From the book lists at Adware Report:

All information current as of 19:10:17 Pacific Time, Monday, 21 February 2005.

The Unusually Useful Web Book

   by June Cohen

  Paperback:
    New Riders Press
    23 May, 2003

   US$23.10 

   Usually ships in 24 hours

Click the button below to . . .

    
(which will add the book to your Amazon U.S.A. "Shopping Cart")

. . . or use your browser's Back button to return to the search-list page.

Editorial description(s):

From the Publisher
The Unusually Useful Web Book
When this proposal first came across my desk, I was really excited. And even now that we've poured every ounce of blood, sweat, and tears we have into this book, I still have plenty of energy to jump for joy and scream at the top of my lungs. It's just that good. The title, The Unusually Useful Web Book, promises a lot, but it's a book that actually carries through on its promise from start to finish.

I'm especially excited about all the special nuggets June included: down-to-earth interviews with experts, hilarious web cartoons by Alex Gregory, sidebars that quickly summarize key points, and worksheets that give you the guidance to immediately start making decisions and implementing changes. This informative, witty, and unusually useful book is one you'll want to have always nearby--along with a pad of sticky notes.

Jennifer Eberhardt, Sr. Development Editor
[email protected]



From the Back Cover
The Unusually Useful Web Book is the only book you need to find out everything you need to know about web sites. In fact, it's 2 books in 1. You can skim the sidebars and checklists for tips and techniques you can use right away. Or you can follow along with the main text for a detailed discussion of planning, designing, building, and maintaining your web site.

The Unusually Useful Web Book is jam-packed with:


* Do-it-yourself worksheets. 20 worksheets walk you through essential tasks such as increasing traffic, improving site speed, writing a product plan, and making your site cross-compatible.


* Behind-the-scenes info. 25 special Lessons from the Trenches show you how sites such as MSN and BabyCenter deal with day-to-day challenges such as naming site sections or sending effective emails.


* Advice from leading experts. More than 50 experts - from the father of the ad banner to the founder of BlackPlanet - openly share the lessons they've learned on everything from making money to working with engineers. Includes expert interviews with Adam Berliant (Group Manager at Microsoft), Greg Dotson (Chief Information Office for guru), Randi Shade (founder of CharityGift), Emily Simas (former product manager for BabyCenter), Srinija Srinivasan (VP and Editor in Chief of Yahoo!), and Evany Thomas (managing editor for Webmonkey).


* Jargon-free explanations. Step-by-step instructions-covering everything from acquiring a domain name to preparing images for the web-are written in language you can understand.

But don't just take our word for it. Read what others are saying about The Unusually Useful Web Book:

"This book definitely stands out. Most books of this nature are stuffed with irrelevant and non-substantive information that only add confusion to an already complex process. This book delivers an overwhelming amount of information but presents it in a way that is both approachable and useful. There was a lot of information that I could immediately apply to current projects."Garo Green, Director of Publications, lynda

"The coverage is practical and comprehensive. I'm not aware of other titles that take this comprehensive approach to web building, addressing the entire life cycle of web design and development as well as the roles required in each phase."Laura McCabe, co-author of Special Edition Using Flash MX

"Anyone that has a passion for web design, both novices and professionals, will enjoy this book. For the novice, it's an eye opener and the reader will probably be compelled to soak in all the material, cover to cover. For the professional, it's a strong reinforcement of things we often overlook and a great reference tool. I'm a professional and found it to be an up-to-date and refreshing read, and I plan on using it as a required textbook in the classroom for my students! They will truly benefit from this book and refer to it over and over again!"Rosanna Yeung, Multimedia & Web Design Instructor, The Art Institute of California



About the Author
June Cohen has been a leading developer of web sites and multimedia for more than a decade. In 1991, she led the Stanford University team that developed the world's first networked multimedia publication. Then, in 1994, she helped launch HotWired.com, the first commercial content site (and spin-off of Wired Magazine). While at HotWired, she founded Webmonkey.com, the much-loved web-developer's site used by millions. Later, as HotWired's VP of Content, she played a key role on a range of innovative sites, from Animation Express to the HotBot search engine. June holds a BA from Stanford, where she was editor of The Stanford Daily.



Book Description


The Unusually Useful Web Book is the only book you need to find out everything you need to know about web sites. In fact, it's 2 books in 1. You can skim the sidebars and checklists for tips and techniques you can use right away. Or you can follow along with the main text for a detailed discussion of planning, designing, building, and maintaining your web site.



The Unusually Useful Web Book is jam-packed with do-it-yourself worksheets, lessons from the trenches, advice from experts, and jargon-free explanations. But don't just take our word for it. Read what others are saying about The Unusually Useful Web Book:



"This book definitely stands out. Most books of this nature are stuffed with irrelevant and non-substantive information that only add confusion. This book delivers an overwhelming amount of information in a way that is both approachable and useful. There was a lot of information that I could immediately apply to current projects." Garo Green, Director of Publications, lynda.com



"Anyone who has a passion for web design will enjoy this book. For the novice, it's an eye opener and the reader will probably be compelled to soak in all the material, cover to cover. For the professional, it's a strong reinforcement of things we often overlook and a great reference tool. I'm a professional and found it to be an up-to-date and refreshing read, and I plan on using it as a required textbook in the classroom!" Rosanna Yeung, Multimedia & Web Design Instructor, The Art Institute of California






Reader review(s):

An instant classic!, June 10, 2003
The Unusually Useful Web Book could have been titled The Book You Must Read To Help You Plan, Design, Build, and Maintain A Successful Web Site. Everyone who is on a team developing or maintaining a web site should read this book and then re-read it frequently to keep the information and lessons fresh. I will definitely use this book to help me with my future web projects.

This book provides an overview of the processes, the techniques, and the technologies that can (and should) be used to develop and maintain a successful web site. If you are looking for an in-depth technical book on HTML, CSS, or other specific tools this is not that book. Buy this book anyway! It will be worth it.

The book is divided into four major sections: Planning Your Site, Designing Your Site, Building Your Site, and Maintaining Your Site. There is also an appendix with short biographies of the experts that the author interviewed and some additional expert advice. Each section has good information that you can use right now whether you are starting to create a new site or are involved in the maintenance and upgrade of an existing site.

There are some great features to go along with the great information. The book has 19 worksheets (the back cover says 20 so maybe I missed one) to help you with tasks such as: determining the site's goals, determining the site's features, improving site speed, browser/platform compatibility, and how you will promote the site. There are one-to-two page "Lesson from the Trenches" sub-sections that present the experience of web development veterans. Three lessons that stand out in my mind are: You are not your user, Your site is not the center of the user's universe, and Why you should follow web standards. Two other features are the "links" that point to other sections with more in-depth information about a topic and the references to on-line resources.

A conscious effort was made to make the book look and feel like a web site. This approach works very well. Sections are short, important points are highlighted, and I found myself following "links" to more in-depth information on topics that were of interest to me. This book lives up to its title by being full of unusually useful information and also being unusually readable. I think this book is going to be an instant classic.

Covers what the other books forgot--making successful sites, June 27, 2003
By M. Todd Lassich
Bishop Eastern Sierra Macintosh User Group (beSMUG)

People spend months and even years learning and staying current with the technical aspects of web design. Armed with this vast knowledge--so vast it intimidates many from even taking these first steps--they head out in to cyberspace to set up shop, only to produce an ugly site with a clunky interface that no one visits.

If only they had started with the Unusually Useful Web Book. Indeed, if only I had. This is one book about web site creation, management and promotion that lives up to its name.

Unlike so many in this genre, this book takes you step-by-step through planning, creation and promotion and examines every known trick of of the world's most successful websites. This book is subtitled "Everything We've Learned About Why Sites Succeed!" and as such is less about the technical details of site design and maintenance as it is about the goals you should be shooting for, giving the aspiring webmaster a complete roadmap--prioritized--to the creation of a successful site.

I often spend a tremendous amount of time making sure the technical aspects of my designs work as planned. In so doing, it's easy to forget that the goal of designing a site is to attract visitors and hopefully, business. What I like most about this book is the way it makes me examine these priorities, and really helps on deciding whether adding this bell or that whistle to my designs is simply an effort to show off my skills, or whether they will be a useful, attractive enhancement that will encourage visitors to return.

From planning your site through building, visual design, marketing and hitting your target audience, to sizing up your competition and learning from them, making money, maintaining and updating your site, this book covers all the bases.

The book frequently encourages you to "Take Action!" with step-by-step sidebars and checklists to solve specific problems, such as visitors leaving your site without buying, getting higher up on the search engines, avoiding traps that lead to slow pages and difficult navigation and so much more.

I recommend this easy-to-read book for beginners and seasoned designers alike. In fact, this book is the best starting point and reference I've seen for anyone who thinks they might ever be interested in online marketing.

-...

Review of the Unusually Useful Web Book, October 28, 2003
This book is aimed at "web producers" whom the author defines as "anyone who bears the primary responsibility for a site's success" (3). As a hobbyist web site operator who fits that description, I was at first confused by reading what the book was NOT vis-�-vis its table of contents, the four parts of which (Planning, Designing, Building, and Maintaining a site) seem to indicate a technical manual. I was pleasantly surprised to discover that the technical aspects (xml, Javascript, Active Server Pages, Hypertext PreProcessing with PHP, and so on) are briefly defined so readers understand where they might fit in a site's operation, but the book focuses on why a "producer" might use such technologies and what other experts have learned about them. So it's accurate to say that the book covers a great deal of territory from the perspective of the person with ultimate responsibility for the site rather than from any single but necessary builder, like graphic designer, coder, database engineer, or quality assurance engineer.

The reason the book works so well as a reference manual for "producers" is that the author uses data gathered from 49 different web experts to support her choices for what to do in each of the four phases of web site development. Cohen herself has over a decade of experience in web design and support, from jobs at Stanford University to the commercial Hotwired.com site, where she was VP of Content. Since she knows many of these experts as colleagues, she is able to include page-length interviews from many of them on specific points, like "the top 10 reasons web sites fail," "the biggest mistake web sites make," and "50 ways to increase site traffic." Each chapter has several such interviews, which are reinforced by the summary worksheets at most chapters' ends. These sheets pose questions like "How will you improve your search engine rank?" and list check-boxed summaries of the chapter's points to use as a guide for action.

The chief value of the data provided by the author and her experts is that they eliminate guessing. Since nearly everything on the web can be counted (number of page visits, where visitors came from, number of times particular links are clicked or pages are viewed, and so forth), these data show what has worked for sites with millions of visitors. For instance, sometimes particular words--like FREE or MORE--on the home page increase traffic, and these experts have the before-and-after statistics to show how much. So "producers" can be pretty sure that by following advice in the book, they will improve their sites. It's given me at least a half-dozen ways for improving my hobby site, and none will cost money!

Because it covers so much information, the book might intimidate readers with little website background in the same way a dictionary can intimidate most of us by showing how few words we know out of the total. But especially for those people whose sites are necessary to their jobs and therefore must work effectively and reliably, this reference book will serve as a very good starting point.

But Who's it for?, June 18, 2003
Friends of the writer will (have?) hyped the book. It's a good effort, but like nearly every book being flung out of pub houses on "web design" these days, it's 20% useful and 80% pure superficial crud. Nearly all of what's here is a rehash of what anyone with six months' experience already knows. It's *NOT* a book about "everything" to do with the web, or with web design, or with building web sites. Or anything.

Go to you local bookstore, check it out like you would any expensive-and-out-of-date-in-a-few-months computer book, pick up a tip or two, then put it back on the shelf. They recycle them eventually, you know.

It *is* unusually useful... it really is!, June 12, 2003
I couldn't believe how packed this book is with good information. So many other Web books cover one topic well and gloss over the rest. This one takes on everything Web producers and Web site owners need to consider, and gives practical, well-reasoned application methods. If it had been around a few years ago, perhaps the bubble wouldn't have burst. I'm looking forward to reading more from this author. If only she could write the Unusually Useful Guide to Dating....

Pretty Useful (Almost) All-In-One Web Book, April 24, 2004
I see this as an attempt to have an all-in-one quick reference book on issues relating to managing a commercial website. This book is packed tight with loads of very useful information and things to consider. It thus covers a lot of ground, from planning and design issues to technical issues (from file compression to XML) and usability and marketing issues. With so many areas covered, the material is necessarily brief, mostly in the form of summaries, points, and lists. A beginner may find some things hard to follow, since the book does not go into detailed explanations. However, it would still be useful for a beginner as it gives a good overview on most of the skills required to manage a website.

I would recommend this book to a wide audience, including
- beginners in web-related activities (great eye-opener and good introductory material to other important areas)
- students or fresh graduates (who think they know everything about HTML and other technology but are lacking in other issues)
- teachers who teach students web technology (and miss out the other issues)
- managers in charge of websites (who think think they know everything because they surf the internet)

A great well-rounded book which covers wider issues than almost any other web book.

Good for beginners, but it has problems..., November 10, 2003
The book is a fairly thorough overview of the process of producing a website and how to make it better, but it suffers from several flaws. If you have done any reading on usability, a large part of this book is redundant. While it is admirable that the author stresses user-centered design, most of the information is available elsewhere, and covers only basic information.
The layout of this book makes it difficult to read also. The book is about web design, and this was carried over into the printing of the book as if it were on the web. I found so much bold text and other style elements to be distracting. A different layout would make this much more readable.
I found the organization of the book distracting as well. There were lots of references in the book to other areas in the book, I think they were going for an offline hyperlink style. I found the references annoying and it left me wondering why the organization wasn't changed to keep related material together. The table of contents was very thorough, and if I had really wanted to find related information, I would have looked it up in the toc.
Some of the information appeared to be filler and was so basic even a novice would know it if they had used the Internet more than once or twice.
On the plus side, there are a number of good ideas presented by the book, not all of them glaringly obvious. In particular, I thought the chapters on increasing site traffic, promoting the site, and search engines were worthwhile and covered ground that's not intuitively gained.
Overall, I would recommend that only absolute beginners buy this book, most of it you will pick up while you are working and surfing. If you have more than a couple month's experience, find a different book, this one won't teach you much you didn't already know.

Recipes for Web Site Success, December 21, 2003
Congratulations to the author and to the New Riders Publishing staff for bringing the book "The Unusually Useful Web Book" into being. June Cohen truly "got it right" with this publication of many years of distilled knowledge and wisdom relating to Web site planning, creation, and maintenance.

The book is truly jam-packed with highly useful, well organized, and clearly explained 'nuggets of information' for all levels of readers to both appreciate and to conscientiously apply toward their own Web site design and development efforts.

I was immediately pleased by its overall content, logical organization, its many illustrative graphics and tabular checklists, the many signposts within each subsection, the tone of the author's writing, and the inclusion of supporting statements by numerous experts in their respective areas related to Web site design and development.

One of the true strengths of this book is its applicability to all members of the Web site team coupled with its inherent emphasis on continual process improvement. June Cohen's wisdom is perhaps best exemplified by an acknowlegement that no Web site is ever truly finished. It only gets better or worse according to the receptivity toward and implementation of feedback from users.

Very easy to read book..., November 17, 2003
This is a very well written book, I liked the way they have constructed the book - it is well organized and easy to follow.

I guess the targeted audience for this book is from beginners to advanced users. So if you are not a beginner you might find some of the chapters useless.

Why I didn't give this book 5 stars is that, I was expecting more online references and url, as well as working examples online.

But generally I found this book very useful. And have implemented their advice on my own website.


{end of page}

(Page code from the SEO Tools, Toys, and Packages site)