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Brand Thunder to use Bing to Extend Web Search into Interactive Browser Themes by Brand Thunder

Image representing Bing as depicted in CrunchBase
Image via CrunchBase

COLUMBUS (February 16, 2010) — Brand Thunder LLC (http://www.brandthunder.com), the browser customization specialists, announced today its relationship with Microsoft Corp.’s Bing to integrate their web search into all Brand Thunder interactive browser themes.

Interactive browser themes are like an extreme makeover for the web browser. With an easy-to-install browser add-on, end users transform their drab web-browser into an immersive experience. The theme features official logos, colors, images and style, plus content and functionality that extend browser’s capabilities and can include video, music players or other Internet widgets. Bing is now central to the experience as the default search engine included with all Brand Thunder products.

The growing list of company’s leveraging the communication power of an interactive browser theme includes leading Internet news sites, The Huffington Post (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/firefox) and The Daily Beast (http://www.thedailybeast.com/browser-theme), leading sports teams like
NHL’s 2009 Stanley Cup Champions Pittsburgh Penguins (http://penguins.nhl.com/club/page.htm?id=56396) and the 2009 SPL Champions Glasgow Rangers (http://www.rangers.premiumtv.co.uk/page/RangersOfficialBrowser/0,,5,00.html), colleges and universities including the University of Cincinnati Bearcats (http://www.gobearcats.com/ot/browser.html), corporate clients like Comcast and Mercedes Benz and many more. The full list of active custom browser themes can be found at http://brandthunder.com/gallery/.

“Bing is an innovative new search product and we’re looking forward to working together to address the core need of search,” says founder Patrick Murphy. “Brand Thunder uses brand affinity and strong design to attract users to our product, but it’s the integrated content and functionality, like Bing, that helps keep them there.”

About Brand Thunder:
Formed in April 2007, Brand Thunder creates extreme makeovers for the Internet browser. Brands enjoy a persistent connection to their Internet consumer driving more website visits and increased revenue. Through a software installation, end users change the drab Internet browser into an immersive experience from their favorite sports team, entertainment franchise or Internet site. The interactive browser themes feature official logos, colors, content and functionality, and can also extend capabilities including video, music players or other Internet widgets. Current business partners and clients include Bing, The Daily Beast, Huffington Post, Major League Soccer, NASCAR, NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL and Universal Music. Samples found at http://brandthunder.com/gallery/.

Contact:
Patrick Murphy, CEO
Brand Thunder, LLC
614-408-8202

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Small Business Considerations for a Move to Cloud-Based Services by Kevin Dwinnell

Image representing BizSpark as depicted in Cru...
Image via CrunchBase

PCWorld recently issued a story, by James A. Martin, on cloud computing and what small businesses should keep in mind when they think about this path. We provided a little insight for that article. Since we gathered our thoughts on the subject, I thought I’d offer Brand Thunder’s own thoughts and experience in this space and hope that it provides value to other small businesses.

We were asked what recommendations/tips/strategies would we give other small businesses considering a move to cloud-based services (and away from PC-centric software)? What would we do differently, what not to worry about, common mistakes and so on?

Here is our bullet-point list of ideas and considerations, followed by a more detailed explanation:

Advice and Lessons Learned About Cloud Computing:

  • Get process down first then find the right tool, instead of finding a tool and putting process around it. Once we adopted certain tools we later learned of limits and had to change our existing process to match the tool.
  • Planning up front can reduce changes to your system and potentially give you a tool that remains effective over a longer period of time and avoid early migrations.
  • Expect to outgrow an application, so make sure you know you can extract and migrate your data to a new service! We are experiencing some pain as we move from 37Signals to Salesforce.
  • It’s a great way to defer and spread out costs as you’re buying access to the service and not software packages for each employee.
  • It helps remove geographic limits to your business and offer greater benefits from a personnel standpoint as well as a business development one.
  • Open source should be in the consideration set. Popular open source tools have a lot of applications and plug-ins already developed allowing you to easily modify capabilities to your own business needs. Plus, you are not limited to the number of licenses, so you can give all employees access to the system without incurring additional cost.
    1. - It allows for your own custom development to develop tools unique to your business.
      - With other services, we’d be forced to change internal processes to fit the tool or, if feasible, pay for new development with the service provider.
      - Open source may require having someone on staff capable of set up and administration of the service.
  • Get thoroughly trained in the applications early. We missed out on many features of these products by just diving in and trying to learn as we go.
  • Consider where that data resides and how secure it is.
  • Look for programs that support small businesses, like Microsoft BizSpark, where you can get complete software packages and systems at no cost.
  • Products like Skype are great for a dispersed team but call-quality limits conversations to one person speaking at a time. Spontaneity can be lost.
    1. - We try to maintain the energetic and creative environment by supplementing regular Skype calls with face-to-face meetings for the entire team a few times a year.

    Details About Our Experience:

    As a small business, we’ve tried to aggressively manage costs while still using tools that allow our team to operate effectively.

    The majority of our migrations from PC-centric software to the cloud have been driven by growth. As a startup with a handful of people, PC-based solutions made the most sense. It was economical to start with local tools such as Daylite (for Customer Relation Management – CRM) and Excel for project management and software bug-tracking.

    As we continued to grow, and given our distributed workforce (from Mexico to West Virginia), we realized we were hitting the limits of what the local-based software application could do and sending files via email made working from the most current document version difficult to manage. We also were not buying software packages for each new employee and dependent on them using the software they owned. Each person had their own preferences ranging from Microsoft Office, Open Office to Google Apps. There were collisions with compatibility across file types.

    It became more efficient and still economical to migrate to cloud-based services where we could pay a small monthly fee but gain functionality for the entire team. We migrated to 37Signals products, Highrise (CRM) and Basecamp (project management, bug tracking), for their inexpensive cloud-solution for small businesses. We then moved to Google Apps for email, calendar and office applications. This was the natural progression for us as we grew in staff and grew in customers. We all have access to single files with real-time collaboration, tracked changes, comments, edits and more. It’s alleviated a lot of confusion and emails.

    As we outgrew Basecamp, based on functionality desired and the cost associated with license for a growing team, we migrated our entire project management and bug tracking to the open-source Redmine. Even now, we continue to upgrade the products we use and are currently migrating to a more robust CRM system (Salesforce).

    We also use Internet services to run the business including Skype for all team meetings. It allows easy and open communication across team members despite being geographically dispersed.

    Adobe Acrobat Connect is used for product demos during sales presentations. It gives us a virtual presence during the sales call, that we can manage like a normal sales presentation but we don’t incur the travel expense. The result has been sales success with major brands both domestically and internationally.

    This has been our path. What’s yours and what would you recommend?

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    The Company That You Keep by Kevin Dwinnell

    You’re only as good as the company that you keep, as the saying goes, and today we’re taking steps at being better. We announced some great additions to our advisory board. If you haven’t already, I encourage you to read the press release here.

    Three highly regarded people have agreed to join our advisory board and they bring depth to our team. Bob Christopher recently with UGOBE, John Dixon recently with AOL and Mark Harris from Microsoft have extensive experience in the product, business lines and market in which Brand Thunder operates.

    Our success is increasing the challenges and decisions we face. We know we’re not always going to make the right moves, but we certainly want to put the odds in our favor. We’re looking to our advisory board for the objective overview that will help us do that.

    So, while we may only be as good as the company that we keep, we’re hoping they help us keep a good company.

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    Brand Thunder Expands Advisory Board with Industry and Entrepreneurial Vets from AOL, Microsoft and UGOBE by Brand Thunder

    COLUMBUS, OH — October 29, 2009 — Brand Thunder LLC (http://www.brandthunder.com), the custom browser specialists, announced today the addition of three new members to its Advisory Board. The board now includes Bob Christopher, former CEO of UGOBE, John Dixon, former VP at AOL, and Mark Harris, Technology Strategist for Microsoft. The members were chosen for their demonstrated success in consumer technology and business building.

    “Our business is at the point of growing exponentially,” said Patrick Murphy, founder and CEO of Brand Thunder. “As we look to scale the business, we needed the wealth of knowledge and resources these gentlemen bring. We think their contribution will be invaluable to Brand Thunder’s business as they each bring a expertise in areas critical to our ongoing success.”

    Bob Christopher brings leadership and operational experience in building successful technology companies with international focus. Bob recently served as CEO of UGOBE where he raised $24 million to launch the first consumer lifestyle robot company. Bob’s experience includes President of the investment forum InnerCircle 1,and Chief Strategist and President for Nikotel, a worldwide VoIP company.

    John Dixon offers incredible depth of knowledge about online businesses and management. He recently served as Vice President of Business Development & Strategic Alliances at AOL and was instrumental in developing partnerships across industries including PC Manufacturers, sports, search providers and content creators. John’s experience includes marketing and brand management for H. J. Heinz Company.

    Mark Harris, a 14-year veteran with Microsoft, brings a discipline for technology serving its consumer. Mark led the releases for Windows XP SP2 and Windows Server 2003 R2. He currently works with large healthcare accounts in central and northeast Ohio as a Technology Strategist.

    Brand Thunder’s browser Booms! wrap the user’s web browser in a graphically-rich experience with integrated content and functionality from their favorite sports team, entertainment brand, publication or Internet site. The browser becomes a valuable connection between brand and its community delivering continuous engagement and increased loyalty.

    About Brand Thunder:
    Formed in April 2007, Brand Thunder creates custom-browser experiences for major brands. Brands enjoy a more persistent connection to their Internet consumer through the custom browser Boom!, which increases website visits and revenue. Through a software installation, end users change the look and feel of their Internet browser into an immersive experience from their favorite sports team, entertainment franchise or Internet site. The custom browser Booms! feature official logos, colors, content and functionality, but can also extend capabilities including video, music players or other Internet widgets. Current business partners and clients include the Huffington Post, Major League Soccer, NASCAR, NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, Universal Music and Yahoo!. Samples found at http://brandthunder.com/gallery/.

    Contact:
    Patrick Murphy, CEO
    Brand Thunder, LLC
    614-408-8202
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    Google’s Chrome Positioning for Growth by Kevin Dwinnell

    Google Chrome
    Image via Wikipedia

    Today, Laurie Sullivan over at MediaPost’s Online Media Daily discusses how Google is educating the world about Chrome. It’s a small step in a much bigger effort.

    Whatbrowser.org is a simple site defining the most important application on the computer. It generously makes the major browsers available from the site, and has links to tests that I’m not sure really further the knowledge of browsers.

    This is all nice, but the rest of the story is the overall push that Chrome is making to gain market share. Google is proceeding in a systematic way as hey are also buying the default placement on PC-OEM machines and offering customization via themes.

    Switching is a fairly high barrier, so the default placement on the PC-OEMs will provide a big lift for Chrome. Customization has proven to be another tool that overcomes satisfaction with the norm. We’ve seen Firefox penetration double on our partner sites after they’ve launched a branded browser Boom!. That’s despite the requirement of going off to Mozilla to download Firefox first.

    Given these steps, is Brand Thunder releasing a Chrome Boom!? Not yet. For a small company, efforts have to be focused. That focus has been on refining the custom browser experience on Firefox and extending the product to Microsoft’s Internet Explorer (see our IE beta story here). The market share of Chrome doesn’t warrant our full attention.

    Does this put Chrome on the product road map? You bet. Google is taking the necessary steps to ensure Chrome has a meaningful presence, and that has ensured companies like ours are moving from interest to action.

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    Brand Thunder Launches Beta in Preparation to Storm Microsoft’s Internet Explorer Browser Experience by Brand Thunder

    Windows Internet Explorer
    Image via Wikipedia

    COLUMBUS, OH — September 29, 2009– Brand Thunder LLC (http://www.brandthunder.com), the custom browser specialists, announced today beta group availability to test the most visually immersive add-on available for Microsoft’s Internet Explorer browser. Fans of the NHL’s Vancouver Canucks (http://canucks.nhl.com/club/page.htm?id=48312) or Washington Capitals (http://capitals.nhl.com/browser) can request access to private beta groups and their opportunity to experience Brand Thunder’s Boom! beyond Firefox.

    Brand Thunder creates persistent connections between major brands and their online consumers via the Internet browser. Each browser Boom! delivers a visual takeover of the browser, an integrated toolbar for content and functionality, plus the multimedia sidebar for videos, photos and more. Previously, the Boom! was only available to users of the Firefox browser. With the addition of Internet Explorer, 90% of the browser market will have access to a more custom and personalized Internet experience.

    “The customization capabilities we’re adding to Microsoft’s Internet Explorer are a pretty big step forward for the users of the IE browser,” said Patrick Murphy, founder and CEO of Brand Thunder. “And it’s a huge win for our clients who want it as simple as possible to give their fans a stunning web browser.”

    Brand Thunder’s browser Booms! are free, lightweight active customizations that can include themes, toolbars, sidebars and other content or functionality. Users can switch real-time between any installed Booms!.

    About Brand Thunder:
    Formed in April 2007, Brand Thunder creates custom-browser experiences. Brands enjoy a more persistent connection to their Internet consumer through the custom browser Boom!, which increases website visits and revenue. Through a software installation, end users change the look and feel of their Internet browser into an immersive experience from their favorite sports team, entertainment franchise or Internet site. The custom browser Booms! feature official logos, colors, content and functionality, but can also extend capabilities including video, music players or other Internet widgets. Current business partners and clients include the Huffington Post, Major League Soccer, NASCAR, NBA, NCAA, NFL, NHL, Universal Music and Yahoo!. Samples found at http://brandthunder.com/gallery/.

    Contact:
    Patrick Murphy, CEO
    Brand Thunder, LLC
    614-304-1316

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    Company Profile

    Founded:2007
    Founder:Patrick Murphy
    Investors:TechColumbus
    Ohio TechAngels
    Contact:Send us a note
    (614) 408-8202
    Connect: RSS
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    February 16, 2010 - Brand Thunder to use Bing to Extend Web Search into Interactive Browser Themes

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