A tabletop gaming group wanted their own member site, with themed design and content. Part wiki for their adaptive rules play, the site also includes content areas for story backgrounds and play session summaries, and a blog for the master of the current campaign. The side images are static as the content area scrolls between them.

 

This non-profit promoting community programs for children in grades K-12 sorely needed a an overhaul of their aged web design. One of the most fun aspects of this project was the new site header, that features photos (with permission) of participating youth in supported programs. Scripting calls on a database library to provide different images in the spread with every page load.

 

A franchiser of free tutoring programs wanted to umbrella its multi-community brands into a single streamlined site. The owners had a specific and strongly held vision for the project, and development criteria focused on a compact design with dominant branding that would live unmoving in the center of the browser window, scrolling its own content. The site was developed almost entirely in Adobe Flash® / Animate CC®.

 

A volunteer non-profit tutoring program serving middle and high school students in the local district needed to establish a presence within the schools using print materials including posters, brochures, and student take-home flyers. All materials required pre-approval of the district through the office of the superintendent, which meant including the school district in the proofing process before incurring final printing costs.

 

This home kitchen start-up had grown to the point they needed a more professional online presence and the ability to transact online and process credit card transactions remotely when traveling. Print collateral with cohesive and consistent branding was part of the service package, as was an e-newsletter template mirroring the web site design.

 

A busy telecom executive turned entrepreneur wanted a media plan to promote his idea of an anonymous virtual voicemail box — the phone equivalent of a gmail account, but more robust — making it easy to separate business and personal calls while protecting the privacy of the user. Internet, radio, newspaper, and transit were all part of the marketing mix.

 

An automotive dealership wanted to feature its used car inventory advertised in the local newspaper on a dedicated site with a unique URL.

 

A SaaS CRM provider needed a library of landing pages to improve and test conversion rates for their online pay-per-click ad campaigns.

 

A manufacturer and wholesale supply company vending to the soap, candle, and essential oils industry wanted to upscale their product catalog from a 1/4-size spot color only publication that was nothing more than an index of SKU's and single line product descriptions, to a full-size 4-color magazine and catalog. Initial printing and direct mailing was to more than 30,000 unique customers in the USA and abroad.

 

A local community church needed to refresh the design of their web site, re-organize the content and improve the site navigation.

 

A belly dance performance troupe specializing in Mediterranean style dance and influence needed a web site in concert with coherently branded print collateral, including 4-color brochure featuring dancer profiles, scheduled appearances, and booking information.

 

A stage-fighting and jousting acting troupe, specializing in Medieval Fantasy, featuring authentic armor, weapons, and equestrian components in performances, was looking to establish a branded Internet presence. The troupe was the headline act for one of the largest renaissance faires in their home state. The owner/director of the faire at the time also desired an Internet presence that prominently featured the troupe.