OK - so I`m looking for a company that can do prompt and reasonably priced web maintenance such as adding pages and keeping information up to date.
Also - as you can tell...I can`t even HTML my web address into my sig line.
OK - so I`m looking for a company that can do prompt and reasonably priced web maintenance such as adding pages and keeping information up to date.
Also - as you can tell...I can`t even HTML my web address into my sig line.
Hi Jeff,
We offer maintenance but i know that a member here offers unlimited updates for 19.95 a month, here is the listing that is in the marketplace. It may save you some money.http://www.startupnation.com/marketplace/554/unlimited -website-maintenance---1995-a-month/

@ JeffreyT
Sent you the updated code for your sig via PM.
All best,
Chris
OK - so I`m looking for a company that can do prompt and reasonably priced web maintenance such as adding pages and keeping information up to date.
Also - as you can tell...I can`t even HTML my web address into my sig line.
OK - so I`m looking for a company that can do prompt and reasonably priced web maintenance such as adding pages and keeping information up to date.
Also - as you can tell...I can`t even HTML my web address into my sig line.
I`m not sure the end-user (i.e. JeffreyT) should be contemplating whether to move to a "content management system like Joomla", or even have to go look up these words on Google. If the end-user`s requirement is that he/she wants to actually do the updating, whomever is creating/managing their web property should offer relevant options on how to do this - in a lot of cases, if the site is small (i.e. a "brochure" site), the cost/benefit equation probably leads to the end-user simply emailing the changes to the webmaster, and they get put up. Additionally, the type of changes need to be taken into account; text and images that change within an unchanging site framework and navigation scheme are certainly candidates for content management, but if the actual site structure changes somewhat frequently (i.e. "adding pages"), a content management approach might be prohibitively complex and expensive.
So, JeffreyT, we could take a quick look at your site and needs, and recommend a maintenance approach that fits within your expectations with respect to cost, ease-of-use and frequency. You could then use this approach input to solidify requirements for candidate web maintenance persons or companies.
By the way, my background includes designing, architecting and managing implementation aspects of very large Portal and Content Management systems for clients such as IRS.gov, Delaware.gov, NYC.gov and others.....
-Ted