Richard Male and Associates uses WordPress to maintain a very large website, which includes hundreds of articles. These articles help the site to do better in the search engines, reinforce the consulting group's expertise and help prospective clients understand how the company can meet their needs. If you want a content management system that works for your small business, this example shows how easy it is to create a good-looking, highly functional site with WordPress.
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E-Commerce content management tools let staff at Neve's Uniforms and Equipment update their huge online inventory quickly and easily. Staff can create web specials, specify which items are on sale, and, of course, publish prices, photos and descriptions for items. Neve's can even specify which items are required by each client, so customers see items relevant to them when they log in.
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Rosy Rings sells a wide variety of candles, reed diffusers, potpourri and more to retail and wholesale customers around the United States and Canada. To keep their online inventory up-to-date, staff at Rosy Rings uses an e-commerce content management system developed by Blue Ray Media. With this system, staff can add, edit and remove items from the site with ease. They can even categorize items, so each shows up wherever it's appropriate throughout the site.
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The Bates Carey Nicolaides website includes extensive information about each attorney who practices at the firm. To manage all this information, the law firm uses content management tools created by Blue Ray Media. the tools allow them to keep the site fresh and up-to-date all the time.
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We're happy to talk to you about your needs and goals. Fill out our online form and tell us what you want the web to do for your business, nonprofit organization or other group. We'll work together to plan how to create a new website that works for you and your customers.
How do you know when it's time to redesign your website? Read: Eight Ways to Know it's Time to Redesign Your Website
You've been asked write a Request for Proposal, or “RFP”, and send it to qualified website development companies. Where do you start? Read: How to Create a Request for Proposal (RFP) for Web Site Development Services
The New York Times is still using Web site, but we've (somewhat reluctantly) decided to move from spelling it "Web site" to "website". We're now using "email" and have given up on "e-mail", too. (The AP just switched from e-mail to email. Other terms, like e-commerce, will keep their hyphens. The AP moved to "website" last year - read about it here.)