SERVICES
Websites & Applications
The implementation of websites and applications can open a lot of doors for your business. They help you connect with current and potential clients, amplify your brand’s reach, and can even smooth out internal wrinkles, boosting efficiency. There are many different types of websites, each with their own set of unique features. Blogs, forums, informational websites, eCommerce websites, marketing websites, and directories are just a few examples of what you might encounter while surfing the web. Choosing the best one for your business? That all depends on what you’re aiming to achieve. Applications, by contrast, are programs that perform a very specific function for the user. In a business context, they are pieces of software that can be added to a mobile phone, a personal computer, or a website.
We can help craft a digital solution that fits your business’s needs, and see it through to completion and launch. We’ll make sure everything functions as intended and serves as a boon to your business in the long-term.
Technical Development
Creating or revamping a website provides a wealth of advantages to a business, but sometimes a little extra is needed to solve the issue at hand or achieve a specific goal. That’s where technical development steps in. In simple terms, it’s all about writing code—those magical combinations of letters, numbers, and symbols that tell your website’s elements how to act, usually based on what a user does. Sometimes it’s building something from scratch, and other times it’s just tweaking what's already there. It could be as simple as implementing a few lines of code in your website to add a price calculator, or it could be as expansive as creating a live map of power outages in your area, complete with a push notification system and an interactive database of resources.
eCommerce
With the rise of the internet, more and more businesses have been turning to ecommerce to sell their products and services. There’s a good reason for this; millions of people worldwide buy products and services online. Businesses tend to implement ecommerce solutions in one of two ways; exclusively selling their products or services online, or using ecommerce alongside their physical store locations. As you can imagine, making sales this way comes with a fair few advantages. eCommerce expands your reach, opening the door to more customers and more profit potential. It’s a super convenient, low-effort way for customers to snag your products anytime they want, tapping into those spur-of-the-moment shopping impulses. Plus, who doesn’t love a store that’s open 24/7?
Informational & Marketing Websites
In a business context, websites are typically geared towards a company, product, service, or event—these are your informational and marketing sites. Their job? To inform and act as a marketing tool. While not built for transactions, adding eCommerce is always an option. A business site might showcase contact info, services, products, and a company’s backstory, while an event site tells you the where, when, why, and how, often with ticket prices and schedules. Websites are key for giving potential customers or attendees quick access to all the details. That’s why companies include their URL on business cards and social media. Plus, being searchable online boosts your visibility, helping you reach a bigger audience and increase profits or attendance.
Good websites will successfully capture a visitor’s attention in five seconds or less, by which point the person will either decide to stick around or go somewhere else.
Extranet & Intranet
Intranets and extranets are like your business's private VIP lounges for collaboration, communication, and sharing resources—but with one key difference: who gets the golden ticket.
An intranet is only accessible to employees within the organization. It’s perfect for things like an HR hub where staff can grab forms, find key info, and track performance review dates without breaking a sweat.
Extranets, on the other hand, open the doors to trusted outsiders like vendors, suppliers, and partners. It’s a platform intended to facilitate interactions between you and third parties who are closely associated with your organization in a long-term or short-term capacity. For example, the academic sector uses an extranet for online learning and administration.
Customer Portals
Not every webpage is meant for all eyes, and that’s where customer portals come in. A customer portal is a personalized and private hub for information storage and interactions between customers and businesses. It centralizes the involved content and functions in one place, with access only granted after a quick login for security. Customer portals offer easy and instant 24/7 access, improved customer experience, improved customer service, and a flexible integration with your pre-existing digital platforms. They can be exactly the tool you need to streamline your operations, reach your customers more easily, and up your organization game.
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