmers harvest almost 20000 acres of chilli every year in New Mexico, generating $200 million in sales.

 
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