Monday, August 17, 2009

Proposal Postmortem; Ask "Why Not?"

Web Developers Studio bid for a new contract and was not selected to do the job. Although it's discouraging after having worked diligently on the proposal to be rejected, I resisted the urge to drop the subject.

To better understand the missed opportunity, I emailed the prospective client this (with the particulars removed):

"Thanks for the opportunity to bid on the project. Good luck with your ....
I wonder if you would take a few moments to give me some professional feedback regarding my proposal. What were the factors that made you go with
http://xyz/? Was my pricing on the high side? Did I omit requested features? Was my proposed solution set unworkable? I'd appreciate any information you'd offer to help me better respond to my clients in the future.
Please keep me in mind for future projects and if you require any assistance on the current one, I'm available on an ad hoc basis.


Best regards,
-Terri


Within a few hours I received this most gracious and informative reply:

"Hi Terri,

I’m not at all surprised that you ask that, since “professionalism” is one of the key words that came to mind in reviewing your proposal. But I can honestly say that none of the concerns you list played a part. Your price was well within range and every aspect of the proposal was sterling.

In fact, in the end, we narrowed our choices to Web Developers Studio and xyz. Among the seven bidders, your two proposals were in a class by themselves, and I agonized for days. After long discussion with the rest of the Board, it finally came down to a slight preference for stylistic intangibles – a feeling that xyz’s portfolio reflected a somewhat better fit with the eventual design elements we envision for the ... site. Even this was a difficult call – your work is extraordinarily elegant and creative. I have also developed a philosophical attraction to Drupal (which xyz uses) and have worked with it before.

I am very glad to have been made aware of your work. I occasionally have friends and colleagues in need of web development and design work, and I will recommend you without hesitation.

Kind regards and thanks,"


Well, that was nice and I know much more than if I hadn't asked: the price I quoted was reasonable, but my suggested solution of Joomla happened to be off the mark. Regarding the stylistic concerns, well -- better luck next time.

In the future, I'll be sure to always ask for reasons.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

FireFTP and Omeka

I love FireFTP (I did donate), but recently this convienent little tool cost me quite a bit of time.

Trying to upgrade an Omeka installation with large, deep directory folders, I didn't notice that apparently FireFTP just gets tired and skips files, but continues on so you don't notice. Spent more hours than I care to tell debugging what was just missing modules.

My bad, not checking the logs, but rather than be paranoid, I'll just try to remember to use FileZilla when it's gotta be right.

Update 8/16/2009:
Oh, now I remember what I don't like about Filezilla...it acts very weird about .htaccess files. Recently I uploaded a directory using it and it all uploaded fine, except for the critical .htaccess file.

When I google around about this, the top forums claim that the .htaccess is just not showing or "hidden". But this was not so in my case unless "hidden" also means "not working". As soon as I uploaded the .htaccess using FireFTP, the site began working properly.

So, pick your free file transfer program poision. Then again...hey, wadda ya want for free?

Finally added a robots.txt

A bit too late added a robots.txt disallowing indexing to a site in test.

Monday, August 3, 2009

Popular days for doctor website

According to Google Analytics, the most popular days for visits to cindyparnesmd.com are on Monday's and Wednesdays. Monday's I get, you're sick over the weekend and call first thing. But Wed's?