All posts tagged Business

Since moving my family and business to Kingwood Texas earlier this year we’ve enjoyed a great sense of community and support from our fellow residents and businesses.

Kingwood is a 14,000 acre community located in northeast Houston, Texas. The majority of the community is located in Harris County with a small portion in Montgomery County. Known as the “Livable Forest,” it is the largest master-planned community in Harris County and second-largest within the 10-county Houston–Sugar Land–Baytown metropolitan area.

With it’s vibrant online community and local businesses, we feel right at home. Although we continue to serve the web design and marketing communications needs of businesses nationwide, we have already made several great businesses relationships right here in our local community.

If you are a resident of the the Kingwood Texas area and are interested in working with a local business for your print and Internet design, email marketing, search engine optimization, copywriting, and other marketing communications, please give us a call.

Lower Trinity Groundwater Conservation District Web Site

The new web site for the Lower Trinity Groundwater Conservation District (LTGCD.org) is just about ready to launch. Bill Jacobs, the District’s General Manager, handed me the final documents to be added to the site this morning.

Here is a sneak peek at the photoshop mock up I designed for this web site.

I’ll be posting screen captures and links from the official site upon it’s debut next week.

Whether you are running a content management system, a blog, or just writing a business email, the readability of your content is always extremely important.

Readability, by definition, is the state or quality of being readable. You want to keep your readers eyes locked onto your content and lead them through your text, giving them the information you want them to have, in the order you want them to receive it. We achieve this by arranging our text in a way that is pleasing to the eye whether we are skimming through the information quickly or reading the entire article word for word.

Our goal is to create as little friction and confusion as possible.

Here are five simple ways to improve your website’s readability.

Avoid using all capital letters

Using all capital letters in your paragraph text has long been considered SCREAMING IN TYPE. Many people use “all caps” in their paragraph text to add emphasis, but in reality all they add is confusion. The human eye by nature does not like to read through a large amount of writing in “all caps”.

When adding emphasis in a paragraph, try to sparingly using a bold or italic effect instead. Your readers will thank you.

Avoid centering your headlines and paragraphs

Printed posters and flyers occasionally use centered headlines and text, but this is rarely appropriate when writing content for the web. Since we first learned to read, we have all become accustomed to reading text that is aligned to the left. I can’t ever remember reading a book that was formatted differently.

There are rare occasions where other formatting will work, but be careful not to add any confusion to the readers eye, especially in your paragraph text.

Use paragraph breaks

In grade school we were taught to indent the first line of every paragraph. When writing for the web we take this a step further and put a space between paragraphs by using paragraph breaks. This added white space between paragraphs will give your readers eyes a rest and allow them to skim through to the content that interests them faster.

Use consistant and appropriate colors

Using a different color for each of your subheadings may be fun to do, but in most cases you are just confusing your reader.

Is this a new blog post or article? Is this another subheading in the same article?

Making drastic changes to your formatting can be very distracting. It is a good practice to use consistant color, font type, and size for your headlines, subheadings, paragraphs, etc, so your readers will easily flow though your content knowing exactly where they are.

Avoid scrolling sideways

Although books are written with pages facing each other horizontally, we have grown accustomed to scolling downward when reading web sites. If your text is formatted to be wider than the average monitor, you are forcing your reader to scroll sideways, using more mouse movement than is neccesary, and may distract them from whats important – your valuable content.

These are just a handful of the many ways to make your content more readable on the internet. These rules, like all others, are meant to be broken, but only when the design calls for it and it does not cause added difficulty for your reader.

In an early morning meeting at the office of Bill Jacobs, we finalized our plan for the creation of a new web site for the Lower Trinity Groundwater Conservation District.

Groundwater conservation districts have the power and duty to manage underground water as defined in chapter 36 of the Texas water code. A prime duty of the department is issuing the licences required for water well drilling and other related projects.

The main challenge with this web site project will be the organization of several documents for the user to download in PDF format. The interface needs to be simple to navigate so that their clients can obtain the proper document in the shortest amount of time and with fast page loads.

Since this project will not be graphically intense, I’m looking forward to this opportunity to stretch out, challenge myself, and focus on my CSS skills to provide them with a elegant web site design.

I’ll be posting the final result in the portfolio section soon in just a few weeks. Check back soon!

UK based oil and gas industry recruiting company, MacDonald Energy, requested my original oil rig photography to be used in the design of their new corporate web site.

MacDonald Energy is the corporate enterprise of Jim MacDonald who is widely known throughout the oil and gas industry. He is respected as one of the most experienced consultant facilitators and has been involved in the consultancy business since 1988.

MacDonald Energy was established as a professional Body Shop with worldwide contacts able to identify the right person for any placement required by clients.

Apache Advertising and Design was pleased to provide photography that fit their marketing needs.

Architecture Week, the “new magazine of design and building”, contacted me recently about using my photo of an offshore oil rig in the Gulf of Mexico for their website, ArchitectureWeek.com.

An agreement was made and now my photo has been published on the “quiz” section of their web site. You can view a screen capture of this page by CLICKING HERE.

I’m very pleased that interest in my photography is growing and I hope to see more pieces published in the near future.

“Matt has become a valuable asset to our company by consistently creating high quality graphics, style sheets and ad campaigns for us. Always able to come up with fresh ideas, a very creative thinker.” – Mark Austin

Mark Austin is co-founder of EquineAuctions.com, president of Austin Media and the founder of a non profit recycling organization titled We Can Recycle. Mark is a very busy man and I appreciate him taking the time to write such nice testimonial for me on LinkedIn.

The opportunity arose to design a promotional poster for the scholarship golf tournament being run by the Sam Houston State University Department of Theatre and Dance.

All parties involved were very pleased with the end result, and it looks like more projects are already coming our way. This looks like the beginning of a great relationship with Sam Houston State University and a few other Huntsville area businesses.

On Sunday, July 22, I submitted this poster design iStockPhoto.com to enter their “Designer Spotlight” contest. I was thrilled to see that it was selected and is now on display on their web site. The “Designer Spotlight” features the best designers that use their stock photography products.

A stallion as impressive as JMK Streakin demands top quality design work. Apache Advertising was given the opportunity to create a new web site, business cards, brochures, and print ads to promote Streakin. We enjoyed working with Dr. Rigby on each of these projects and we look forward to promoting JMK Streakin in the future as well.

Be sure to visit the new JMKStreakin.com web site to view our work.