Blog Detail
Josh Can Help web strategy
http://www.joshcanhelp.com
Creating and maintaining a presence on the web is about better communication, putting your best foot forward, and connecting with people. With so many options to consider and so much competition, what can you do to set yourself apart? I take your goals and strengths and help you translate them into a quality web site that performs. Take the first step towards a unique, well-built web presence that works for you. I'm Josh and I Can Help.
Recent Posts
Easily track and build Google Analytics UTM campaign URLs with Google Docs
If you’re using Google Analytics and you’re not taking advantage of its built-in campaign tracking, you’re missing out on important insights. Campaign tracking uses URL query strings to determine where your traffic is coming from sp...
6 key ways to improve your email communication
I love email, I really love it. Email is a simple communication medium that creates a historical record and is dead-simple to manage (if you’re a Gmail user). I use email as much as possible and prefer it over pretty much any communication meth...
Traditional networking is dead
I think I’ve found my calling: exchanging ideas and talking them through. What’s that pay nowadays? I always like sharing my interactions with people here on my blog. Partly because it adds a really human side to my business and shows pro...
Create a simple website with the Google Docs CMS
In attempt to solve one problem, I figured out a way to easily publish and manage data on the web by using a simple Google Documents spreadsheet. What I was trying to do was come up with the simplest way possible to manage my Josh Can Help network pa...
Succeed by Finding Your Audience
Many people tell me that their website costs more than it brings in. For many, this is just a fact of life and their site becomes a bill to pay like a cell phone. If your site is commercial in nature, however, this is no way to go about your technolo...
Do it and then do it better: an iterative mindset
I used to work for a big, huge wireless company. I was the nameless, faceless guy who received email requests all day and made minor change to wireless accounts. Each email was formatted exactly the same way and I used the same system for each change...

