Teenage entrepreneur revamps online photo business
Trade Me Made Me Do It
Teenage web entrepreneur revamps successful online photo printing business.
13 June 2007.
Christchurch. - Teenage web entrepreneur Jasper
Bryant-Greene
is relaunching his successful photo
printing site albumprints.co.nz with the
help of local
design company hairyLemon.
Frustration with Trade Me
spurred Jasper into building a photo sharing site
in 2004
at the age of 15, "Trade Me wouldn't allow enough space for
people
to store photos of items they were selling, so I
created a site called
album.co.nz where they could for
free."
Jasper's photo sharing site spurned the
albumprints.co.nz sister site a year
later and
represented a more commercial proposition.
Promoted using
Google's online advertising service,
albumprints.co.nz
automatically processes customer orders
each day as Jasper works in software
development for
Christchurch-based web hosting company Digiweb.
In
response to growing competition in the photo printing
market, Jasper
engaged hairyLemon to develop a new look
and feel for the site. "You've
typically got around 10
seconds to grab a visitor's attention so I needed
some
professional help to create a high impact design."
As the
big players moved into this area it wasn't possible to
differentiate
on price, so albumprints.co.nz was focussed
on providing a superior quality
product. "The site design
has to reflect that."
hairyLemon director Graham Dockrill
said they were excited about the new
site design which
went live in March. "As sectors of online commerce
get
more competitive design becomes that much more
important in attracting and
retaining site
visitors.
"Jasper has had considerable success with a
well-constructed site offering a
valuable service - to
get to the next level he understands that a design
edge
is needed."
Mr Dockrill said while hairyLemon was pleased
with the quality of design
that emerged from the project,
the ultimate measure would be increased
transactions for
albumprints.co.nz.
Like any entrepreneur Jasper has a
number of other projects in development,
including an
online ticketing site for smaller event companies looking
for a
cheaper, more streamlined ticketing
solution.
ENDS