Is your web designer asking you questions?
A lot has been written about “asking your web designer the right questions” before you hire him / her. But flip that around for a bit – Is your web designer asking you questions?
26th May 2013
We have expanded, and the newest member of our team is our writer: Mana. Mana has written ad copy and newspaper articles, and now jumps headfirst into the content creation for our clients on the web. We’re wrapped with her varied interests and strong curiosity; she’s going to be writing about some pretty diverse subjects: social entrepreneurship and microfinance, communication technology… even brewing beer. Watch this space for more.
Websites, unlike products online, survive on the vitality of their content. We have long produced websites with the ability to remain fresh and relevant, only to find that the hardest part about keeping a blog updated, is not the tools, but the content.
And so we have shifted our focus: to not only provide the tools you will need to have a dynamic website that represents you, but to always have the ability to generate intelligent and current content that keeps your site bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, keeps visitors abreast with the industry you represent and leaves you free to do the work that is most important to you.
We’re not building websites anymore, we are co-creating your presence online.
A lot has been written about “asking your web designer the right questions” before you hire him / her. But flip that around for a bit – Is your web designer asking you questions?
I started out on the web like most front-end devs: fiddling around. The web is beautiful because the front-end is open source by default–take any web page, and with a browser and notepad, you can take it apart and rebuild it.
Adobe Photoshop has become quite the central player is a wide variety of industries. From photographers to digital artists, graphic designers, web developers, even video production and CG, it really is a tool that crosses boundaries.