Web Content Development 101
March 31, 2009 by Melissa Donovan · 1 Comment
Web content development is the process of generating material that supports and promotes your online presence.
Throughout the course of developing your web content, you will brainstorm, plan, research, organize, and create content for online publication. And then you’ll publish it.
For a small business owner, this content should be designed with one purpose in mind: to advance the goals of the business.
It usually starts with your website, but web content can include any online content that represents you or your business. It consists of text, images, audio, and video that are accessible on the Internet.
Establishing an online presence can be challenging, and it can be fun. If approached thoughtfully, it can be quite helpful in terms of marketing your business. In other words, smart web content development can lead to online success. And if a business operates mostly or entirely on the internet, then web content can make or break it.
The Importance of Web Content Development
Almost every day I am confronted with websites that were not properly developed. In some cases, it’s unclear what the website’s purpose is – the purpose has not been clearly established. In other cases, the content is out of sync with the design – the planning and building were poorly executed. Many more are outdated and have never been updated or regularly maintained.
Businesses that take their online presence seriously and want to establish a strong hold in the online marketplace must treat their web content development with importance.
Whether you need a simple, three-page website or an elaborate site packed with content, you will find the process easier and more fruitful if you take the time to develop content that works effectively, content that helps your business reach its goals.
Five Easy Steps
There are five simple steps in the web content development process. Each phase can be broken down into smaller stages, and each of these could take several weeks or several months, depending on how extensive your online presence will be.
- Conceptualize (Brainstorm)
- Plan (Organize)
- Build (Create or execute the plan)
- Launch (Publish and publicize)
- Maintain and update
Each step is critical. Leave one out, and your site will suffer.
The Nitty Gritty of Web Content Development
Let’s take a more detailed look at each of the five phases in web content development. Keep in mind that this is a general overview.
Concept
Concepts begin with an idea or a vision, but they must also have purpose. In this phase, you establish the purpose of your web content development plan. Why do you need an online presence? Are you trying to build a platform, find customers, or sell more widgets? You also brainstorm. What information needs to be on your website? How much off-site content should you create to drive visitors to your site? Which mediums will you use — text, images, videos?
Plan
The planning phase is the most critical. Start by deciding what web content you absolutely need in order to achieve your goals, and then build that into a design plan. Remember, content first, then design. Also remember, your plan can be long-term. You might want to end up with 100 pages of content. Maybe this month you can get the first ten completed. Use time to your advantage and work within your budget constraints. By regularly allocating funds to your web content development, you can execute your plan over time and keep your site fresh.
Build
Building is when you put your concept and plan into action. You may have many components being built simultaneously – a website designer creating your site while a web content writer prepares the text. A careful and well-laid plan will lead to an easier build. Toward the end of the building phase, you’ll start working on your launch.
Launch
It happens in a flash. After months of web content development, website design, and content writing, your site launches (or relaunches). Some launches are quiet. Others are loud. Once the site goes live, you can start driving traffic to it. This is also part of the launch – spreading the word about your site (also known as online marketing).
Maintain
After the launch, it might feel like all the hard work is over. That would be wrong. Every website needs maintenance. Some sites are maintained constantly and updated several times a day. Others are updated weekly or monthly. A small few are only updated every year or so, though this is only a good idea in rare cases. Making updates to your site and managing it (by tracking your traffic, for example) are critical to the success of your online presence.
Common Mistakes – The Don’ts
There are plenty of mistakes that people make with web content development. Here are a handful of things you don’t want to do:
- Don’t plan your design before you plan your content. They should complement each other, but the design should be built to hold the content. Also, keep in mind that you may add content over time, so choose a design that’s flexible enough to handle growth.
- Don’t start driving traffic to your site until it’s complete.
- Don’t launch until you’ve thoroughly tested the site on all platforms and browsers.
- Don’t expect your site to be an overnight success. Building a website is hard, but getting traffic to a brand new site is much harder. Be patient, stick with it, and success will come.
Make sure you stay focused on your site’s primary purpose. Web content development can get messy. You’ll have lots of great ideas, but they won’t all lend themselves to the goals you’re trying to achieve. Make sure your plan sticks to your purpose and try not to get sidetracked.
Web Content Services
Scribizzy provides a host of web content services, including web content development. If you need help planning the content for your online presence, or would like assistance developing fresh content for an existing site, we can help. Start today by getting a quote online.
How Business Blogging Generates Online Success
March 24, 2009 by Melissa Donovan · 1 Comment
Every day, more and more business owners are finding out that business blogging can do wonders for online success. But that success requires more than launching a blog and publishing posts.
A successful business blog is well-planned and built on strategy, which is then executed in a meaningful way.
Before launching a business blog, it’s helpful to understand the benefits that your company can reap through business blogging. Then, you’ll be able to develop a plan specific to your business needs.
Here’s a look at how business blogging can help grow your business and improve your online presence.
Regular Updates for Google Goodness
Nobody except the geniuses at Google knows exactly what makes the world’s most popular search engine tick. The algorithm that determines where a website ranks in the search engine results pages (SERPs) is top secret. What we do know is that Google gives good love to sites that make regular updates as well as sites with lots of inbound links. By making changes to your website and adding to it, you can earn some hearty Google juice and increase your website’s rank. One of the most effective ways to regularly update your site is with a blog.
Linkability
Every time someone links to your website, the Google gods smile upon you. There are many ways to get inbound links. You can launch a bunch of websites and link to yourself. You can trade links with other website owners. You can even pay for links. But nothing works like good old-fashioned organic linkage. To get that, you need to produce content that interests people enough to want to share it. You can easily use a blog to publish content and then promote it by networking with other bloggers and leaving comments on their blogs. Links are one of the foremost ways to draw traffic to your website via business blogging.
Keywords and Search Engine Optimization (SEO)
Unless you have a gargantuan website, there probably aren’t a lot of opportunities for you to plant enough keywords on your site to really gain traffic through popular search terms. Also, keywords can be obvious when they’re packed into a small space, and this renders the text unfriendly to readers. Business blogging provides infinite opportunities to implement keywords on a regular basis, so you can expand your keyword pool and place more keywords throughout your website.
Customer Outreach
The online marketplace is increasingly competitive, so it’s essential for business owners to find innovative ways to communicate with customers. A blog gives you a permanent platform that you can use to talk to your customers. Tell them what you’re offering, how it’s important, and why they should buy it from you. Offer specials and discounts to subscribers. Announce new products and run contests or collect feedback from your readers. This empowers you as a business owner and it also puts some power into the hands of consumers, who appreciate having their voices heard and concerns addressed.
Promote Transparency
The latest trend in politics, pop culture, and business is transparency. Talking about your company’s mission, business philosophy, and professional practices helps build trust and customer loyalty. To practice transparency, you need a way to communicate the inner workings of your business with the public. Business blogging is perfect for that — a blog provides an open forum where you can share information about your operations, policies, and procedures. Some bloggers even publish their revenue information, which is the height of true transparency in business.
Establish Credibility
If you’re practicing transparency by discussing the inner workings of your business on a blog, then you’re also establishing credibility, which is essential for gaining trust among perspective buyers. Trust is especially important online because there’s a lack of face-to-face interaction. There are also tons of snake oil sites on the web, which strive to sucker buyers with fake or useless products and empty promises. By establishing professional credibility, you can earn trust and loyalty from far more customers.
Publicity and Media Platform
Traditional marketing is expensive. All those brochures, business cards, yellow pages, and newspaper advertisements add up. Marketing online isn’t always free, but it sure can be more cost-effective than doing it the old fashioned way. A blog is a permanent advertisement for your business, a place where you can publish news and announcements, including product launches and specials. You can embed videos and if you’re lucky, one of them will go viral, bringing hoards of hungry consumers to your site.
Professional Online Networking
Businesses need other businesses. Professionals must connect with one another, and blogs are great for networking online. You can interact with other professionals whose products and services complement yours and forge valuable partnerships with them, which can lead to growth and expansion for all parties. Blog networking is a modern phenomenon but a powerful one. Links, blogrolls, and comments all provide ways for business blogging professionals to interact, get to know each other, and develop lasting relationships.
Get Busy Business Blogging
A blog isn’t an endeavor to enter lightly. It takes some planning and there’s a lot to learn. For starters, there’s the blog design and associated technology like plugins and widgets that make a blog more effective and user friendly. Then there’s the strategy involved, plus the challenge of producing relevant, compelling content on a regular basis. In future posts, we’ll be exploring all of these components and many more, so stay tuned.
Are you interested in business blogging? Scribizzy can help! We offer a full suite of blog services.
Seven Simple Website Design Tips
March 17, 2009 by Melissa Donovan · 8 Comments
Your website is your number one marketing tool, and your website design is one of your core opportunities to convey your company’s image.
When visitors come to your website, they’ll sum it up in a flash based on what they see. Content is important, but aesthetics are a close second.
Whether you’re designing your own website or hiring someone to design one for you, you should have a solid idea of how you want to portray your business. If you have already started establishing your identity with a logo and marketing plan, then you’ve got the foundation you need for your website design.
However, there are still many considerations to keep in mind, and throughout the process of designing a new website (or redesigning an existing one), you will need to make choices about how your site will look and feel so that it represents your business appropriately.
Here are seven website design tips that cover the core components every website needs in order to succeed. These tips will help you make smart design choices so that your site captures visitors’ attention while maintaining the integrity of your company’s identity.
Website Design Tips
1. Build Your Brand with a Logo
Design is an excellent tool for brand building. If you have a logo, it should be prominently displayed on your home page and all subsequent pages as well. If you don’t have a logo, you should get one immediately. If you’re an independent entrepreneur using your name to do business, consider developing a signature-style logo, using a particular font and possibly your photo, or some other simple visual emblem. Logos help to build familiarity, association, and reputation, and they are the essential in developing your brand.
2. Color Choices
Often the color choices you’ve made for your logo will drive the design of your website. However, simple logos, or brand designs that are flexible enough to adapt to a broader color scheme may lend themselves to a wider variety of designs. You should already know the objective of your site, so choose colors accordingly. There are an unlimited number of color combinations that can work; a good way to determine what direction you want to take is to spend some time surfing around the web looking at sites that target the same audience you are going after, and make note of designs that strike your fancy. Keep in mind that selecting two or three different colors in varying shades will generate a better design.
3. Font and Text
There are so many exciting fonts out there, but don’t be tempted! You can use fancy fonts for your title, logo, and headings, but use a very simple, easy-to-read font for the bulk of your content, and remember that fonts are stored on visitors’ computers locally, so if you’re using a font that’s not web-friendly, turn it into an image. For your content, make sure that you use dark text on a light background for better readability. Too many people get overly excited about all the font and color choices, and go to great lengths to make their site look extraordinary, but if you make the text difficult to read, visitors will click off to some other site that puts less stress on their eyesight. Lastly, make sure your font size is not too small… or too big.
4. Header
The header is located at the top of a web page, and it’s usually the area where you’ll find the title or site name. This should be prominent, clear, and easy to read. The title can be text or an image but it should provide the name of your site, and give some clue as to what your site is all about. You can always use a tagline in the header to broadcast your site’s purpose. Also, if you do have a logo (and you should), it should be in the header. Bonus tip: Your header should be clickable and should always take visitors back to the home page.
5. Images
The more images you have on any web page, the longer it takes to load. Generally, web surfers will wait just a few short seconds for a page to load before they go off in search of speedier delivery. Ensure that your images are optimized for the web, and that you don’t clutter your page with them. Keep in mind that videos and slideshows take even longer to load than regular images. However, you should have at least a few images on each page. Images break up long strings of text, and create spatial interest, which is attractive to the eye. Of course sites geared toward art, photography, film, etc. are exceptions to this rule!
6. Layout & Content Planning
Before you design a site, you should have a good idea of what its content will be. This is achieved through thoughtful web content development. Determine the content for your site, and then you, or your designer, can start to establish a formidable layout and website design. Always develop a plan for content before you start working on design. There’s nothing worse than putting a site together only to discover there’s not enough room in your navigation menu for all the content you want to include.
7. Navigation
Your main menu or navigation bar will act as your site’s table of contents. It is here that you want to display simple links to key pages within your site. There are a few pillar pages that almost every website should have, which include Home, About, and Contact. Most business sites will also include Products or Services pages as well. Take a look at other sites within your niche to establish other key pages that warrant a link on the navigation menu.
Moving Forward
Website design projects can be stressful but can also be a lot of fun. It’s exciting to see the whole thing come together, especially for the first time. Even redesigns will help breathe new life into a business, and will often help to ramp up sales, even in a down economy.
A few final website design tips:
- Keep your design flexible enough so that you can add and change content later on.
- Include a plan for website maintenance and regular updates.
- Make sure the site is thoroughly tested on various operating systems and browsers to ensure full functionality.
Scribizzy offers website design services for small businesses. All projects are tailored to your business needs and specifications. Start your website project today by getting a quote online!
Website Copywriting Basics
March 10, 2009 by Melissa Donovan · 3 Comments
Recently, I was discussing website copywriting with a colleague. When I mentioned that I usually spend about three hours writing a home page, he seemed stunned. He told me that it usually takes him about half an hour to write a home page. On a good day, twenty minutes.
Interestingly, our rates were pretty much the same.
The whole conversation got me thinking: Do you really want your entire business represented by something that took all of twenty minutes to write? That’s not a whole lot of time to invest in a home page, which is basically your core marketing tool.
My colleague wanted to know how I could possibly spend three hours or more writing a single page of website copy. So I told him, and now I’m going to tell you.
What is Website Copywriting?
Website copywriting is nothing like writing articles for online distribution, blog posts, or press releases. Most other types of web writing require a basic understanding of a single topic, and many of these topics are quick and easy to research. From a writing perspective, such material merely involves imparting information in a straightforward way.
Website copywriting, on the other hand, requires a fairly diverse skill set and a considerable investment of time for gaining facts and knowledge that need to be communicated in the copy. It has to speak to a well-defined audience in a language that audience can understand.
And it has to sell.
After all, when visitors arrive at your website, they need to know immediately what you can do for them. How are you going to make their lives better? Are your products and services what they need, and if so, how do they go about obtaining them?
The Knowledge
Before writing a single word, a good website copywriter will get started by establishing a clear and thorough understanding of a client’s business. It’s not enough to know what the client is selling. You have to know how long they’ve been selling, how much they sell for, all the varieties of products and services that they offer, and most importantly, you have to know who their target customers are.
I start out with a simple questionnaire that covers business basics. Here are just a few of the questions I ask:
- What do you sell?
- How do your products or services help people?
- Why should customers buy from you?
Once I understand what the business is offering, I need to get a grasp on the company’s brand. Some businesses project a cutting edge image while others like to stay traditional. One website wants to be sophisticated, another wants to be down home. Understanding the tone that a website needs to set is one the most basic elements of good website copywriting and is crucial for making sure that the copy supports and promotes the company brand and image.
But the most important and often overlooked element of website copy is the customer.
One of the biggest mistakes I see in website copy is a home page that lists all the details about a business without ever communicating how it will benefit a client or customer. I’m thinking in particular of sites that offer technology services, which often talk about different types of code, hardware brands, and software solutions, but never quite explain how all of this is relevant to the buying public. I’ve even seen sites for businesses that create websites, but a person without any IT or development knowledge would never know that these businesses create websites because they’re so overladen with tech jargon.
That’s why a good website copywriter sits down and takes a long, hard look at a business before typing a single word. A big part of this job is acting as an interpreter. The website owner tells me what he’s offering, and I translate it so his target customers will understand and think “That’s just what I need!”
The Skills
Writing is comprised of a huge set of skills. You have to know the rules of grammar, spelling, and punctuation (and know when those rules should be broken). You need the ability to craft a compelling sentence in a voice that resonates with readers. You have to know your readers and speak to them in their own language. And you have to be able to hook people, to keep them turning pages to read more.
Copywriting is a very specific type of writing. It’s designed to sell. Copywriting identifies not a reader, but a customer. It can be as straightforward as listing the benefits of a product or it can get creative, telling stories and playing on emotions in order to intrigue people into buying.
Even more specialized is website copywriting. To do this type of writing, one must possess all the skills of writing and copywriting, plus understand how people use the internet, how they read web pages, and what compels the average website visitor to scroll, click, and buy. You must know the business about which you’re writing and you absolutely have to be able to play the role of that business’s customer.
The Website Copywriting Process
I keep a questionnaire template on file and customize it for each client. Usually, the basic questions I’ve developed will suffice, but sometimes I need to gather extra details, especially when dealing with a type of business that I’m not familiar with. It’s my job to learn my clients’ businesses, so I keep asking questions until I feel like I’m a member of their team.
Once I have the information I need, I start picking through it, pulling out the bits and pieces that are most essential to the page of copy that I’m writing. This differs from the home page to the about page, so I’m always focused on the objective of the page I’m writing. Is its purpose to captivate visitors on their first visit? Does it need to communicate the company’s mission and philosophy? Should it highlight the products or services, or should it describe a particular product or service in detail?
This is a great way to build an outline. Eventually, my notes get molded into a comprehensive list containing the core details that need to be addressed on the page. This might include SEO and keywords or language that I need to use to convey the right tone. It may also include link placement and making sure that the text guides the visitor to take some action – usually filling out a form or making some type of purchase.
Next, I go through this list and start fleshing it out, filling in words, crafting sentences, and forming paragraphs until I have a nice, sturdy first draft.
After the first draft is complete, the revision process begins. This, for me, is an exciting step because it’s when I start to see what the final copy will look like. It involves checking for grammar, spelling, and punctuation to ensure the text is mechanically correct. I also have to make sure that the copy looks good because website presentation is highly visual, so the copy has to present in an aesthetically pleasing way.
At last the revisions are complete. To finalize the copy, I read it aloud, slowly, several times so I can absorb the tone and readability. Each time I proof it, I make minor changes and corrections until it’s completely polished and ready for publication.
That’s Why It’s Not a Twenty-Minute Job
As it turns out, my friend who writes a page of website copy in twenty minutes was timing his writing, and only his writing. Once I started talking about the research, outlining, and polishing, he nodded along enthusiastically and said that he does all that stuff too, but the actual writing only takes twenty minutes.
Here’s where writers start to debate. Is the research included in the writing process? I say so, since it’s an integral part of getting the job done. If you do all your your prep work, take notes, and spend enough time sitting there thinking about what you want to write, you could probably type out the copy in ten minutes or less.
But website copywriting is not the same as typing. It involves asking questions, conducting research, developing a plan of action, and then executing that plan. It has to be topped off with revisions, editing, proofreading, and polishing.
With every project, you go in with a blank page and come out with carefully crafted copy that compels website visitors. That takes a lot more than twenty minutes.
At least it should.
Need compelling copy for your site? Learn more about about Scribizzy’s website copywriting services.
Ten Tips for Doing Business Online
March 3, 2009 by Melissa Donovan · 4 Comments
These days, having an effective online presence can make or break your business. Even if you have a traditional brick and mortar location, setting up shop online will give you access to a larger customer pool, provide a cost-effective avenue for information sharing, and dramatically open up your opportunities for marketing.
More and more entrepreneurs are skipping brick and mortar altogether and are exclusively doing business online. For small business owners who are used to working behind a storefront, making the switch or expanding into the online arena can be challenging, confusing, and overwhelming.
The benefits of doing business online are undeniable. A website costs far less than a shop or office. You can communicate with hundreds, thousands, even millions of web users at a fraction of the cost of doing a television commercial or major ad spread. And you can sell your products or services across the globe, removing geographical limitations entirely.
How you handle the details of doing business online will depend on your industry, target customer demographics, and professional goals, mission, and philosophy. You might sell products using an automated online store or you might sell a service to a small, select group of clients. You may use your online presence strictly for marketing but keep transactions offline. You might even offer free products and services, like a blog or informative newsletter, as a strategy to entice customers.
While the specifics vary, there are general tools and strategies that every business owner can use on the web. Here are ten tips that will prove beneficial to all entrepreneurs who want to harness the power of the internet to make their businesses more successful.
- Get a Great Website
- Go Global
- Diversify Your Income Stream
- Develop and Memorize Your Elevator Pitch
- Know Your Niche
- Networking
- Use Social Media
- Add a Blog
- Practice Diligent Maintenance
- Give Back
A great website is one that helps establish your brand online, provides relevant information to visitors, and works to convert those visitors into customers by issuing a clear call to action. Plus, it has to have an aesthetic design and be user friendly in terms of navigation. It can be as simple as one page or as elaborate as Amazon or eBay. This is one area of doing business online where you’ll want to take your time, learn the ropes, and make sure you hire the right people to get the job done.
The Internet has a worldwide reach. For some business owners, this is a boon. Using e-commerce, you can set up an online store with all the same merchandise from your brick-and-mortar store and reach millions more customers. For other business owners, the global reach of the web is a conundrum. How does an electrician or a consultant harness the Internet to expand a customer pool? Be creative and consider all your alternatives. Can you do phone consultations? Write an ebook and sell your expertise? Is there any part of the service you offer that can be done remotely? If so, package it and sell it on your site. If not, create a complementary information product and sell that instead.
Once you figure out how to sell your product or service online, you have diversified your income stream. However, you can continue to look for new opportunities to generate income online. If you’re a gardener, write an ebook with gardening tips and sell it online. If you run a clothing boutique, post your merchandise online and add a blog with fashion tips. Information is one of the biggest sellers online, but you can also publish free information to round up visitors (and then convert them into customers). Some ideas for doing business online and diversifying your income stream: consultations via phone, Skype, or chat; information products, such as ebooks; training with videos and multimedia; affiliate marketing and website advertising.
An elevator pitch is a 30-second explanation of your business. You have 30 seconds to explain what you offer, demonstrate how it benefits people, establish why they should buy it from you, and tell them what to do next (click, call, or email). It sounds a lot easier than it is. Try it now. Set your timer for 30 seconds and describe your business. Make it sound good. Go ahead and do it. I’ll wait.
Like I said, it’s not as easy as it sounds. But if you take some time to put your elevator pitch together, it will help boost your business online and off. You’ll be armed with an answer whenever someone asks what you do. Also, make sure you keep the written version handy so you can copy and paste it into online directories and the bios or profiles that you’ll fill out on the web.
Get familiar with how other professionals in your industry are using the web by perusing their websites. You’ll find important trends and as a newcomer, you’ll be able to spot attractive opportunities that your competitors might be missing. Sign up for their newsletters and email lists, pay attention to the ads they’re running, and strike up conversations on blogs and forums so you can get involved in the online community. Reach outside your niche too. Explore similar companies and those that offer products and services that complement or enrich your own.
The Internet has a heartbeat and before long, you’ll realize it belongs collectively to the millions of people who are sitting at their computers and connecting online. People who have a knack for networking will do well on the web. The bonus is that people who suffer from shyness may find that it’s a lot easier to network online than off. Your next big contact could be just a click away. As you travel around the web, look for people who work in your industry, professionals whose services you could use or who might need yours, and watch for folks you might want to team up with. Strike up conversations in forums and in the comments sections on blogs. Make friends and expand your contacts with your online professional network.
Sites like Facebook, Twitter, and LinkedIn can help you with your networking activities. Through these sites, you can easily connect with tens, hundreds, even thousands of people instantly. They are all free to use and you can upload your address book and immediately your existing contacts will become your first connections. Check out each of the social media sites to determine which ones are a good fit for your goals and purposes. LinkedIn is great for professionals. Twitter is excellent for link sharing and brief conversations. MySpace is a valuable tool for artists, such as musicians. Facebook lends itself well to just about any business imaginable. You can also get involved in social media sites like Flickr and YouTube. Publish your photos and videos, build your brand into them, and use those sites to share media and spread the word about your business. Put yourself out there!
There are lots of reasons why website owners rail against the idea of including a blog on their websites. A blog adds a whole new dimension of technology and maintenance, requires regular post writing, and in many cases a blog will need a separate marketing campaign from the core site. However, the benefits can be vast. Blogs allow you to communicate with customers in an open forum, act as a vehicle for company news and announcements, and are ideal for staying fresh and focused on SEO keywords. In short, a blog expands opportunities for marketing and doing business online, and it’s worth considering as a potential investment.
Make it a point to keep track of your online presence. You’ll probably list your business in dozens of online directories. You’ll leave comments on blogs. You’ll also have all those social media profiles. Be aware of your own presence and don’t let anything get too outdated. You never know who will surf into an old profile. It could be your next big client! So keep everything current and let people know about your offerings and availability.
Nothing grabs people’s attention like an act of charity or a good old-fashioned contest. Find a cause you believe in or add a little publicity about the organizations that you donate to or volunteer for. People are drawn to the positive message of giving back and may well choose your company over one that is seen as uncharitable. Throw a contest for your customers or readers as a way of saying thank you. It’s good karma and great for publicity!
These are tips that any professional, entrepreneur, or website owner can utilize as they start working to establish themselves in the online environment. People who are used to doing business in a more traditional, brick-and-mortar format might find these newfangled tools awkward at first, but part of being successful in business is having the ability to adapt with the trends.
So log on and get busy doing business online!
Scribizzy helps small businesses succeed online. Visit our services page to learn about our web content, website management, and online marketing solutions.
