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May 9, 2007

Why I Started My Web Design Business

Royalty Free Stock Nature Photo - Download It HereIt was the winter of 2001-2002. I was living right here in Happy Camp - a tiny town of about 1200 souls in the middle of the Klamath National Forest, about 70 miles from the rest of civilization. I desperately wanted to work from my home so I could be there with my two youngest children who were 11 and 12 at the time. I didn’t have a clue as to how I should earn money as a stay-at-home mom, but felt I had to do something to supplement our income.

A friend nearby, Judy, called one day and told me a workshop on starting a small business was about to be offered in our town. She worried that the event would be canceled if enough people didn’t show up.

Wanting to be a good friend, and slightly intrigued by the topic, I volunteered. “I’ll do it, Judy; I’ll go with you.” I thought it was a one or two day workshop.

The following evening at 6 pm I sat in the classroom - a small portable room behind the local elementary school. It was there I discovered I’d just volunteered for a nine-week video-conferenced class offered by College of the Siskiyous in Weed California - a college about 100 miles away. The instructor, Chris, was an employee of JEDI - the Jefferson Economic Development Institute.

Nine weeks! That was a lot more than I’d bargained for. And the class met twice weekly!

I weighed my options. Should I spend so many hours away from home, commit myself to the effort needed for success in a college class, and totally dedicate myself to it? Or should I flake out and go back to my quiet uninvolved life?

Besides Judy and I, there was one other student - a newcomer to town who wanted to open a clothing distribution website. Judy’s business was writing - she already had a part time job writing columns for a county-wide newspaper. And as for me - I had no idea what I wanted to do, but I knew I needed to do something. Silently I decided to take the class along with Judy and our new acquaintance, Erik.

The class involved learning all the steps for writing a business plan including cash flow projections and other simple accounting procedures. But I didn’t know that then. We started at the beginning - with simple goal setting.

We were joined via video-conferencing to students in three other Siskiyou County locations. There were about six students in Yreka (population about 7000) and maybe twenty at the main campus in Weed (a much smaller town near Mt. Shasta). And in a tiny town in the north-west corner of our county, Tulelake, there were three other students. Many of the students had businesses already. Others had definite plans about what they wanted to do. And a few were like me: clueless, but willing.

I survived the nine weeks! I got through the class and at the end we were given certificates with our business names on them. I still was unsure what business idea to pursue but the instructor was so enthusiastic with my idea of a web design business, she put “KlamathDesign.Com” on the certificate. And that did it for me. Since she thought I could create a successful web design business, I decided to do it.

I purchased this domain name, and struggled to come up with a site design. I redesigned it three times before I was satisfied. And before I could officially open the business, I got a call from a local business owner who wanted to hire me for her site maintenance projects!

I’m convinced that almost anyone with web design skills can learn to offer their talents to the public. This blog will reveal all the lessons I learned in my journey to becoming a well-paid web designer. I will not only tell you what worked well for me, I’ll reveal my most painful and frustrating mistakes.

If you’re considering a career in web design, this will be a journey worth taking. And if you want to read this blog to glean the web design business tips I have to share, you’re welcome here as well. And as for you who just want to laugh at all my mistakes, go ahead. I’m writing this blog for entertainment as well as for sharing what I’ve learned.

To stay notified of updated postings please subscribe via FeedBurner - you can sign up with any news reader you like. If you don’t have a news reader yet, you might like the one I’m using: Google News Reader.

I’m also setting up an emailed newsletter - the link is at the top of the right-side column. The newsletter, Web Design Business Help From Klamath Design, will contain articles and information not included in the blog. I probably won’t send out newsletters very often - about once a month would be enough for me - but it will remind you of this blog and encourage you to check back in once in a while.

More stories of my start-up web design business efforts will appear here in days to come.


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April 20, 2007

Royalty Free Stock Nature Photos

Royalty Free Stock Nature Photo - Download It HereI’m offering royalty free stock nature photography on this website. These photos are intended to be used on websites only (personal or commercial). For any other photography use, email me for permission.

For those who use my nature photography on their websites, a link back to this site is requested, somewhere on your site. Also credit for the photographer would be appreciated. All these photos were done by me: Linda Martin of Happy Camp, California.

My nature photos such as the one on the left here are all linked to a much larger version of the same photo, so you can click on the picture, wait for the large free photo to download, and save it to your hard drive.

These nature photos are all taken here in the Klamath River Valley where I live. I’ve got a collection of nature photos of the Klamath River, Klamath National Forest, Klamath River Valley, Klamath River Highway, and other nearby places.

If you don’t see what you want and think I might be able to get it, feel free to ask - I might have just what you need in my nature photo collection.

If you need a free photo utility to crop the photo, I recommend IrfanView… a small, free photo utility that’s easy to use and quick to download. I’ve used IrfanView for years to crop or resize photos and also find it helpful for browsing through the many nature photos on my hard drive.


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April 19, 2007

Technorati Favorites Exchange

Free Web Design TipsAre you a blogger? If so, read on:

I am exchanging Technorati Favorites with other bloggers. This is something I learned about from Daryl W.T. Lau and Dosh Dosh.

The goal of the exchange is to help one another up toward the top-100 favorited blogs list at Technorati. This is an experiment to see what effects it has on overall blog traffic and popularity. I’m hoping, by doing this, to help other people who have web design or SEO blogs, but if you have any other type of blog you can join in too.

Here’s the rules of the exchange:

1. Click on this link and add me as your favorite at Technorati: Favorite Klamath Design

2. Leave a comment to this post telling me you favorited me. And leave me a link like the one above so I can favorite your blog; it looks like this: http://technorati.com/faves?add=http://www.YourBlogsURL.com

3. I will favorite your blog, and everyone who comes after can favorite it too.

Also if you want to host a favorites exchange in your blog, post something about it there and link to this posting. When I notice your post from trackbacks or Technorati, I’ll add a link to this posting, to your blog and link exchange post.

Have fun with it.

Here are some other Techno-Fave exchange postings. You can favorite them, and go to their exchange postings and ask them to favorite you back:

Daryl W.T. Lau - Add To Favorites
Dosh Dosh - Add To Favorites
Rishiraj - Add To Favorites
Blog@Fyais.Com - Add To Favorites

Bil2me dot com - Add To Favorites
Zath - Add To Favorites
Foreign Perspectives - Add To Favorites
CalvinWarr - Add To Favorites

Digital Information Technology - Add To Favorites
Quasi Fictional - Add To Favorites
JameoTips - Add To Favorites
Money Consciousness - Add To Favorites

VersaCreations - Add To Favorites
Vinod Live! - Add To Favorites
The Million Dollar Experiment Down Under - Add To Favorites
Gauravonomics - Add To Favorites

MLM Forums online marketing blog - Add To Favorites
Pentimento - Add To Favorites
Azazil - Add To Favorites
EJCooksey - Add To Favorites

Manila Mom - Add To Favorites
AskaX World - Add To Favorites
I Thought, Therefore I Blog - Add To Favorites
T Jantunen - Add To Favorites

Ramblings of an Undisturbed Mind - Add To Favorites
MrGaryLee - Add To Favorites
Technospot.net - Add To Favorites
My Online Collections - Add To Favorites

ContentPays - Add To Favorites
QMusings - Add To Favorites
Shadow Scope - Add To Favorites
Article Discovery Politics - Add To Favorites

NiaTrading Signals - Add To Favorites
Blogging for Money - Add To Favorites
FrugalMomma - Add To Favorites
Brown Thoughts - Add To Favorites

Rugjeff’s Blog about Blogging - Add To Favorites
Digital Phocus - Add To Favorites
Living Your Dreams - Add To Favorites
Life Spices - Add To Favorites


Home Based Business - Add To Favorites
Genius Type - Add To Favorites
Sexy in Red - Add To Favorites
Lack of Money is the Root of All Evil - Add To Favorites
BlogOp - Add To Favorites

TechJunction - Add To Favorites
Random Expressions - Add To Favorites
shaarique.com - Add To Favorites
Life in the Fast lane - Add To Favorites

Teknobites - Add To Favorites
Life Rocks 2.0 - Add To Favorites

More to be added soon…


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April 18, 2007

Opening Links In A New Browser Window Tab

Royalty Free Stock Nature Photo - Download It HereIf you’ve browsed the web for long, I’m sure you’ve come across sites where, when you click on links, a new browser window opens. If you want an example try this link: Blog Top Sites.

This is done by adding the attribute, target=”_blank”, to the link anchor tag.

How do you feel about having a site designer choose to force you to open a new browser window?

Lots of people don’t like this at all, and in fact I’ve seen it featured in lists of the most annoying things people have seen in web design, along with animated graphics and being caught inside someone’s frames. Many if not most people do not like having a site force the opening of a new browser window. It is intrusive.

Now, with the tabbed browsing used in Firefox and Internet Explorer v.7, I too find it annoying because I like to keep all my sites opened in tabs, in one browser window.

There’s a simple way to get around these types of links. If you realize you’re at a site that is opening browser windows you don’t want, just right-click on the mouse, right over the link you want to explore, and choose “open in new tab”. Voila! No more browser windows opening!

This tip is also very helpful for sites that use frames and force you to stay inside their frames while you explore other sites they’ve linked to. About.Com does this, though it also gives an option to click to get rid of their frame at the top of the page, so it is much better than many other framed sites we’ve seen. In the future if you find you’re at a site that keeps a frame open on the new site you want to see, just hit your back-arrow, and then right-click on the link for the new site you want to see, choosing “open in new tab’.


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Klamath Design: Starting A Home Based Web Design Business © 2007 by Linda Jo Martin