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Website Design

Bailiwick Company Web Site

Client: Bailiwick Company

Project: Bailiwick Company Web Site

Informational site.

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Bob Krist Web Site

Client: Bob Krist Photography

Project: Bob Krist Web Site

Photo gallery and e-commerce site.

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Deanna's Restaurant Website

Client: Deanna's Restaurant

Project: Deanna's Restaurant Website

Designed in conjunction with graphic designer, Kevin Griffin, Deanna's website strives to represent the city vibe and local hang out ambience which make Deanna's a popular spot with locals and out-of-towners alike.

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Design Concepts Web Site

Client: Design Concepts @ Princeton LLC

Project: Design Concepts Web Site

An informational site for an interior design firm.

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E-Commerce Web Site

Client: Yolo Sportswear

Project: E-Commerce Web Site

E-commerce site.

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Education Management Web Site

Client: Education Management Consulting, LLC

Project: Education Management Web Site

Informational site.

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Flash Catalog on CD

Client: Sherpa's Pet Trading Company

Project: Flash Catalog on CD

Macromedia Flash product catalog.


HLTA Web Site

Client: Hunterdon Land Trust Alliance

Project: HLTA Web Site

Informational site.

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Sherpa's Pet Trading Web Site

Client: Sherpa's Pet Trading Company

Project: Sherpa's Pet Trading Web Site

Informational and e-commerce site.

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Timothy Martin Web Site

Client: Timothy Martin, Fine Artist

Project: Timothy Martin Web Site

Image gallery and e-commerce site.

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Web Site

Client: Senior Care Management

Project: Web Site

Informational site.

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About Website Design

Websites are, have been for a while, an essential and expected communications tool for all types of businesses and organizations. It's pretty safe to say that almost every organization or business needs a good website. At a minimum prospective clients and vendors will get an idea of what you do by checking out your website. From there, the sky's the limit. You can offer document sharing, e-commerce, movies, podcasts, polls, memberships, employee productivity tools and on and on.

All of our websites are designed so the client can maintain them on their own if they wish. Most of our sites are a hybrid of static and dynamic pages. Static for unique pages that are unlikely to change much, and dynamic using PHP and mySQL for pages that have a lot of similar, repetitive content or that will change regularly.

CMS, PHP and mySQL make things simpler.

In many ways designing a great website has been strengthened and simplified by improved technologies. Full content management systems (CMS) and custom hybrid sites have opened a treasure chest of features. Cascading style sheets (CSS), server-side scripting languages like PHP and ASP and on-line databases like mySQL offer much greater control over the look and functionality of the website. For the website visitor these invisible technologies are seen as a more natural, friendly experience. For the website owner they mean easier, faster, more flexible and less costly upkeep. We use CSS and PHP for almost every website we design and mySQL when there is a lot of similar repetitive information that might change or be added to, such as case studies or product listiings.

SEO makes things more complex.

Some things about website design have become more complicated and, at the same time, more important. Search engine optimization (SEO) used to be mostly a matter of including title, description and keyword meta tags on each web page. Now SEO is a complex melange of well-thought-out page and site design, plus external factors. Although it's way more complicated than this simple checklist, here are a few key SEO factors that are important to the big three search engines,

  1. Base your pages on key phrases that people might use to search for your services or products. Try to use key phrases that are popular with searchers but aren't used that much on websites, higher use and lower competition.
  2. Have content on your site that people will want to read.
  3. Write good, unique title tags specific to each page. Google indexes pages, not websites.
  4. Write a meaningful, one or two sentence meta description. The search engines use this hidden text in their listing of your web page.
  5. Use up-to-date, valid code. The search engines spiders or crawlers that index your pages get thrown off by messy code. It's not necessary to be perfect; sometimes you have to use non-valid code for an effect or function, but it should clean, organized and as valid as possible.
  6. Register your site with Google. Visit Google's Webmaster Tools.
  7. Submit a sitemap to Google and put one on your site.
  8. Get as many links from other quality websites to yours as you can. This is huge with Google. Link farms don't count, and in fact may be considered as negatives. Other websites and directories in your field,Yahoo Directory, on-line press releases and blogs are all good places to start.