Conveyor Blog

Driven by Customers … Powered by Proven Products

Looking for something in particular? Try our new search engine.

Chris Thompson, Marketing Coordinator at 9:50 pm on Wednesday, April 25, 2007

Search BoxToday we’ve made it much easier for you to find exactly what you’re looking for on our site. A search box has been added at the top of every page of our main site. You can also use the form on our search page. Simply enter what you’re looking for and our search engine will take you right to it!

As always, you can search our blog by using the search box at the bottom of the sidebar on the right side of each blog page.

Tags: |

del.icio.us | Digg it | reddit | StumbleUpon | Yahoo MyWeb |

Saluting Small Businesses

Chris Thompson, Marketing Coordinator at 10:12 pm on Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Small Business Administration LogoIn honor of National Small Business Week 2007 (April 22-28), we’d like to recognize our small business customers. It hasn’t been that long since we were a small business ourselves, so many of us remember the hard work and dedication it takes to make a business grow. According to the Small Business Administration, half of all private sector employees work for small businesses and they create 60 to 80 percent of the country’s new jobs each year. We’re proud to support those small companies and their valuable contributions to our economy.

Tags:

del.icio.us | Digg it | reddit | StumbleUpon | Yahoo MyWeb |

Today, We Are All Hokies

Chris Thompson, Marketing Coordinator at 1:16 pm on Friday, April 20, 2007

Virginia Tech RibbonLike the rest of the country today, our thoughts and prayers are with all those who have been affected by this week’s tragic events at Virginia Tech. This senseless act has weighed heavily on each of our hearts.

The New York Times has profiles and photos of each of the victims. Virginia Tech has established the Hokie Spirit Memorial Fund to aid in the healing process.

Tags:

del.icio.us | Digg it | reddit | StumbleUpon | Yahoo MyWeb |

SouthPack

Chris Thompson, Marketing Coordinator at 1:15 pm on Friday, April 20, 2007

SouthPack LogoWe will be exhibiting at SouthPack (or as we’d prefer to call it, the Design and Manufacturing South Show) in Atlanta, GA beginning Tuesday. Please stop by and visit us in Booth #1213 (immediately in front of the SouthPack entrance), where we’ll be displaying our new InnerDrive and Flextrac conveyors.

It’s not too late to register and receive free admission to the show. We look forward to seeing you there!

Tags: | |

del.icio.us | Digg it | reddit | StumbleUpon | Yahoo MyWeb |

They say imitation is the sincerest form of flattery

Chris Thompson, Marketing Coordinator at 9:16 am on Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Side by Side Comparison

One of the greatest things about the internet is its free and open nature. Unfortunately, some people take the “free and open” part too literally.

On Monday, one of my colleagues received an email from a company touting their new website (I’ve concealed their identity because I don’t believe they had any malicious intent). When my colleague clicked the link, he noticed something surprisingly familiar; the company’s “new” website contained many elements identical to the QC Industries site. You can see the similarities in the side by side screenshots above.

Don’t get me wrong, we’re flattered that someone liked our website enough to copy it. But this site isn’t a template we bought somewhere and repurposed for our needs; it was built from the ground up by our internal web design/development team. We spent countless hours and cups of coffee to build a custom site that met the unique needs of QC Industries and its customers.

We intentionally built the site so that it would be easy to change in the future. Unfortunately, this made it very easy for this company’s web designer to copy the HTML and CSS source code from our site and make some very easy changes to turn it into a site for another company.

How can we tell this was copied and not an independently created derivative? Many parts of the CSS code contained specific references to things on our site, such as:

#conveyor-selection-guide td a {…

and

…body#conveyors #nav-conveyors dl…

Those are odd lines to include in their CSS, considering they don’t sell conveyors (you can compare our CSS file to theirs). Many of the graphics from our navigation and headers were also copied wholesale, without so much as changing the file names. Even the text describing their newsletter was identical to ours.

Our entire website is copyrighted (and has been since we published it last July). This copyright covers not only the text of our site, but the images, design and code as well. This “copy” of our site equates to theft – the theft of thousands of dollars worth of work on the part of our web design team.

blue-screenshot.jpgOn Monday, our General Manager asked the company to remove the infringing portions of their site. In response, their designer changed the colors of the graphics to blue and removed a few of the most incriminating lines from the CSS code (see the screenshot at right and their updated CSS). Even though these changes make it a little less obvious that the site design was copied wholesale, it leaves intact several of the most proprietary and time-consuming portions of our design, such as the left side navigation and its flyout product descriptions (which are loosely based on the Suckerfish dropdown technique, but contain a significant amount of proprietary code and images to create the final effect).

It’s unfortunate that this company’s designer chose to charge them “several thousand dollars” for something as simple as copying and pasting our proprietary look and feel, code and graphics. Our sincere hope is that the company is able to develop another site without significant harm to their business and without infringing on our copyrights.

Tags: |

del.icio.us | Digg it | reddit | StumbleUpon | Yahoo MyWeb |

The Future of Trade Shows Needs a New Name

Chris Round, Marketing Manager at 3:13 pm on Monday, April 2, 2007

Canon South ShowsOver the last several weeks I have found myself saying “yes we are exhibiting at SouthPack,” only to hear from the other person “do you mean ATX South?” Of course I have to say yes. Then we chat for a minute about the very nice job that Canon Communications has done by buying and bundling all of the shows together.

If you get really good you might be able to say, “Hey I’ll see you at the SouthPack, Powder & Bulk Solids, PLASTEC, Design & Manufacturing South, AM Expo, ATX South Show.” I wonder if the crew over at Canon has tried to say it three times really fast.

Joking aside I talked to Josh Dome with Canon who said, “…the show is now the most compreshensive advanced design and manufacturing event in the South with more than 600 exhibitors taking 120,000 net square feet.” I liked the sound of that, maybe they should go with Design and Manufacturing South Show.

The event will take place April 24–26 in Atlanta and if you have been there in the past you should expect a much better show. Our company sells to every one of the industries that will be represented in Atlanta, so for us it is fantastic. I guess for now I’m OK with the early confusion and lengthy name as long as we and the other exhibitors have a chance to talk to 20,000 people.

Tags:

del.icio.us | Digg it | reddit | StumbleUpon | Yahoo MyWeb |