New Review!
mealticketonus.com
Introduction
Tina, from mealticketonus.com, runs a website based off the distribution of freebies through affiliate sites. She wants to optimize her site for search engines and through monetization with PPC (Pay Per Click) ads or affiliate deals. The benefit of running a site like this is that people love free stuff and you get the affiliate money for referring people to it. I know a lot of people who are registered on certain forums just to be the first one to get a free deal. A site like this can capitalize on this interest. The difficult part about doing this site, in particular, is that it is new. Gaging the effects of specific changes tends to be difficult to measure if you don’t already have a user-base. On the flip side, it is always nice to optimize your site before you know you need to make changes.
Presentation
The first thing I saw on the page was the center. The font is way too bright for a white background. Why not use black font? I have to stare close to the screen to read anything. Some other obvious changes that I noticed (which wasn’t too obvious, at first) is your header - the one that says “Meal Ticket On Us… etc.” I had to highlight the page before I saw that title. If you don’t want it to appear there, remove it and manually type in “Meal Ticket… etc” in the title if that title is linked by PHP to your page title (<title></title>).
Your menu (Home/Contact Us/News/Links) appears twice. You only want it to appear once. Your logo also needs work - something without the first image that you saw when you Google’d “Freebies” ;) - use something that will blend with your background.
I think the major part of your site that needs to be improved is organization (oh yes, I went for the bold AND italics for extra emphasis). Your main content is parsed by your “Popular” links, and your Google ads really make everything confusing. There are good ways of using Google ads (like your left sidebar), and there are confusing ways. Use your Google ads to space out your content - to provide a divider, in some respects. In other words, change the dimensions - even change the colors so it blends with your site. Of course, if you change your dimensions, you will also have to edit those article clips that are at the bottom. Maybe remove the Google ad altogether?
Your goal, I am assuming, is to maximize profit. To do this, you will also want to maximize legitimacy. The more ads and affiliates you have crowding your site, the less legitimacy your content has. This is true because your actual content will be far overshadowed by your affiliates. I see that happening right now (at least with the Google ads). You should desire trust - because without trust from your users, your “freebies” will be confused with “scams.” Confusing those two would be a plague to your traffic.
The right sidebar isn’t organized well either. Try to keep font size consistent and orderly. You have some stuff centered, some stuff aligned to the left, some stuff underlined, some stuff small, some large, etc.
Decrease the links at the top menu. There are too many and they have been pushed down to a lower level. You will want to fix that - maybe put them over to the left?
Also, think about your audience. They will want to be updated every time you make an addition to your website, correct? Position your RSS feed links to the top of your sidebar so people can easily access it (and so they are aware you have one).
Making these changes will be a good start. Down the line, when changes have been made - I will revisit sites and do another analysis upon request. Making these changes takes work - websites take work. All of my sites do - so just because I review sites doesn’t necessarily mean I’m not banging my head against a table from the tediousness desig when I am making sites.
Technical
Find these lines in your code:
<br /><center><a href=“http://www.JustFreeStuff.com”>
<br /><img src=“http://www.JustFreeStuff.com/buttons/jfsani1.gif” width=“60″ border=“0″ height=“31″ <br />alt=”Just Free Stuff “></a></center><br><br>
And fix the IMG tag so it isn’t parsed by the <br />.
Outside of that, your METAs look good, title is fine - but could be more specific! Remember you are competing with every other site with the word “free.” That’s a TON of sites - hey, look, more <B><I>! Be specific and use adjectives. That will get you to the top of the search engines. One thing that may hurt your SEO is your frequent use of the word “Free.” They MAY see that as saturation of a keyword… however, I always like the do what you want, as long as it is usable and it gets your point across philosophy.
I like the keywords “Meal ticket.” You’ll probably hit a top spot with that one in no time.
Also make sure your HTML validates. That’s important to search engines.
The Lo Down
-New, original, blended logo
-Organize your content
-Make sure your content is clear and obvious
-Reconsider positioning/shape of the Google ads in your entries
-Change your font color! I don’t want to see anymore lime green font on a white background!
-Move RSS up
-Standardize font size on right sidebar
-Organize right sidebar
-Get rid of extra menus and redundancies
-Shorten top menu
Conclusion
Your site looks far from professional, but it sounds like you have the content ideas down. It could definitely use an overall face-lift. I think the main issue right now is that it is messy! Organize everything so it is presented neatly. Make sure we can see your content, because when it is all said and done - content is king. You want to maintain reliability, so reconsider your ad placement. Make sure the ads aren’t overwhelming the content. If they begin to overwhelm your content, things will again become messy and your credibility will considerably decrease. I would be happy to do another analysis once you have made some of these changes, if you would like. It is my hope that this will help you get off to a great start!
Main factor: Organization
straightalk.biz
Introduction
Mr. Flecha from straightalk.biz requested an analysis mostly to decrease his bounce rate. Now what is a bounce rate? A bounce rate is a measurement of the pages/time people spend in your website. The higher the bounce rate, the fewer pages people are visiting and the less time they are spending on your site. A LOW bounce rate typically means people are digging through your site and are actually interested in your content (I am only assuming it has a direct relationship with interest in your website). 99.9% of the websites online should desire a low bounce rate. The only exceptions are those that want to only boost their Alexa rank, which becomes less and less popular every day. So let’s go ahead and take a look at the site to see if some improvements can’t be made.
Presentation
You obviously have a lot of information you want/need to get across to people. When I first come to the site, I imagine you teaching a seminar about the proper amount of characters and bold words to maximize SEO. This observation is where we separate the coders from the designer. You are obviously a coder. I didn’t draw this conclusion from the content of your site, but from the simplicity of design. The first thing I see when I go to your site are lots of words. I am totally overwhelmed by words. Let’s consolidate and start to build our hierarchy.
What do you want people to know?
Upon my first visit, the first line that caught my eye was: “The focus is not hosting sales, making you a reliable website with Speed Optimization, Code Validation, & SEO is the focus.” This needs to be changed and shortened. You aren’t telling people what EXACTLY you are trying to sell/share, but instead spotlighting what you aren’t trying to sell/share. Not only that, but the word “focus” is a bit redundant.
Consider using something like Speed, Validation, & Rank is our mission… something like that. Then maybe have a subtitle saying “Straightalk Website Optimization.” Or flip it - have the bold phrase as the subtitle? Up to you. Either way, people visiting your website will not be interested if they do not get instant gratification; which is another loop that can hinder progress in the web development world. Americans love fast food. Why? It is as close to instant gratification as you can get. That is the perfect business model - give people what they want and give it to them as fast as possible, while minimizing sacrifices.
How can you inform people?
Maybe the best transmission of your information isn’t through endless text, but through visual instruction. Maybe text is the optimal form of information transmission. What I want you to do is put yourself in the shoes of a potential client/visitor. He/she found your website from Google and is wanting to search for a particular article… quickly. Your search function is in the very top-right corner of your page - a great spot to put it… however, you have to click a button to get to it. Why not have just a standard search? Will having an incredibly advanced search help that much? What if you had the simple search on the front page, but the advanced search as a link below the text box? At the moment, I don’t really know how to find relevant information on your website.
How quickly can they access the information?
I kind of digressed into this topic in the previous question - but I’ll address it anyways because I want to talk about your Navigation. Your Navigation confuses me. The first link is “WHY SHOULD YOU?”
Why should I what? And why are you yelling?
Come up with shorter and more descriptive titles - oh, and lower those caps! You have “SUBMIT CONTENT” - submit what and why should I submit? Consider redesigning your menus with a plus/minus sign to expand a sub-menu. Maybe have the title “Submit,” and when you click the plus, it drops down “Articles” and “Polls.”
Why should they access your information?
What do you have to offer? Present this on the front page and make it obvious.
In my honest opinion, the whole website needs to be redesigned. I think you have a lot of information to get across to people. You have so much potential with the user-submitted content. There is a lot to be said about a site that can offer a dynamic resource from hundreds and thousands of opinions of SEO and web optimization. No one has cornered the idea-compilation market and I think this site has the capacity to finally put the final stone in the building. The design needs to be leashed, though! It needs to be brought under control!
At the very LEAST, get rid of that smiley at the top-left of your screen. It doesn’t make your site look professional.
I have another site that you may want to look at. I created this site as an experiment to see if people liked blogs over static web pages. Look at the usability and design of Making Adcents and take some notes. Also note that I didn’t market, update, or do anything but make a few basic pages for this site (which is why it has 0 PR). I just want you to see proper uses of graphics on a front page. You don’t have any graphics - which really takes away from the site. If you are selling CMS plans, consider making your front page look like a hosting site’s:
vizaweb
GoDaddy
etc
On another note, the phrase “FREE FREE FREE” is often associated with spam and/or malware. You may want to consider changing the heading of that link section.
Oh yeah, and your forums are unusable. Implement something like PHPBB or vBulletin.
My main impression is this: you spend so much time talking about how you aren’t selling your services like a hosting company. You want to be successful like those large companies that are real pushy about sales… so if that works, why don’t you do it? I’ve said this before and I will say it again - do what works! If being pushy about sales works, if stretching the truth to work in your favor (while still being honest) makes a profit, do it! Push sales. Show how awesome you guys are! Be honest and straightforward with your prices and customer service - the business will typically harvest itself!
Enough with Presentation.
Technical
You have all of the meta tags. That’s good.
It all works… but it isn’t really usable.
The key to understanding isn’t in explanation. It is in making everything painfully obvious.
The Lo-Down
-Work on the following:
Design
More design
Even more design
So much more design
-Navigation is unidentifiable
-Need images
-Get to the point! People don’t want to read so much!
-The more professional it looks, the more customers you will receive - so remove that smiley at the top-right of the page!
-Fix forums to make them more usable
-Fix search
-Add more color
-Fix the catch-phrase
Conclusion
This site has such bland design. I think there is some great information that you need to convey, but the design is hindering it all. Imagine yourself as a potential client visiting the site - an average person. What would that person want to see? What do people enjoy seeing? Do they want to see miles of text? They probably want to get right to the point. That is what the current problem is - it doesn’t get to the point. Bounce rate has an indirect relationship with professional design - the higher quality of presentation, the lower the bounce rate. Right now, the design quality is seriously lacking and needs some massive improvement. Maybe add in a logo, some images you create (that actually blend with the site - no forum smilies). I think this scratches the surface of the effect these suggestions have on the site… or in other words, I think this will greatly help your site.
Main Hindrance Factor: DESIGN!
Clemsonasa.com
Jason, from the Clemson Asian Student Association, is the webmaster of http://www.clemsonasa.com. Let’s get right into it.
Presentation
I like your Wordpress theme. When I first entered your site, I pretty much knew what the site was about - that is a good thing, of course. One bit I did notice, which is bothering me, is that it says “Have a safe and happy holidays” with a gingerbread man. I’m not sure if you are just getting ahead or didn’t take it down from last year? Maybe you should put Clemson Asian Student Association there instead. Just some food for thought.
As I sit here staring at your page, I notice there is a lot of wasted space. I love the layout and I understand why you made your design decisions, but begin to think about your purpose. What does your audience want to see first? A schedule of events? A welcome message? Consider putting a very small welcome message below the navigation with a link to a longer welcome message/mission statement. Another idea would be to put a group picture with this message to show that you have a community.
For example:

This was a bit quick and dirty, but you get the point.
With the welcome message out of your main content area, you can then focus on making the important content stand out.
Get rid of your News page since it is inaccurate/out of date. If you want to keep it, move the archives listing to the sidebar… or don’t even include it since there are only two items. Since meetings are incredibly important, also think about making it another sidebar item. Put something like (specifics are just for the sake of example):
Next Meeting: 10/17/07
Location: Kinard 101
Time: 7:00PM
Your most important news should be visible without your audience having to scroll/search for it. Trying to do this without messing up your design is a challenge, but totally possible. Make a hierarchy of information items you want to get across to your audience. Make sure the top few are visible when they reach the front page. If you have the meetings listed on the sidebar, your main content area can be used for meeting notes or event announcements. Not to necessarily go sidebar-crazy, but you could also list the events on a sidebar panel, as well.
What is the point of the Articles link?
Technical
You don’t have any meta tags.
Your page titles are not descriptive.
Email me if you have problems setting those up.
Your copyright is out of date.
Make sure there aren’t any major issues with your website by going over some of the validation suggestions. Basically, the only significant change you need to make from that list is just “alt” properties on your “img” tags. That can really help your site’s SEO and is just helpful overall (if the picture cannot load, it will replace it with your alt tag).
Outside of that, your load times are good, your links work, and your CSS is clean.
The Lo-Down
-Use more sidebars to reduce wasted space!
-What navigation links are necessary?
-Create hierarchy of needs for your site
-Use meta tags!
-Update copyright
-Update page titles
Conclusion
Your site is just out of date. It looks very sleek, but many of the links aren’t updated. I think the main problem is that you tried to be too organized with your links. A few of those navigation links could have been compressed, and you aren’t really sitting down and thinking what do people want to know? That’s what’s important! When you are making some changes to your site (which I hope you use some of my suggestions!), put yourself in the shoes of someone who has mild interest in the ASA. You want to answer who/what/where/when/why/how in the most efficient way possible.
Who are you? What is this? Where can I meet you? When do you meet? Why should I join? How do I join?
Who runs it? What can I do to help? Where are the events listed?
There are so many combinations you can use, and that is why you need to decide what is the most important and what is the least important.
Overall Rating
6/10
Main factor: Organization
Site Analysis: Koobarra.com
I was asked by Mike conduct an analysis of Koobarra.com. Mike sent me an email saying “this site was built a year or two ago and the universal opinion has been that my site really sucks,” according to members of his hosting provider. They were right. The design is horrible. It reminds me of a classic, free Geocities website. After going to his other site, I died a little on the inside. All destructive criticism aside, this can be fixed. I am assuming you want to make the site usable and presentable. We will work on this. *cracks knuckles* Off we go!
Presentation
Where should I start? Well, the first thing I noticed was my cursor. This isn’t a myspace page, nor should it look and act like one. This is a website. Please get rid of the code that changes my cursor at the top of your page.
The second thing I noticed was your domain name… and the title of your blog. What is Koobarra and why would I want to read something about Koobarra? Is that you? Why should I care about you? Establish yourself! Why are you here? Be specific! The main purpose of design is to function. Its secondary function is to look pretty. Your site doesn’t function or look pretty. In your email, you described everything you can do with your website. It sounds so dynamic, but when I get there - how would I know?
Here’s objective #1 for you:
-Design for a mentally challenged pre-schooler
I don’t mean this as an insult to anyone mentally handicapped - but you will always know more about what you are trying to write than anyone reading it. In short, make it simple! Pretend people are coming to your site from a foreign country speaking horribly broken English. When I access your website, I see so many functions on the left, I am overwhelmed! You even had to explain your site to me and I am still a bit lost! Pretend you are in 3rd grade and you have to write an instruction manual for a peanut butter and jelly sandwich to a foreigner. Here’s how it would go:
Step 1: Unscrew cap of light-brown substance
Step 2: Unscrew cap of gel-like substance
Step 3: Get sharp pointy thing
Step 4: Dip sharp pointy thing into Step 1 and spread on one side of one bread slice
Step 5: Dip sharp pointy thing into Step 2 and spead on one side of another bread slice
Step 6: Connect Steps 1 and 2
To spare you some sanity, I didn’t go into any more detail. You see what I am saying, though. Just because your menu on the left has the option of caching your saved .txt files that you uploaded to distribute to everyone on your BFF list doesn’t mean people will understand it. In fact, I bet 98% of the people that go to your site will be totally confused. So plain and simple: SIMPLIFY. Never assume people will understand something. Ever. Odds are, they won’t.
Your title of “Koobarra,” at the top of your page, should be descriptive enough so you won’t have to have a “Welcome to Koobarra” box right below it. I still don’t know what Koobarra means. Filter out what is necessary. Make a list. What makes your site what it is? What completes it? What is a necessity of your site? Anything that doesn’t make the list… delete. There are way too many options for anyone to stomach.
I don’t want to have to register to comment. No one else really wants to either (unless you have a very large fan-base). The only reason I would want to flag one of your articles as spam is if you don’t have control over your blog/compilation. Is that necessary? Could this option be abused?
At first, I was confused as to what this site did, but in the middle of typing this I saw my article on Aryst’s analysis pop up. This is the main issue - when I came to your site, I had no clue what it was. I didn’t even know it was a compilation site. I think the news articles are more important than your Recent Visitors - so basically, I think you should put that over on the left. You should really create a hierarchy of needs. I’ll mock one up for you real quick:
What comes first with your site?
1. Content
2. Usability
3. Presentation
4. Feedback
5. Efficiency
So then you have to ask yourself: What gets in the way of my content? What hinders my site’s usability? What could be wrong with my presentation? Am I getting enough feedback? How efficient is my site?
You are not getting the most out of your site, at the moment. I think it has much potential, but content remains king… so treat it like one!
I’m never really one to criticize colors too much. However, I do think you need to choose between the two ends of the spectrum (blue or pink?) and run with it. Change the thickness of your borders to something like 1px because they steal your attention away from the content. I spent half of my time tracing your borders with my eyes! Make them more subtle! The logo at the top-left looks like clip-art. I would suggest either taking it down or making something original. It may represent your site well, but it doesn’t look good (doesn’t go with your colors, mostly). Another issue is with consistency. One box has a light-blue background, one has pink links, one has blue links, another purple… my head is spinning! Try to make things universal. If you don’t want to deal with that, make the “Theme” option more accessible… like make it available to change on the front page. Also, changing the theme messes up the links you have set up at the bottom of each blog post… maybe remove the theme-changing option?
Make the title at the top a link to your homepage.
Technical
Heard enough yet? Well, there’s still more to come. Your website works. That’s very important. It functions as you want it to function. As I will say with any site I analyze, you need to validate it… well, as much as possible. I must admit, I am a bit hypocritical when it comes to site validation. I don’t really do much, in terms of validation; but it is always important to follow these guidelines when validating:
1. Include titles in <a></a>
2. Include alts in <img>
3. Close every bracket
4. End every quote
That should clear up about half of the validation issues. The title of your site is not descriptive. If you are going to create a site without specific pages for articles, it is always important to have a descriptive title on your front page. You do not have any meta tags. This severely cripples your SEO. The important meta tags are description and keywords, so make sure you at least have those.
Your load times are fine.
Monetization
Like I have said before in my other analysis - you may not be in it for the money. However, if you (hypothetically) wanted to make money, I’ll tell you what I would do. It’s part of my… thing. You could probably put a leaderboard at the top of your page and some ads below blog posts. In terms of on the left menu - I would clean it up a bit before I put ads close to that.
The Lo-Down
-Remove cursor-change script
-Lay out the purpose to your site
-What is Koobarra?
-Consider necessity of some links below blog posts
-Consider a new/more defining logo
-Remove recent visitors box (or move it to the left)
-Consider necessity of a login system
-Reconsider necessity of 100,000 menu options
-Consider changing website colors
-Add meta tags
-Work on validation
-Content is king
Conclusion
Functionally, your site is a mess. Can it be improved? Easily. Much of what I recommended requires simple fixes - delete something here, add something there, and figure things out. I think that is what really messes your site up the most - it doesn’t have a specific purpose or niche. Your site could look butt ugly, but still really shine with its content. When I go to your site, I don’t know what the content is and why it should matter to me! Be sure you make everything clear. Overall, I think your site has potential because I feel like I only scratched the surface. I only really figured out its general purpose 1/4 of the way through writing this. I only hope I was clear with what I was trying to convey.
Remember - assume the people who come to your site have never seen a website before. That should put things in perspective.
Overall Rating
2/10
Main Factor: Confusion
Note: Content is not a factor in ratings. The overall rating is based purely on everything analyzed above.
Site Analysis: Nimrodjo’s Blog
The site I will be reviewing belongs to Aryst from Nimrodjo.com. For each review, I will be referring to the author in third person, as though I am speaking to an audience (because I technically am). So for a reference, this isn’t only directed towards the author of the blog, but also anyone else reading this. Now as a bit of a disclaimer, I did work with Aryst on his website earlier, and we worked on a few bits and pieces of the website. However, I will try to go into as much detail as possible to give you a good idea of what should be looked at. By doing this review, I am not making the changes mandatory, but simply offering suggestions based off of personal experiences, opinions, and good judgment. The magnitude of which you take each observation is determined by you.
Presentation
Your page looks very active. That is a good thing. I like how you have the three columns (2 sidebars and the body of the page). However, articles could get a bit saturated within the “plug” plugins. The “Plugs” options, the “Sphinn it” button, and the “Share This” link may be a bit much. Think about it - you have your audience. You may get 100 hits per day, but how many people read your articles? Let’s say 75% read your articles, but 20% of that 75% are passionate about your website. So that leaves 14 people who have the RSS feed hooked in, have your page bookmarked, and will come back again and again to check for updates (this figure is actually a very inflated and optimistic one). Realistically, you may have 5 people who actually want to put forth the effort to share your blog with others.
So let’s put this in perspective. How many hits do you get with the “Plug” button? How many do you get from del.ico.us? Every bit of content that hinders your articles takes a piece with it. I understand this when I post my Google ads up, but every once in a while, someone clicks it and I make a (small) profit. Now look at it this way - if I get a .5% CTR on my Google ads, how much would you want to bet that the profit comes from the single Plugim click? I’m not necessarily saying you should eliminate the button from your site. In all honesty, posting those buttons increases accessibility and usability for those tools. However, Plugim has a very small community. Del.ico.us has a large community, but is hindered by other factors (which I will cover in the next section). If Plugim is producing results, what do you think a Digg button would produce? Digg’s community is almost exponentially larger than Plugim’s. Just something to consider.
I think you could easily get rid of a lot of your links at the bottom-left hand corner of your page. Many websites only make you post that for verification. Unless you are passionate about them, I think removing them would help your page load time a bit. I think the style of your website works, but I think you need to change your colors a bit to really make the title stand out. When I first came to your website, I didn’t know what to expect. Put something in your header that really characterizes your website - whether it is about your life, your point of view on business, etc. People like niches.
Technical
Your website works. Step 1 complete. Step 2… does it work well? No. Your website loads like a salted slug. In other words, it is painfully slow. Remember when I said you needed to eliminate some images that may be slowing the load down? Yeah… I’ll let you figure out what I meant by that. I think that your load time is the #1 thing that hurts your website. I have tried loading your page on several different internet connections (… let’s just say I borrowed them for a few minutes!) and it is mind-numbing. I have a pretty quick connection, too (3MB down 250kbps up). For the love of all that is material, immaterial, and unknown - get a better host! The main factor that keeps me from visiting your site every day is the load time. There was a study done on how long it takes people to give up on web pages because of long loading times - I don’t know what that number is… but you exceed it by about 25 seconds.
Your meta descriptions are not descriptive.
Your meta keywords are lacking.
Jump into the world of PHP with Wordpress and figure out how to improve your descriptions and keywords. There are plugins you can download for this.
Your site does not validate either, which will hurt your search engine listings.
Monetization
I’m not sure if you want to monetize your website, but your ads aren’t obvious. There is so much happening on your page that I become disinterested in what your links even say. The important part of advertising is to get them to stand out. Your ads blend in. My suggestion? Bring a few up to the top. Put them in obvious places.
The Lo-Down
-Reduce page clutter by removing some of the unnecessary links off to the sides of your page
-Fix metas
-Reconsider utility of the reference buttons
-Improve page load time (get a new host)
-Change some colors (the title font color really almost blends with its background)
-Fix some website validation issues
Conclusion
I have some bias towards you, Aryst. You’ve been on this site from the beginning. I don’t intend on losing you as a visitor of this site, so if there is anything else you want to know I would be honored to help you out (and I hope this reciprocates!). I think you have some great articles. You write some great articles, you find great articles, and I think your site has a bright future. However, you need to pay much attention to detail! Many of your issues lie in the Technical section, which worries me. That is the hardest section to correct. New hosting will cost money. I don’t know how well you can connect to your site in Malaysia, but over 50% are from the United States and elsewhere. Maybe they are having the same, long load times. To reiterate, too - shorten your title or use some spaces, man! People with low resolution will see a deformed front page!
Overall Rating
4/10
Main factor: LOAD TIMES!
Note: Content is not a factor in ratings. Aryst writes some great articles and you all need to check them out. The overall rating is based purely on everything analyzed above.
Free Site Analysis
I have decided to apply my knowledge of efficiency and usability to help other sites (as a senior in Industrial Engineering and experienced web developer). I’m going to begin analyzing websites for free (unless I get a whole lot of people coming to me, but I don’t really see that happening). This doesn’t mean I will be insulting your content, criticizing your writing style, or making financial decisions for you. An analysis would basically include whatever you want to know, namely usability and design suggestions.If I don’t get anyone volunteering to have their site analyzed, I will pick out a blog/site at random (take THAT, society!) - just as almost a reference or example. So… any takers? Leave a comment in the “Save Me!” section or email me at jtg (at) clemson.edu if you are interested.
Note: By agreeing to a site analysis, you are also agreeing to have it posted publicly (hey, a free backlink!).
Hi, I'm Jim! I'm a Senior in Industrial Engineering at Clemson University. I created this site so I can get experience in the field of website optimization - so if you were wondering why this is free, there's your answer. This is what I enjoy doing and what I plan on doing for a while yet. So I encourage any web developers to go ahead and request a