Thursday, February 27, 2014

The Grimm Brothers

Grimm Brothers Brewhouse, sample tray, brewery
bartender, blogI went to the Grimm Brothers on Monday night, which happened to be trivia night. The event was fun and entertaining. The beer was average. But that may just be my personal opinion, I like variety and they are all German style beers. And I met this guy in the picture to the right, his name is Aaron, and he was an excellent bartender. He let me take a picture of him taking a picture of me.



Last week we look at an example of an exceptional use of a website, this week I will dissect the Grimm Brothers website. If you can't take criticism (or adventure) than I would not recommend reading this.

Told from the point of view of the Brothers Grimm
Once Upon A Time... The Grimm Brothers Brewery created a website. It was filled with information about beer and the brewery. What an ominous website it was. Truly embracing the dark German styles. This brewery had no idea of the future that lie ahead. The all knowing power of the Internet...Google...would not haveth what the website produced...eth.  Google sent a brave knight known as, that hoppy guy, to Grimm Brothers. Upon entering the site he encountered 2 error messages. For what reason? He does not know, the pages tried to relocate him but failed. After 2 more attempts the pages finally opened. The knight then took on a quest, he opened the HTML coding. To his fears the coding was an ugly beast. It was filled with unnecessary fluff that dragged the website down. The most frightening part of all, this beast, with all its code, had not alt tags or meta descriptions! It was most frightening! How is the all knowing Google supposed to rank a website when it give no tags? Google won't blink an eye at you if you lack these aspects. The Google rankings will plummet. The Grimm Brothers Brewery has a problem they need to overcome. They have a difficult road ahead.
The tale of the Grimm Brothers and the beast of HTML.

All joking aside. The website needs work, it has no keywords on it, not meta descriptions, no alt tags for images. It has so much potential, it just needs a little extra work.

Grimm Brothers Brewhouse

The ramblings of one hoppy guy,
Chris

Thursday, February 20, 2014

The Great Divide

Located in Denver, CO
The Great Divide, denver brewery, craft beer
The Great Divide Brewery was founded by Brian Dunn in 1994. Prior to starting his brewery Dunn home brewed out of his garage. His friends loved his beer so much they agreed to help fund him to start his own brewery. After the help of his friends Dunn was still $50,000 short, he went to 11 different banks around time to get loans. They all liked his plans enough to help fund the start up. Today, in my opinion, The Great Divide is the best thing to come out of Denver.

They have grown so much since then, but how does their website fair? Does it keep up with competitors? Let's take a look into the HTML code to begin. The title page starts with "<meta name="Keywords" content="denver brewery, microbrew, award-winning craft beer, tap room" />." These are few keywords, but they get the point across. They're not too vague as to get buried in Google results but they are searched enough to to still come up as top results.

great divide brew tanksThe page entitled "Beers" has more keywords, they consist of "great divide beer," "microbrew," "yeti," and "collette." Obviously other breweries will not be using the key phrase "great divide beer," so they have that one down. However, "microbrew" has an average of 3,600 searches a month. Many breweries use this keyword and Great Divide becomes overshadowed and lost in the results. Should they bother with that keyword or find another? It wouldn't hurt to experiment a little bit.

Aside from the meta keywords, how is the design? Can you look it up on different devices? Yes. The website is fully optimized for tablet and phone. It works just as well on these platforms and is easy to navigate and find information.

So, do they keep up with their competition? Absolutely, they don't just rely on their great beer to get them through, they also have excellent website design.

The Great Divide

The ramblings of one hoppy guy,
Chris 

Sunday, February 9, 2014

Funkwerks

I would like to start out by saying this is the first time I have had Funkwerks. Needless to say, I am impressed. I was a little nervous going to the brewery because it is in a strange location for a brewery, but I guess when you think about it, so are many around Fort Collins. Funkwerks features a Saison style of brewing, but we're not here to talk about that.

Funkwerks is a smaller brewery, do they keep up with the bigger breweries online? In my opinion, no, and it shows. As of today, Feb. 9, they are following two people. They have over 4,000 followers, but how good is that if you aren't listening to people? They post updates about the brewery to let people know what is going on. Funkwerks isn't following anyone though, how do they expect to know what people want, what they are interested in online? They won't find out unless they investigate, follow some more people, interact with them. Then they may have more of an insight into what the customer wants.

One thing they do well is email. They take the information they post on Twitter and Facebook and put it into a newsletter.
Funkwerks newsletter
The email is done well. There is a large amount of text, but for being a monthly newsletter it works being that wordy. It had a great deal of pictures and information about new beers, events and other information. It follows email guidelines and format. But if the email works fine then why even use Twitter? It's the same format as their emails. How I see it, they have a couple options, forget Twitter because they're not using it well, or find somebody who knows what they're doing with Twitter to manage it and make it more useful.

 Funkwerks

 The ramblings of one hoppy guy,
Chris