Close X

Leave a comment


Name:
Email:
Comment:
  I have read and understand the terms and conditions
 

Please click the post button only once - your comment will not be published immediately

Business Focus >>

The new manufacturers The new manufacturers

A great British renaissance has been taking place. From Aberdeen to the West Country, the zing is back in manufacturing. It’s about time this spectacular story was told.

  • hot
  • hot
  • hot 100
  • 50 to watch in mobile

Can you manage your websites?

by David Longworth - Thursday, 6th September 2007 -

Can you manage your websites?

Keith Pollard had sold EasySite’s content-management system in a previous job. So when he went solo, he knew who to call.

When I started this company three years ago, my plan was to build a virtual business, with all our people working from different locations.

Eventually, we got to a size where we needed to have a core team in-house, and now we have an office manager, two sales managers and a content manager working together.

But most of our people are still scattered around the UK, and our technology supports our original intention – particularly our content-management system.

Every bit of technology we use is web-based, right down to our Sage accounting system – our management accountant is homebased and accesses it remotely.

We have a small business server and network, but it doesn’t do a lot for us, it just runs the office. Our main site, www.privatehealth.co.uk, is a big website, with 6,000 pages and 330,000 visitors a month.

People visit it when they’re looking for private healthcare suppliers, and we make our money from the suppliers through advertising.

We developed it and update it using a content management system called EasySite from EIBS. It manages all the databases and governs how everything’s presented on the website.

We’ve also used EasySite to develop other websites, including www.treatmentabroad.net, which, over 18 months, has become the leading destination for people looking for treatment overseas.

Before starting this company, I worked as a healthcare marketeer, and became interested in the internet in the nineties.

I was running a company developing websites for healthcare clients that got taken over, and I saw an opportunity to develop my own websites.

I knew of EasySite because I’d sold it to two or three clients who were looking for a content-management system that staff could update themselves, even if they weren’t IT-literate.

We’ve never paid for or invested in training, although EIBS does provide it.

EasySite has allowed us to expand our web publishing activities phenomenally without a significant cost increase. Once you’ve paid the licence fee upfront, you can build other connected sites for free.

We’re building a site called Treatment in Hungary, which is reusing content from other sites and, in an hour, we’ve been able to put together a 60-page site.

Obviously, if you want a different design you pay for it. We’ve spent a bit of money on enhancements.

But unlike some content management systems, where you pay something upfront, then £10,000 a year for support, EasySite’s ongoing maintenance is just £600 a year.

Hosting does cost a bit – we anticipate spending £20,000 next year, but it is the core of our business.

The beauty of this system is that, being web-based, it doesn’t matter where in the world our editorial staff, content managers and contributors are based. That’s allowed us to build our contributor base very quickly.

It’s also very easy to build searchable databases. We have 40 or 50 databases, and we’ve just added another for hearing-aid dispensers, which, ignoring the time it took to input data, we put live on the site in 20 minutes.

EasySite also has good search-engine optimisation built in. If you type “medical tourism” into Google, we get the top four positions. We don’t pay for it, it’s all organic, natural positioning.

We spend a lot of time and effort using our content to target around 2,000 search terms.

That’s why I would have concerns about switching to another supplier. If Google didn’t like the way the information was presented, for example, such a decision would kill our business overnight.

BUSINESS NEWS >>

Upmarket boot camp draws a crowd

By Catherine Woods - August 29, 2008 5:23pm GMT

Victoria Wills’s battle with the bulge inspired her to launch Devon-based boutique boot camp NuBeginnings.

"Capital gains tax is ludicrous"

By Kate Pritchard - August 29, 2008 4:44pm GMT

Andy Hood spent nine years building Sarian Systems into a £5.3m-turnover technology manufacturer. But when he sold his business earlier this year, he got hit by a whopping £400k tax bill. “I fell victim to CGT, one of the most ill-considered tax changes ever introduced,” he says.

"You're fired"? Beware hasty redundancies

By Phil Allen - August 29, 2008 3:47pm GMT

“Britain ‘facing huge job losses’”. “Backlash warning over hasty job cuts.” If these scaremongering headlines have you quaking in your boots, read our top ten redundancy tips for employers.

Rugby superstar Will Greenwood on his move from bruises to business

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - August 29, 2008 12:09pm GMT

He’s won 55 caps, scoring 31 tries for England during his time playing centre for the national team. But now, Greenwood, sports journalist and commentator, has hung up his boots to advise businesses using sports analogies gleaned throughout his career.

Regus entrepreneur: we're leaving Britain

By Matthew Rock - August 29, 2008 12:09pm GMT

Mark Dixon, founder and CEO of the world's largest service office provider, dropped a bombshell today when he announced that the FTSE 250 business is to become the latest to leave the UK.


BUSINESS COMMENT >>

The Federation of Small Businesses gets a flavour for the arts

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - August 29, 2008 3:35pm GMT

We’re loving the “Keep Trade Local” campaign from the FSB. The project showcases traditional shops from all over Britain, most of which have been trading over 30 years.

Fancy winning a Growing Business Award?

By Catherine Woods - August 27, 2008 12:31pm GMT

So, you reckon you’re pretty good, do you? But…are you good enough to win one of our Growing Business Awards?

Ashoka and the art of social entrepreneurship

By Matthew Rock - August 27, 2008 11:36am GMT

We strongly recommend this interview with Bill Drayton, founder of the Ashoka organisation that brings together the world's finest social enterprises.

Dragons’ Den: Where are they now?

By Rebecca Burn-Callander - August 21, 2008 5:02pm GMT

If you (like us) were wondering whatever happened to all those businesses that faced the Dragons’ wrath in the Den over the past six series, look no further.

How do you fund your growth?

By Zarrin Lilani - August 20, 2008 4:09pm GMT

As the economic situation worsens in the UK, we’re hearing reports that smaller businesses aren't managing their finances in the best way.


Click here to sign up for the Real Business newsletter
Real Business Front Cover