5 hardworking guys above a pub
incredible since 1999
Hendersonville, North Carolina

If you’re put off by Facebook, trepidatious about tweeting, or lackadaisical about Linkedin, we can get you going in a direction that works for you. You don’t have to do everything – you just have to pick something and stick with it.
Pick and choose: I like Facebook, and I’m experimenting with Google+ (when I have time), but Twitter is a dud in my book. Steve tweets through the day, every day, and Chuck uses Twitter to post super short movie reviews. Andrew posts photos in Facebook, and the other Andrew keeps up with Rachmaninov. To each, his own.
If you need help finding your way, or blazing a trail, we would be glad to guide you.
We can help. If you need a Facebook page or app, we can build it. If you want Twitter integrated into your website, we can do that. Got another idea? I’ll bet we can do it!

Camp Manitou is a forward-thinking camp and they like to stay ahead of the competition. Rolling out a custom Facebook page was a smart move. They leveraged some of the prime content from their website by making it immediately accessible from Facebook.
Visit their Facebook page

Manitou’s Facebook page features their video, countdown, interactive map, news, and cover photos from their website.

Facebook pages are so very busy. The whole right column of the page is dedicated to distraction: people you may know, sponsored ads, photos of your friends, suggestions to like Britney Spears (seriously).
With so many competing elements, you need effective design to help focus the user’s attention on the things that matter most.
Color choices, sizing, white space – subtle details you might not think about – work together to produce an effective Facebook page.
For Camp Champions, we wanted to drive people to request their spiffy new brochure (it’s a hum-dinger designed by you-know-who).
Red is a “hot” color that draws your eye and it just so happens to be part of their print piece, so we strategically placed it where there would be the least likelihood of visual competition. High on the page, and close to the navigation, it’s hard to miss.
Visit their Facebook page
Camp Lenox, a Massachusetts summer camp started using Twitter because it solved a problem: how to communicate sports scores to parents.
Moms and dads are interested, but intermittent scores didn’t seem blog worthy. Enter Twitter – the right tool for the job.
Lots of parents aren’t at home during the day. No worries, using Twitter allows Lenox parents to keep up on their mobile phones – easy.
For those by their computer, is it worth logging in just to check the score? Nah, we put it up front on the home page – instant access.

After a summer of tweeting, the camp just keeps on going, and people keep on following.
In prior years, the post summer action moved to the Orange & Black blog (powered by Typewriter) and their Facebook page.
Not wanting to leave the tweeting crowd out in the cold, the camp uses Hootsuite to simultaneously post to Facebook & Twitter. It’s a simple solution, and it makes everyone happy.
Visit Camp Lenox