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Our philosophy on web site design is to build quality web pages for our clients which promote their product or service well, increase sales, and do it in a cost effective manner. To achieve this goal we build web sites that look good, load quickly, are scaleable, don't require obscure plug-ins to work, and present well with the majority of monitors, screen resolutions, and display settings (colors) used today.
Our goal is to make your web site and business, or organization available and presentable to the greatest number of viewers on all systems. To help achieve this goal we use pure HTML (Hyper Text Markup Language) whenever possible, thus avoiding traps for viewers with browser options turned off (usually for security reasons), or who have older systems or software.
After our initial consultation with you to determine functional requirements, understand what you wish your web site to look like, and review of "site construction" material you deliver to us; we rough out a blueprint of sorts for your approval. Once we get the OK to move forward, we built the "Web Site Template" adding in elements for future function. We then submit this to you for approval.
It is important to make sure everything on this "template" is accurate, correct and to your liking as it becomes the foundation for the balance of your web site, delivering consistency in look, feel, and navigation, all of which are important to your customers
Once your approval is granted, we copy the template into the individual pages of your web site and add the appropriate content and function needed for each page. At the end of this process we have another short consultation noting any revisions or additions which need to be made, and you give tentative approval of the site pending these revisions.
Once this approval is granted, the noted revisions have been made, and our payment received; your web site is uploaded to its "Directory" or "Virtual Domain" at which point it can be accessed by the public.
Please Note: Once the "Site Template" has been approved, any changes to that portion of any page constitutes a "change in contract", making the time to make those changes billable. Since the "Site Template" is in fact the foundation of the web site, a modification in the template requires every page in the web site to be modified, and has the potential to cause total rework of the entire web site.
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