January 17, 2008

Triggit: Edit Any Page Where Java Script Is Accepted

Nick Gonzalez

20 comments »

triggitlogo.pngHTML code and CSS is easy enough for most, but not everyone. There’s an obvious need for simple editing solutions as more people become amateur webmasters. It’s one of the reasons why we’ve seen a host of simple web page editors cropping up around the web (Jimdo, Weebly, Typeroom).

So far most of these editors let you modify web pages on their terms by hosting sites on their servers (Typeroom is the exception and lets you edit a file and copy it to your server). However, a new startup Triggit lets you make WYSIWYG edits on any site where you can post their Javascript tag, most likely your own. The tag is used to load their editing functionality and to insert the modifications you make to the site, such as added images, videos, and links. When you want to edit your site, you simply click on your Triggit button and are given the option to insert new photos and links. When you’re done, you save the changes where you want them, and Triggit will serve the changes whenever someone visits your page.

The current editing options are currently very basic. You can use Triggit to add images (Flickr), videos (YouTube), and a bunch of affiliate links to your site (Amazon, Commision Junction, Shopping.com, Snooth, Wine Searcher, and Wine Zap). The service is so heavily weighted to affiliate linking because Trigit fell into the web editing business after developing a tool to help web un-savvy customers add advertising links and widgets (specifically wineries, if you couldn’t guess). What they ended up with was a more general tool than they realized could help more people who have trouble making tiny changes to their sites.

Naturally serving content through javascript causes problems for creating a search engine readable site, which causes webcrawlers to not see your content when they calculate rankings. However, most affiliate linkers don’t want search engines to see their links. Amateur editors probably don’t care.

The service is only in private beta, but has provided us with 300 invites to TechCrunch readers that enter the code “techcrunch” during signup.

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Comments

“The service is only in private beta, but has provided us with 300 invites to TechCrunch readers that enter the code “techcrunch” during signup.”

Is there a “Triggit” missing between “but” and “has”?

 
 

Their video is rude. After finished playing it brings you automatically to their website.

 

off subject, but i want to know

why did paypal block funds to the recount in new hampshire????

 

So none of the content you add is search engine indexable? I guess that doesn’t matter for videos and images as much as it would for text.

 

Nice Innovation as more and more start their businesses from home.

http://tekno-world.blogspot.com

 

#3 - I was wondering what the hell happened (I looked away for a few seconds at the end of the video, looked back and Triggit had loaded). That’s not cool at all, unsolicited redirection.

 

I think that the service is pretty much pointless as search engines cannot index the web pages. Also, not every browser supports or even has javascript enabled.

Also, there is no option for the website to host the pages.

http://www.webepags.com

 

TriggIt for the content - http://www.dotemplate.com for the template and you get your website.

 

It’s definately not useful for people looking to be search engine optimized. But professional web developers or tech savvy people aren’t going to use this service anyways. It might be valuable to Joe Schmo who just wants to change his personal homepage that only his friends see.

 

This is eerily similar to what we at http://www.clutterme.com have created.

When we see stuff like Triggit it tells us that we’re on to something, otherwise why would anyone bother.

 

What I find very funny is reading the comments from readers of this site who are attached to their html and SEO, and comparing them to comments on other blogs that the less technically savvy (the tools true target audience) follow. The target audience seems to love it, and that is all that matters. Good luck Triggit!

 

sucks when you have a spelling error on the first slide - Editting is spelled with one t - Editing

I didn’t get past that.

 

Aarron, geat a liffe!

 

The service itself works quite well. surprisingly well in fact. I’ll definitely keep my eye on this in the future.

 

Hey, Nick — how do you figure “Amateur editors probably don’t care”?

Affiliate marketers aside, what web site editor (publisher), amateur or not, doesn’t care about having a search-engine-readable site?

 

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