We are business people first so we always start with the question "does this feature or element enhance or reduce the customer experience?" We don't design websites to win awards, we design them to give the customer a reason to want to keep coming back to that site.
We offer a full range of website solutions, whether you need a small online "brochure" or a comprehensive data-driven e-commerce site. Find out how we can help you by learning how we've helped others.
Fresh Tilled Soil wins Internet Media Award for Outstanding Achievement in Building/Construction of website: FreeGreen.com. As stated on their website, FreeGreen encourages progressive building practices by making green home designs free for everyone.
Our team has grown again but we're still looking out for talented designers and SEM specialists to join our team. On the design side we just added another senior user interface designer Kevin Leary. On the SEM side Sam Guest joins us from Canada to strengthen Dave Pye's search marketing team.
We've been developing several new lead generation programs for our clients and supporting them with detailed tracking and analytics. Our Boston local services reviews and concierge area on Bobby's Best is a great example of a lead generation system supported with our FullControl content management system. Our partnership with Conversion Associates has allowed us to build a dedicated search marketing program including 800 numbers, web analytics, form tracking and several SEO services packages. Soon we'll be launching a packaged SEM service for those clients that don't need a full-service agency relationship but need more than automated off-the-shelf services.
New clients starting to work with us this month include InnovationRX, Spine Universe and Perk Street.
"Fresh Tilled Soil made the process of re-designing our website really easy... They were able to use the feedback I provided them and create a top notch web site. You guys are fantastic!"
Most of us were raised with the notion that it's not what you know but who you know that matters. There are enough exceptions to this rule to reconsider its guidance, but there is some truth in the moral. The meteoric rise of social and business networking tools is testimony to the "who versus what" argument. These web tools thrive on the premise that knowing more people is in some way better than knowing fewer people. If the size of your network does actually matter, are there ways to measure that? Does bigger mean more rewarding relationships, or is it just the price of admission into the status-driven social circles of online networking?